Following a summer of stability, upstream and downstream traffic has been rising steadily in recent weeks. Cable operator network spending in Q3 indicates that MSOs were preparing for this latest surge.

Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor

December 3, 2020

4 Min Read
US cable network peak usage is surging again

Following a multi-month period of relative stability, upstream and downstream peak usage on US cable networks is on the rise again.

Peak downstream usage on US cable networks had climbed 27.4% since March 2020, when pandemic-driven stay-at-home orders produced spikes in network usage, according to the NCTA's COVID-19 Dashboard. The dashboard tabulates and illustrates network usage data from a group of major and independent US cable operators, including Altice USA, Cable One, Charter Communications, Comcast, Cox Communications, GCI, Mediacom, Midco and Sjoberg's, a service provider based in Thief River Falls, Minnesota.

Figure 1: Upstream peak usage is flirting with a 50% increase since March 2020, according to the NCTA's COVID-19 dashboard. Click here for a larger version of this chart. Upstream peak usage is flirting with a 50% increase since March 2020, according to the NCTA's COVID-19 dashboard.
Click here for a larger version of this chart.

It's a similar story for the upstream, as peak usage for the week of November 21 ballooned by 46.9% when compared to the March 2020 benchmark.

Figure 2: Downstream peak usage on measured US cable networks has nearly doubled in the past month, according to NCTA's COVID-19 dashboard. Click here for a larger version of this chart. Downstream peak usage on measured US cable networks has nearly doubled in the past month, according to NCTA's COVID-19 dashboard.
Click here for a larger version of this chart.

The rate of growth in both the upstream and downstream are records, according to the data collected over the past eight-plus months.

Despite the recent surge, US cable networks appear to be staying ahead of the curve. According to the NCTA data, measured networks are performing under "normal" peak usage 97.4% of the time, seeing "elevated" peak usage 2.5% of the time, and undergoing "substantially elevated" peak usage just 0.1% of the time.

During the pandemic, cable operators have slowed down or delayed some next-gen network projects, including moves to a distributed access architecture (DAA). Instead, operators have been making more traditional moves – such as splitting nodes or adding capacity to their existing converged cable access platforms (CCAPs) – to keep data demands in check.

Jeff Heynen, VP, broadband access and home networking at Dell'Oro Group, said the end of the summer slowdown and the start of this latest wave of demand on residential cable networks entered the picture as students returned to school (with many using broadband to learn remotely) alongside an uptick in work-at-home activity. The surge in peak usage is also showing up amid a rise in COVID-19 cases across the US.

Cable access network spending perks up

Cable operator buying patterns have mirrored that trend. According to Dell'Oro, total cable access concentrator revenue jumped 6%, to $280 million, in Q3 2020, driven by solid growth in CCAP license purchases across multiple regions. Cable access concentrator revenues (a category that includes DOCSIS infrastructure elements such as CCAP cores and chassis, virtual CCAP licensing and DAA nodes and module) dipped 8% in Q2 2020, when cable operators nailed up enough capacity to handle the rise in demand seen in the early stages of the pandemic.

Heynen said some outside plant work done earlier in the year, including mid-splits or high-splits that increase the amount of capacity that is dedicated to the upstream, resulted in a boost in CCAP capacity licenses in Q3.

He noted there's also been an ongoing demand for new nodes and node splits as operators started to see sustained utilization reach thresholds that warranted them. That threshold varies by operator, but Heynen said 70% utilization is a typical trigger for an operator to split a node and, therefore, distribute the bandwidth to a smaller group of homes hanging off those nodes.

That scenario continues to put a crimp on the rate of deployment of new distributed access architectures. There's was "no significant jump" in Q3 with respect to DAA activity as sales of remote PHY nodes and remote PHY devices remained relatively flat, he said.

The same can be said for the deployment and adoption of virtual CCAP technologies. That activity continues to grow in small increments and has yet to reach the degree of a clear transition or shift to virtualization of the cable access network, Heynen said.

Meanwhile, the deployment of DOCSIS 3.1-powered consumer premises equipment (CPE) is accelerating amid the launch and support of 1-Gig broadband service and the resolution of pandemic-fueled supply chain issues that created pent-up demand.

In Q3, 76% of all DOCSIS CPE was for 3.1-class products, up from 69% in Q2 2020, according to Heynen.

Related posts:

— Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor, Light Reading

About the Author(s)

Jeff Baumgartner

Senior Editor, Light Reading

Jeff Baumgartner is a Senior Editor for Light Reading and is responsible for the day-to-day news coverage and analysis of the cable and video sectors. Follow him on X and LinkedIn.

Baumgartner also served as Site Editor for Light Reading Cable from 2007-2013. In between his two stints at Light Reading, he led tech coverage for Multichannel News and was a regular contributor to Broadcasting + Cable. Baumgartner was named to the 2018 class of the Cable TV Pioneers.

Subscribe and receive the latest news from the industry.
Join 62,000+ members. Yes it's completely free.

You May Also Like