What is 5G and who are the major players?
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[March 15, 2018]
By Eric Auchard and Stephen Nellis
LONDON/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump has blocked microchip maker Broadcom Ltd's <AVGO.O>
$117 billion takeover of rival Qualcomm <QCOM.O> amid concerns that it
would give China the upper hand in the next generation of mobile
communications, or 5G.
Below are some facts about 5G and major players.
WHAT IS 5G?
5G networks, now in the final testing stage, will rely on denser arrays
of small antennas and the cloud to offer data speeds up to 50 or 100
times faster than current 4G networks and serve as critical
infrastructure for a range of industries.
Deals to start building mass-market 5G networks are still largely a year
away, but by 2025, 1.2 billion people are set to have access to 5G
networks - a third of them in China, according to the global wireless
trade group GSMA.
Moving to new networks promises to enable new mobile services and even
whole new business models, but could pose challenges for countries and
industries unprepared to invest in the transition.
Unlike the upgrades of cellular standards 2G in the early 1990s, 3G
around the millennium and 4G in 2010, 5G standards will deliver not just
faster phone and computer data but also help connect up cars, machines,
cargo and crop equipment.
WHY IS THE U.S. WORRIED?
The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), which
vets acquisitions of U.S. corporations by foreign companies, said the
Broadcom takeover risked weakening Qualcomm, which would boost China
over the United States in the 5G race.
Acquiring Qualcomm would represent the jewel in the crown of Broadcom’s
portfolio of communications chips, which supply wi-fi, power management,
video and other features in smartphones alongside Qualcomm's core
baseband chips - radio modems that wirelessly connect phones to
networks.
The concern is that a takeover by Singapore-based Broadcom could see the
firm cut research and development spending by Qualcomm or hive off
strategically important parts of the company to other buyers, including
in China, U.S. officials and analysts have said.
5G promises to open up the clubby world of telecom equipment by creating
openings for a far wider range of players in hardware, software and
semiconductors, many of them from Asia, increasing the dependence of
Silicon Valley on foreign players.
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A 5G sign is seen at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain
February 28, 2018. REUTERS/Yves Herman
MAJOR PLAYERS
Before the new technology becomes a reality for consumers, two transitions need
to take place.
Mobile operators have to upgrade their networks with 5G gear made by the likes
of Huawei [HWT.UL] and ZTE <0000630.SZ> of China, Sweden's Ericsson <ERICb.ST>
and Finland's Nokia <NOKIA.HE>. And phone makers need to make handsets with
built-in 5G radios ready to hook up to networks.
Qualcomm <QCOM.O> is the dominant player in smartphone communications chips,
making half of all core baseband radio chips in smartphones. It is one of the
last big U.S. technology companies with a major role in mobile communications
hardware.
Most other baseband chips come from Asia: MediaTek <2454.TW> of Taiwan holds
about one quarter of the market, while Samsung Electronics <005930.KS> and
Huawei [HWT.UL] - two big smartphone makers - develop chips for their own
devices. Huawei does through a subsidiary known as HiSilicon.
Its dominant position in 5G comes from its mastery of two areas: getting its
patents adopted in what are known as standards and then selling the chip designs
that work with those standards.
The standards are set by a global body to ensure all phones work across
different mobile networks, and whoever's essential patents end up making it into
the standard stands to reap huge royalty licensing revenue streams.
Qualcomm has landed a number of these foundational patents, which means that
both handset makers and telecommunications gear makers will have to pay it
licensing fees. It dominated standards setting in 3G and 4G wireless and looks
set to top the list of patent holders heading into the 5G cycle.
Huawei, Nokia, Ericsson and others are also vying to amass 5G patents, which has
helped spur complex cross-licensing agreements like the deal struck late last
year Nokia and Huawei around handsets.
(Editing by Kim Miyoung in Singapore and Jason Neely in London)
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