Heavy Reading Launches First-Ever Market-Tracker Service Targeting the Carrier Ethernet Switch/Router Sector
26 August 2005 - 6:59PM
PR Newswire (US)
New Quarterly Service Delivers a Full Accounting of Worldwide CESR
Market Activity, Including Detailed Market Share Data and Revenue
Projections NEW YORK, Aug. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- Heavy Reading
(http://www.heavyreading.com/), Light Reading Inc.'s market
research division, today launched a brand-new service that tracks
one of the telecom industry's most dynamic and important emerging
product sectors: the carrier Ethernet switch/router market. Heavy
Reading's new Carrier Ethernet Switch/Router Quarterly Market
Tracker delivers a complete accounting of telecom equipment
manufacturer revenues in the carrier Ethernet switch/router (CESR)
sector, an emerging product category that includes all
carrier-class Ethernet switches and carrier Ethernet routers. The
primary purpose of these products is to aggregate and/or transport
Ethernet traffic in support of enterprise Ethernet services and
residential triple-play services. The new service from Heavy
Reading provides granular market data for the CESR sector,
including quarter-by-quarter revenue and market-share breakouts for
each supplier, revenues by geographic region, and revenue
projections through 2008 by region and application type. The
quarterly tracking service also analyzes each vendor's market
strategy and identifies and analyzes customer wins, providing
granular insight into this emerging market sector unavailable from
other sources. Worldwide sales of carrier Ethernet switch/routers
grew 43 percent in the second quarter of 2005, to approximately $97
million, according to the Carrier Ethernet Switch/Router Quarterly
Market Tracker. Heavy Reading estimates that the global CESR market
will grow from about $158 million in 2004 to $410 million this year
and nearly $1.5 billion in 2008, representing a CAGR of over 75
percent. Demand for CESR products is being fueled by widespread
network-build activity related to both Ethernet enterprise and
residential triple-play services, notes Heavy Reading Senior
Analyst Stan Hubbard, author of the Carrier Ethernet Switch/Router
Quarterly Market Tracker. "CESR platforms are driving the
transformation of the wireline equipment and telecom services
markets by enabling cost-effective network and service
convergence," he explains. "Demand for these products is so strong
because they represent the cutting edge of the market shift away
from TDM-centric networks toward more cost-effective and flexible
packet-based infrastructures." Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO)
continues to lead the CESR sector with an estimated 40 percent
market share in 2Q, but its overall share fell from the 43 percent
it recorded in 1Q05. Meanwhile, Alcatel (NYSE:ALA) saw its share of
the worldwide CESR market nearly triple to 16 percent in 2Q05. That
gain pushed Alcatel to the #3 position in CESR market share, just
behind Riverstone Networks (OTC Pink Sheets: RSTN), at 17 percent.
Equipment vendors analyzed include Alcatel, Atrica, Ciena, Cisco,
Extreme Networks, Foundry Networks, Marconi, Nortel Networks,
Riverstone, and Siemens. Heavy Reading's Carrier Ethernet
Switch/Router Quarterly Market Tracker is distributed in PowerPoint
and Excel formats. Reports may be purchased individually or as part
of an annual subscription. For more information, contact: Dave
Williams Sales Director, Heavy Reading 858-485-8870 Press/analyst
contact: Dennis Mendyk Managing Director, Heavy Reading
201-587-2154 About Heavy Reading Heavy Reading is an independent
market research organization offering quantitative analysis of
telecom technology to service providers, vendors, and investors.
Its mandate is to provide the comprehensive competitive analysis
needed today for the deployment of profitable networks based on
next-generation hardware and software. DATASOURCE: Heavy Reading
CONTACT: Dave Williams, Sales Director, Heavy Reading,
+1-858-485-8870, ; Press & analyst contact: Dennis Mendyk,
Managing Director, Heavy Reading, +1-201-587-2154, Web site:
http://www.heavyreading.com/
Copyright