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What's the forecast for long-term profit from RFID?

2011/11/29

 

     A recent report on RFID players and market opportunities, published by IDTechEx, has examined recent changes in both the technology itself and the shape of the market, and forecasts RFID''s future trends and figures up to 2015.

     In the report, ''RFID Forecasts, Players & Opportunities 2005-2015'', Dr Peter Harrop of IDTechEx examines the RFID value chain. He explains that chipmakers and material suppliers sell their goods to all comers - essentially they are the ''horizontal marketers'' of the industry. For example, all the chipmakers are famous companies selling integrated circuits for many purposes and their RFID chips are only a small part of their business. The economics of chip factories and the very similar nature of RFID and non RFID chips dictates this.

116.30.151.81 This article is copyright 2005 UsingRFID.com.

      On the other hand, the systems providers, integrators and operators and the like specialise in certain application sectors (such as Savi Technology in military, TrenStar in beer kegs and TransCore in non-stop road tolling) - and these are ''vertical marketers''. But between the two, there are companies feeling their way in this still-immature business and trying various combinations of hardware, software and other options, neither fully positioned vertically nor horizontally.

Where the biggest orders are
     The big RFID orders have always been in system provision, integration and/or facilities management, such as the US$111 million order Savi landed from the US Military five years ago, and several for tens of millions of dollars since then. Other examples are the US$1.6 billion order for card systems for travel on London''s buses and trains in the UK, involving 17 years'' facilities management. The consortium TranSys landed that one. Then there is the US$6 billion national identification card system for China that is being installed by a small

number of Chinese companies.

     Potential giants must migrate along the value chain, according to Harrop. Like barcodes and other disposable artefacts, making the artefact or interrogatory hardware is not a good end point if you have grand ambitions. The big money is in system supply, integration and management. For example, in barcodes, Symbol Technologies in barcode readers only landed orders for tens of millions of dollars when it added barcode system supply and integration to its skills.

     Now we are seeing this all repeated with RFID. Companies in RFID are adding skills near the end of the value chain (i.e. where the big money lies) and companies outside RFID are entering thereabouts as well. Much of this is quite recent - for example, Symbol bought Matrics last year. Alien bought Quatrotec, and VeriSign bought R4 this year.

An elegant acquisition
     The acquisition of Matrics by Symbol is particularly elegant because Symbol can fit it into its barcode hardware and systems business like a hand in a glove. For example, its readers will read both barcodes and RFID tags and its systems business will land contracts to integrate barcodes and RFID for the Military and Retail sectors where it is already well respected and highly capable and the combined skill will lead it more strongly into aviation.

     Gemplus International also added services but then, under previous management, disposed of its RFID businesses SkiData and Gemplus Tag (now called Tagsys, a successful independent company). New Gemplus management have now taken a more careful view and have bought back into RFID with Setec, which supplies US$3 passport RFID tags and associated systems to Scandinavian countries and Singapore.

The business model changes
     However, nothing is forever and the RFID industry is easily misread as something somnolent and slow changing - just because that is what it has been for sixty years. For example,

     RFID tags with no silicon chip have been the exception – exactly the opposite of the situation with the antitheft tags. According to IDTechEx, that will change because to achieve the "tag everything" scenario in supermarkets calls for tags costing one cent or less, and an increasing number of analysts and suppliers are realising that that may be impossible to achieve stably with silicon chip tags (i.e. with enduring profit for all in the tag supply chain).

Chipless disruption but when?
     That means chipless tags such as organic Thin Film Transistor Circuits (TFTCs) will move to centre stage though the infrastructure will remain largely the same. It means history will be repeated where the large, profitable label market, created for barcodes, largely vanished when barcodes were printed as part of normal graphics on packaging and products.

     But looking to the equivalent for RFID, the only difference from barcodes is that direct printing of RFID onto things will not use conventional graphics inks but will call for special electronic inks (albeit printed by familiar machinery in adapted form). In other words, it will still not be virtually free of charge, unlike barcodes. This means the value chain will start to evolve, though full transition to directly printed RFID for the biggest volumes (i.e. simplest circuits) may not occur before 2020. It will probably never happen for specialist RFID.

Why tag making is no longer a sideshow
     Why should this matter if the tags have been the subject of only modest orders so far? The answer is that, in the highest volumes such as trillions yearly for supermarket goods and hundreds of billions yearly for postal packages, the tag cost rises to 50% of the total cost of system ownership - and that''s a big enough figure to interest those with the investment and ambition to become biggest in the RFID business. A change of strategy may be needed, the report suggests.

     This is interesting because, although there are small operations equivalent to Matrics in the printed transistor business such as Plastic Logic, OrganicID, Kovio and ORFID, their opportunities and priorities are not necessarily mainly in RFID. The replacement for the silicon chip may become rather like the manufacture of silicon chips, in being horizontal – in other words, sell it to everyone, and RFID is of no great significance on its own.

     According to Harrop, companies with both electronics and printing skills will be strong. Such a movement of the market would be of immense interest to electronics companies heavily involved in printing (such as Hewlett Packard, Toppan Printing and Dai Nippon Printing) and it will come as no surprise that these companies are already working on printed electronics, as are giants such as Samsung, Toshiba, IBM, Xerox and Sony.

Ferrari RFID?
     So far, we''ve looked at strategies of companies intending to be big in RFID. But apart from those that create a secure and profitable future by being mass market suppliers, there are others that can be absolute specialists. Examples of this are Alanco Technologies tagging prisoners, Digital Angel tagging high risk patients, mother/baby tagging by X-tech, Connexion2 personal alarm locators that record incidents if bus drivers are attacked, or Triteq tagging hot air balloons for ID on radar.

     IDTechEx keeps track of these and many others and its RFID Knowledgebase, which now contains more than 1500 case studies of RFID in action, along with technical details. All of these smaller specialist applications require specific skills and industry knowledge that is generally of little interest to the bigger, more general players.

Large niches
     There are many more niches still to be explored, and their numbers will swell greatly in the next few years. Indeed, IDTechEx forecasts that RFID is going to be such a large industry that vertical integration - from making specialist tags and/or readers to supplying service to a specific industry - will permit niche companies to achieve at least hundreds of millions of dollars yearly in gross sales without the largest players either wanting to, or being able to crush them.

     Active RFID (where there is a battery in the tag and where combinations with WiFi and other technologies may be employed) is a particularly fertile sector for such niche companies.

     The fact that the defensible niches can be quite large is illustrated by Alanco Technologies seeing its whole opportunity in the US prison industry, as well over one billion dollars over the next few years.

     The full report can be obtained direct from IDTechEx, which also organises ID conferences around the world (such as Smart Labels USA and Smart Labels Europe).

 

 

 

 

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