Israel information technology report q1 2015

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Israel information technology report   q1 2015

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... the Israeli technology and © Business Monitor International Page 24 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 pharmaceutical segments will contribute to the expansion of the component in 2015. .. Industries technology campus in the Negev and expand its computer services segment in Israel © Business Monitor International Page 49 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Israeli Start-Ups... International Page 38 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Israel PC Browsing Traffic By OS (%) And Y-o-Y Change (pps) September 2014 Source: Statcounter Vendor Performance The Israeli PC market

Q1 2015 www.businessmonitor.com ISRAEL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY REPORT INCLUDES 5-YEAR FORECASTS TO 2018 ISSN 1752-4245 Published by:Business Monitor International Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 INCLUDES 5-YEAR FORECASTS TO 2018 Part of BMI’s Industry Report & Forecasts Series Published by: Business Monitor International Copy deadline: October 2014 Business Monitor International Senator House 85 Queen Victoria Street London EC4V 4AB United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0) 20 7248 0468 Fax: +44 (0) 20 7248 0467 Email: subs@businessmonitor.com Web: http://www.businessmonitor.com © 2014 Business Monitor International All rights reserved. All information contained in this publication is copyrighted in the name of Business Monitor International, and as such no part of this publication may be reproduced, repackaged, redistributed, resold in whole or in any part, or used in any form or by any means graphic, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, or by information storage or retrieval, or by any other means, without the express written consent of the publisher. DISCLAIMER All information contained in this publication has been researched and compiled from sources believed to be accurate and reliable at the time of publishing. However, in view of the natural scope for human and/or mechanical error, either at source or during production, Business Monitor International accepts no liability whatsoever for any loss or damage resulting from errors, inaccuracies or omissions affecting any part of the publication. All information is provided without warranty, and Business Monitor International makes no representation of warranty of any kind as to the accuracy or completeness of any information hereto contained. Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 CONTENTS BMI Industry View ............................................................................................................... 7 SWOT .................................................................................................................................... 9 IT SWOT .................................................................................................................................................. 9 Wireline SWOT ....................................................................................................................................... 11 Political ................................................................................................................................................. 12 Economic ............................................................................................................................................... 13 Business Environment .............................................................................................................................. 14 Industry Forecast .............................................................................................................. 15 IT Market ............................................................................................................................................... 15 Table: IT Industry - Historical Data And Forecasts (Israel 2011-2018) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Broadband ............................................................................................................................................. 20 Internet ................................................................................................................................................ 20 Table: Telecoms Sector - Wireline - Historical Data & Forecasts (Israel 2011-2018) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Macroeconomic Forecasts ............................................................................................... 22 Economic Analysis ................................................................................................................................... 22 Table: Economic Activity (Israel 2009-2018) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Industry Risk Reward Ratings .......................................................................................... 28 Industry Risk/Reward Index ....................................................................................................................... 28 Table: MEA IT Risk/Reward Index, Q115 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Market Overview ............................................................................................................... 34 Hardware ............................................................................................................................................. 34 Software ............................................................................................................................................... 40 Services ................................................................................................................................................ 44 Industry Trends And Developments ................................................................................ 48 Regulatory Development .................................................................................................. 52 Table: IT Regulatory Authorities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Table: Government Initiatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Competitive Landscape .................................................................................................... 56 International Companies ......................................................................................................................... 56 Table: Intel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Local Companies ................................................................................................................................... 57 Table: Amdocs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Table: Check Point . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Table: Imperva . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Table: Retalix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 © Business Monitor International Page 4 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Company Profile ................................................................................................................ 61 Ness ...................................................................................................................................................... 61 Matrix ................................................................................................................................................... 67 Regional Overview ............................................................................................................ 71 Industry Risk/Reward Index ....................................................................................................................... 71 Table: MEA IT Risk/Reward Index, Q115 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 Demographic Forecast ..................................................................................................... 77 Table: Israel's Population By Age Group, 1990-2020 ('000) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 Table: Israel's Population By Age Group, 1990-2020 (% of total) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 Table: Israel's Key Population Ratios, 1990-2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 Table: Israel's Rural/Urban Population Split, 1990-2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 Methodology ...................................................................................................................... 81 Industry Forecast Methodology ................................................................................................................ 81 Sources ................................................................................................................................................ 82 Risk/Reward Index Methodology ............................................................................................................... 83 Table: It Risk/Reward Index Indicators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84 Table: Weighting Of Components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 © Business Monitor International Page 5 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 BMI Industry View BMI View: Israel has the most mature IT market in the Middle East and Africa region, and its skilled workforce, vibrant start-up culture and strong government and university engagement in developing cutting edge research has attracted investment from nearly all major global IT firms. However, because of the comparatively high penetration of IT products and services, as well as its small population, Israel's IT market is expected to grow more slowly than most others in the region. Between 2010 and 2014, the IT market was also impacted by sluggish GDP growth, but we expect an improving macroeconomic outlook to support accelerating demand for IT software and services in the latter years of our forecast period to 2018. Given Israel's geopolitical location and the uptick in violence in the region, we expect spending on cyber security to be a key driver of growth in Israel's IT market, chiming with our view that software and services will increase as a proportion of IT spend to account for 65% of the market by 2018. Headline Expenditure Projections Computer Hardware Sales: Forecast to reach ILS9.225bn in 2014, up from ILS9.143bn in 2013. We expect a return to growth in 2014 to be driven by the launch of 4G mobile networks and ongoing migration to the Windows 8 OS. Software Sales: ILS5.867bn in 2014, up 4.5% year-on-year (y-o-y) from ILS5.524bn in 2013. Enterprise software spending will be the main growth driver as device and data proliferation will result in increased spending on customer relationship management (CRM), databases and business intelligence. IT Services Sales: We expect IT services sales will continue to outperform the rest of the IT market, reaching ILS8.26bn in 2014, up from ILS7.91bn in 2013. Cyber security services will outperform in terms of growth, but it will be stable sectors such as government and defence that continue to account for the majority of spending. Key Trends And Developments In September 2014 the Israeli government confirmed that Intel will invest around USD6bn to upgrade its chip plant in Kiryat Gat. This is the largest single investment from a foreign company in Israel and highlights the attractiveness of the Israeli tech market to global IT hardware and software firms. The trend of foreign investment in Israel's IT market is further emphasized by IVC Research Center data which shows © Business Monitor International Page 7 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 that the country's high-tech start-ups raised nearly as much during 9M14 as during the whole of 2013, with Q214 recording the strongest quarter of fundraising since 2000. Israel's defence, public and private installations are prime targets for cyber attacks, partly due high geopolitical tensions. The recent uptick in regional conflicts and Israel's military activities in Gaza have amplified the threat level in 2014, and is expected to result in growing demand for cutting-edge solutions from public and private institutions. Local and international companies are already positioning themselves to take advantage of this opportunity by investing in various efforts to develop new solutions for the market. In July 2014, Microsoft and cloud services provider Akamai partnered to launch a cyber security-focused start-up accelerator program in Israel, in partnership with venture capital firm Jerusalem Venture Partners. In June, Israeli security analytics company Fortscale announced that it raised USD10mn in funding from Intel Capital and Blumberg Capital to expand its R&D program. Also in June, cyber security start-up Hexadite announced a USD2.5mn in seed funding for its operations. © Business Monitor International Page 8 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 SWOT IT SWOT SWOT Strengths ■ Home to the most well developed economy and IT market in the region with major local IT companies based in the country, a highly educated, linguistically skilled workforce, and relatively low labour costs compared with developed markets. ■ Strong defence and government spending provides base for IT demand. ■ Strong political support, with the government having implemented many policies to aid in the expansion of the IT sector. ■ Investment in FTTH and wireless data networks provide basis for cloud computing growth and internet of things expansion. Weaknesses ■ The recession at the beginning of the 2000s focussed customers on the bottom line, with enhanced services and customer market power adding to pressure on pricing and margins. ■ Digital divide, with just 30% of the bottom-income group having home internet access. Opportunities ■ Cyber security threats should attract increased spending on safeguards as the concerns of government and enterprises escalate. ■ Growing demand for tablets and other mobile computing devices such as hybrids and ultrabooks. ■ Defence and government projects should be less sensitive to fiscal retrenchment, with a major data centre project under way for the Israel Defense Forces. ■ Outsourcing, Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) and applications management likely to grow fastest out of IT services, with particular opportunities in the financial sector. ■ Opportunities for partnership/investment in Israel's lively local IT company sector. © Business Monitor International Page 9 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 SWOT - Continued Threats ■ Government austerity measures will dampen consumer and business spending. ■ Other factors may affect business confidence, notably the security situation. ■ The weaker local currency, and aggressive pricing, may continue to constrain growth and put pressure on margins. © Business Monitor International Page 10 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Wireline SWOT SWOT Strengths ■ Well developed internet/broadband sector compared with regional peers. ■ Fixed-line liberalisation has led to increased competition and the erosion of incumbent market share. ■ Incumbent operator Bezeq faces strong competition from HOT Telecom, which has recently entered the mobile market. Weaknesses Opportunities ■ Internet infrastructure is currently controlled by Bezeq and HOT Telecom. ■ Regulator was slow to license new services eg WiMAX licences. ■ Slow development of triple-play for Bezeq could hinder value growth prospects. ■ Introduction of LLU will give alternative operators access to Bezeq's network and should stimulate much greater competition. ■ The ViaEurpoa-led consortium building a fibre network over the Israel Electric Corporation (IEC) infrastructure would provide competition for Bezeq and HOT, and ultimately boost growth in the market. Threats ■ Continued reduction of internet tariffs could have a devastating effect on revenues. ■ Fixed broadband growth is slowing as mobile broadband services become increasingly popular. ■ Operators, Bezeq in particular, have resisted the introduction of number portability, which could lead to a price war and thus drive down mobile revenues. © Business Monitor International Page 11 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Political SWOT Analysis Strengths ■ Despite corruption allegations against some officials and members of parliament, government members are still some of the most accountable in the region. ■ Elections are for the most part free and transparent, ensuring that a broad spectrum of political views is represented within government. Weaknesses ■ The protracted conflict with the Palestinians means there are persistent security risks. Strategies to minimise or end the conflict are domestically divisive, with tensions between Israel and Hamas set to remain elevated. ■ Frequent change to the composition of the coalition government often leads to policies becoming fragmented or significantly diluted. Opportunities ■ With the civil war in Syria continuing, risks of a spill over into Israel are ever-present. ■ A warming of relations with Greece has given Israel the ability to engage in military exercises over a larger geographic area. Threats ■ Finding a lasting solution with the Palestinians continues to pose a dilemma for Israel, and we think a final agreement will remain elusive. ■ Continued home-building in some West Bank settlements antagonises the Palestinians and stands in the way of the peace process. © Business Monitor International Page 12 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Economic SWOT Analysis Strengths ■ The policy framework has stabilised in recent years, and austerity measures will help to keep the fiscal deficit under control. ■ The workforce is highly educated and skilled. ■ The country's close ties with the US provide it with substantial financial assistance for economic and military ends. Weaknesses ■ A sharp deterioration in the security situation can have an immediate impact on domestic confidence, tourism receipts, the exchange rate and foreign investment. ■ The economy is highly exposed to that of the US and Europe in terms of exports and investment. Opportunities ■ In the long term, relatively elevated levels of employment will underpin private consumption growth. ■ Israel produces more technology start-up companies than any other country in the world except the US. ■ The discovery of large offshore gas deposit will bring an influx in foreign investment and is expected to serve the country's energy needs for decades. Threats ■ Appreciatory pressures on the Israeli shekel risk damaging the country's exports. That said, risks will remain contained by the Bank of Israel's commitment to intervene in the forex market to stem excessive appreciation of the unit. ■ Competition from emerging Chinese and Indian producers of high-tech goods and polished diamonds could undermine demand for Israeli exports. © Business Monitor International Page 13 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Business Environment SWOT Analysis Strengths ■ The business environment is supported by sound infrastructure and communication networks, as well as transparent legislation. ■ The banking system is one of the most sophisticated in the region, and offers a wide range of both consumer and commercial credit products. Weaknesses ■ Historic political instability increases the risk premium of investment in Israel. ■ Some limits on repatriation of capital exist and there are constraints on foreign investment in the high-tech sector. Opportunities ■ The beginning of offshore exploration will increase foreign direct investment in the country. Threats ■ Strike action has proved extremely disruptive to the business environment in 2011, and could regain strength over the next years. ■ The parliament approved a plan to increase the country's oil and gas royalties, which could reduce energy profits in the future. © Business Monitor International Page 14 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Forecast IT Market Table: IT Industry - Historical Data And Forecasts (Israel 2011-2018) 2011 IT market value, ILSmn 2017f 2018f 20,435.7 22,299.5 22,576.0 23,354.8 24,607.9 26,490.5 27,698.4 28,895.0 IT market value, % of GDP 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2.3 2.4 2.3 2.3 2.3 Computer hardware sales, ILSmn 8,685.2 9,388.1 9,143.3 9,225.2 Personal computer sales, ILSmn 7,243.4 7,895.4 7,753.5 Software sales, ILSmn 4,732.9 5,177.2 Services sales, ILSmn 7,017.6 7,734.2 2016f 2.4 2.4 2.3 9,400.2 9,801.5 10,082.2 10,113.2 7,869.1 8,065.4 8,517.5 8,821.9 8,909.8 5,524.3 5,866.6 6,414.2 7,128.1 7,520.4 8,146.5 7,908.4 8,263.1 8,793.5 9,560.9 10,095.8 10,635.2 e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: BMI We continue to hold the view that the Israeli IT market will experience only limited growth over the medium term and will gradually decline as a percentage of GDP. This is a product of saturation of the hardware and software/services market and price competition between vendors, which will hold down the overall value of the market. Nevertheless, Israel remains at the forefront of development of security services and continues to attract investment in research and development centres from global IT firms. We forecast the IT market to reach a value of ILS23.355bn in 2014, equal to USD6.635bn and up from ILS22.6bn in 2013. Despite our expectations of relatively weak growth in 2013 and 2014, we maintain a more positive outlook for Israel's IT market over the long term. Israel remains a robust IT market with plenty of opportunities across industrial, government, defence and financial services spending. Our five-year CAGR sees growth around 4.8% in Israeli new shekel terms for the period from 2014-2018. We expect IT services will be the fastest growing segment of the IT market, narrowly ahead of software, with both growing fast relative to hardware. In terms of key verticals, the financial services and defence sectors drive growth, with rising geopolitical tensions likely to result in even stronger demand for IT security solutions. The nature of sales will change, however, as business management becomes increasingly important and the hardware segment contributes comparatively less to the market's overall growth. Given Israel's relatively rich tech skills resource base, many organisations prefer to conduct software development in-house. © Business Monitor International Page 15 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 2014 Outlook We project real GDP growth of 2.5% in Israel in 2014, then expect slow but steady acceleration in GDP growth throughout our forecast period, reaching 3.9% in 2018. BMI's Country Risk team downgraded Israel's growth forecast slightly in the wake of the violence between Israel and Gaza, but does not expect the events to have a lasting negative impact on the economy. BMI also forecasts relatively weak expansion of private consumption growth at 3.0% in 2014, mainly as a result of the implementation of austerity measures by the government. Private consumption growth has also been fairly insulated from the eruption of violence between Israel and Gaza in Q213 and Q314. While government austerity and political instability have weighed on Israel's economic outlook, we believe there will nonetheless be opportunities for vendors in the IT market, most notably in demand for cyber and information security products and services. This is a growth area in IT markets globally, but there is a particularly large opportunity in Israel where regional political tensions and the uptick in cyber attacks in 2012 and 2013 affecting Israel, UAE and Saudi Arabia, have concentrated the minds of government and enterprise decision-makers on investments to protect their IT systems. Other areas where we expect to see growth include business intelligence and cloud computing, with the latter likely to gain traction among SMEs as a lower cost alternative to bespoke systems. Meanwhile sales of hardware and software will receive a boost from Windows-8 driven upgrades and computer purchases previously delayed as a result of the economic situation. The move to mobility and new form factors such as tablets, hybrids and ultrabooks will help to drive demand in the consumer segment, while to some extent undermining demand for traditional notebooks. Meanwhile, despite the challenging trading conditions, vendors have reported a continued flow of IT projects, with large tenders from the Israeli ministries of finance and defence and the Bank of Israel. In December 2013 VMware won a data centre contract from the Israel Defence Forces valued at USD27mn in the local media. © Business Monitor International Page 16 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Trends - IT Market 2011-2018 40,000 2.5 2.4 30,000 2.3 20,000 2.2 10,000 2.1 0 2 2011 2012 2013 2014e IT market value, ILSmn (LHS) 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f IT market value, % of GDP (RHS) e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: BMI Market Drivers The Israeli IT market has several supportive fundamentals that should keep it in positive territory during BMI's five-year forecast period to 2018. Although household computer penetration of more than 75% offers only limited potential for growth derived from first time buyers, there are several factors pushing multiple device ownership. Innovation in form factors, including tablets and hybrids will push sales of personal devices. Meanwhile, investments by telecoms operators to expand the reach of high capacity wireless and wireline broadband services will catalyse demand for personal devices. Spending will continue to move away from desktops as more consumers acquire personal devices such as tablets - which may also cut into spending on notebooks. Per capita IT spending is expected to rise from ILS2,986 in 2014 to ILS3,496 by 2018. However, spending will fail to keep pace with GDP growth in Israel as the economy becomes less heavily weighted towards the high-tech sector following gas exploration and growth in other sectors. Some key IT spending verticals will keep pace; for instance defence and financial services, which are somewhat insulated from economic © Business Monitor International Page 17 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 vicissitudes. Vendors will target projects across a range of sectors; from government to financial services, telecoms and utilities. While the defence sector is expected to remain the single most important vertical, investments by financial sector organisations should mean more large outsourcing deals. Other sectors of opportunity will include healthcare and telecoms, as well as infrastructure, transport and the small office and home office sector. Income Per Capita Breakdown 2011-2018 75,000 50,000 25,000 0 2011 2012 2013e 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Poorest 20%, net income per capita, ILS Richest 20%, net income per capita, ILS Middle 60% of population, net income per capita, ILS e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: National sources, BMI © Business Monitor International Page 18 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Opportunities BMI expects IT services will display the highest growth over the forecast period to 2018, due to growth in key verticals and the opportunities presented by cloud computing, big data analytics and real-time enterprise services based on the internet of things. As noted, cloud computing is expected to be a source of revenue growth over the medium term as organisations looking for efficiencies turn to Software-as-a-Service and Infrastructure-as-a-Service. Particular areas of opportunity for cloud computing include banking and retail, as organisations in those fields look to save money on hardware and improve customer services. While large organisations still dominate, SMEs have been investing more and represent a growth opportunity. Many SMEs are waking up to the need to compete through more direct investment in support and service infrastructures. Cloud computing is a field which could gain traction with SMEs as the ondemand model fits well with their smaller budgets and lack of demand for bespoke in-house solutions and software. Summary BMI believes IT spending has sufficient strength in key demand verticals to maintain a positive trajectory over the medium term. However, we do not expect growth to keep pace with GDP as market saturation and price competition between vendors limit increases in the total value of the market. The hardware market is forecast to grow from ILS9.1bn in 2013 to ILS10.1bn in 2018, with PC sales projected to rise from an estimated ILS7.8bn to ILS8.9bn. While growth will remain strong, the market will be increasingly dominated by IT service sales and software sales, indicating the maturity of the market. BMI forecasts software sales to account for 28.2% of Israel's IT market by 2018, up from 24.5% in 2013, while services are forecast to rise from 35.0% of the IT market to 36.8% over the same timeframe. © Business Monitor International Page 19 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Broadband Internet Table: Telecoms Sector - Wireline - Historical Data & Forecasts (Israel 2011-2018) 2011 Main telephone lines in service, '000 Main Telephone Lines/100 Inhabitants Internet users, '000 Internet users/100 inhabitants Broadband internet subscribers, '000 Broadband internet subscribers/100 Inhabitants 2012 2013e 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 3,500.0 3,594.0 2,900.0 2,929.3 2,913.2 2,885.5 2,882.0 2,902.5 46.4 47.0 37.5 37.4 36.8 35.9 35.4 35.1 6,013.0 6,698.0 7,069.0 7,348.0 7,492.0 7,702.0 7,896.0 8,021.0 79.7 87.6 91.4 93.9 94.6 95.9 97.0 97.0 1,800.0 1,950.0 2,025.0 2,128.3 2,202.8 2,266.6 2,318.8 2,358.2 23.9 25.5 26.2 27.2 27.8 28.2 28.5 28.5 e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: BMI, operators We have revised our forecast for the development of Israel's internet user and broadband subscriber markets based on new data from the country's service providers. We revised our YE13 estimate for the number of internet users down to 5.33mn, giving Israel a penetration rate of 68.9%. We expect steady, but slowing, growth in the number of internet users to continue for the duration of our forecast, resulting in 6.295mn internet users in 2018, equivalent to a penetration rate of 76.1%. Meanwhile, owing to a lack of reliable data on the number of mobile broadband subscribers (specifically those subscribers who use USB dongles and data cards to access the internet via laptops, PCs and smartphones), our forecast for the Israeli broadband sector is currently based on fixed broadband connections only. Data published by incumbent telecoms operator Bezeq and alternative operators HOT and Partner Communications suggests that the number of fixed broadband subscribers had increased to around 2.131mn at the end of 2013, up by 9.3% year-on-year (y-o-y). BMI estimates that, by the end of 2014, Israel's broadband subscriber base will have risen to 2.24mn; this is equivalent to a penetration rate of 28.6% and reflects full year growth of 5.1%. © Business Monitor International Page 20 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Trends - Wireline Sector 2011-2018 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 2011 2012 2013e 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Main telephone lines in service, '000 Broadband internet subscribers, '000 e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: Operators, BMI Up until 2018, we envisage average annual growth of around 3.1% for the Israeli broadband sector. This will see the subscriber base reach 2.48mn, equivalent to a penetration rate of 30.0%. We expect the growing popularity of mobile broadband services to result in slowing demand growth in the fixed broadband sector. Nevertheless, we identify several developments which will sustain fixed broadband growth for the duration of our forecast and beyond. These include the launch of wholesale broadband services by the ViaEuropa-led consortium building a fibre network over the Israel Electric Company (IEC) infrastructure and Bezeq's ongoing deployment of its fibre-to-the-cabinet (FTTC), a development which is helping to drive capacity for its residential and corporate customers' broadband access. Meanwhile, recent months have seen considerable reductions in the price of broadband tariffs being offered by the major operators. Another development likely to stimulate growth is the introduction of LLU, which will give alternative operators access to Bezeq's network and stimulate much greater competition. © Business Monitor International Page 21 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Macroeconomic Forecasts Economic Analysis BMI View: We have revised down our forecast for Israel's 2014 real GDP growth due to the recent conflict with Hamas and now project the economy to expand by 2.5% this year and 3.6% the next. A moderation of austerity policies and increasing exports underpin our positive medium-term outlook for the economy. We have revised down our 2014 real GDP growth forecast for Israel to 2.5%, from 3.2% previously, and project the economy expanding by 3.6% in 2015 - the result of low base effects and accelerating export growth. Economic growth slowed to 1.7% year-on-year (y-o-y) in Q214 - before the beginning of the conflict with Islamist group Hamas in the Gaza strip in July - from 2.8% y-o-y in Q114. The hostilities likely resulted in an even sharper, if temporary, economic contraction in Q314. A moderation of austerity policies over the coming years, coupled with increasing exports and a subsequent acceleration in fixed investment growth, underpin our positive view for the Israeli economy over the next five years, and we forecast real GDP growth to average 3.6% over this period. © Business Monitor International Page 22 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Conflict Hitting Economy Hard This Year Israel - GDP 400 6 5 300 4 200 3 2 100 1 0 0 2009 2010 2011 2012 Nominal GDP, USDbn (LHS) 2013e 2014f 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Real GDP growth, % y-o-y (RHS) e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: Central Bureau of Statistics Israel, UN, BMI. Private Consumption Outlook: Private consumption will accelerate in 2015, and we forecast growth of 3.5% following 3.0% growth in 2014. Consumer spending slowed to 1.8% y-o-y in H114, from 4.0% in H213. We expect private consumption to remain subdued in Q314 amid declining consumer sentiment resulting from the conflict in the Gaza Strip. © Business Monitor International Page 23 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Modest Increase In Spending In 2015 Israel - Government Revenues & Expenditure 400 -2 300 -3 200 -4 100 -5 0 -6 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Fiscal revenue, ILSbn (LHS) Budget balance, % of GDP (RHS) 2014f 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Fiscal expenditure, ILSbn (LHS) e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: Israeli Ministry of Finance, BMI The ongoing conflict in the Gaza Strip will result in a persistently elevated fiscal deficit in Israel, which we forecast to come in at 3.6% and 3.5% of GDP in 2014 and 2015 respectively. This will result in tight fiscal policies in Q414 and 2015, as the government will have to make up for higher-than-expected spending by increasing taxes. That said, hikes will not be dramatic; higher-than-expected revenues and lower expenses brought the 12-month rolling deficit to only 2.5% of GDP in H114, allowing the government some room for manoeuvre. Government Spending Outlook: Public spending averaged 3.6% in H114, and we expect growth in this component to slow over the coming quarters as the government attempts to absorb the costs of the war with Hamas. The conflict resulted in a significant drop in consumer spending, business activity and tourism, which hit government revenues. We project government consumption to expand by 2.8% and 3.2% in 2014 and 2015 respectively. Fixed Investment Outlook: We expect growth in gross fixed capital formation to accelerate in 2015, a result of low base effects and accelerating export growth. Investment in the Israeli technology and © Business Monitor International Page 24 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 pharmaceutical segments will contribute to the expansion of the component in 2015. Indeed, on August 21, Swiss drugmaker Novartis announced it will acquire a 15% stake in Jerusalem-based healthcare services company Gamida Cell in a USD600mn deal. The five-year outlook for gross fixed capital formation is encouraging, particularly given prospects for increasing investment in the energy sector. In the middle of August, it was announced that estimated natural gas reserves at Israel's Leviathan gas field have risen by 16% to 620bn cubic metres (bcm), from 535.4bcm previously. We project fixed investment to expand by 1.0% in 2014 and 4.0% in 2015, and to grow by 3.9% on average over the next five years. Investment Opportunities Lie Ahead Israel - Gas Production (bcm) 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 2012e 2013e 2014f 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f 2020f 2021f 2022f 2023f e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: EIA, BMI Net Exports: We see Israel recording net export surpluses of ILS12.2bn (USD3.4bn) and ILS13.3bn in 2014 and 2015 respectively, from ILS12.4bn in 2013. Goods and services exports have likely declined significantly in Q314, a result of the conflict with Hamas. Tourism - which accounts for approximately 7% of Israel's economy - has been among the hardest-hit industries, with the number of visitors declining by 26.0% y-o-y in July. © Business Monitor International Page 25 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 We expect total exports to contract by 1.5% in 2014 and expand by 3.5% in 2015, largely a result of accelerating economic expansion in key export markets. Europe - particularly the UK, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany - accounted for 45.2% of total Israeli exports in 2013, and we expect an improvement in macroeconomic conditions in those markets to benefit Israeli exporters next year. Exports will also be supported by the beginning of gas production in 2015, albeit on a small scale. Large-scale gas exports will begin only in 2018, in our view, which will result in an uptick in total export growth in the latter part of the decade. Encouraging Medium-Term Outlook Israel - Components Of GDP (ILSbn) & Real GDP Growth, % chg y-o-y e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: Central Bureau of Statistics Israel, UN, BMI. We project imports to decline by 1.5% this year and expand by 3.3% in the next on the back of low base effects and an uptick in domestic consumption and fixed investment. Import growth will remain robust over the medium term, offsetting the projected acceleration in export growth. © Business Monitor International Page 26 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Table: Economic Activity (Israel 2009-2018) Nominal GDP, USDbn Real GDP growth, % y-o-y GDP per capita, USD Population, mn Industrial production, % y-o-y, ave Unemployment, % of labour force, eop 2009 2010 2011 2012e 2013e 2014f 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 195.0 218.0 243.7 241.2 270.1 293.3 312.1 332.6 355.4 378.7 1.1 5.0 4.6 3.4 3.3 2.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 4.2 26,806 29,384 32,305 31,552 34,929 37,497 39,413 41,432 43,633 45,808 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 7.9 8.0 8.1 8.3 -5.9 8.1 16.5 6.8 -2.0 0.2 3.6 4.9 5.7 6.0 7.2 6.6 5.4 6.7 5.9 6.7 6.5 6.5 6.4 6.4 e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: National Sources, UN, BMI © Business Monitor International Page 27 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Risk Reward Ratings Industry Risk/Reward Index BMI View: We retain our positive growth outlook for the IT sector in most countries in the Middle East and Africa (MEA). Growth will be driven mainly by government and enterprise spending, with rising demand for software and services in the more mature IT markets of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and Israel. High growth levels in Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya and Egypt are primarily the result of low base effects, with long-term opportunities for vendors as government agencies and enterprises adopt IT solutions for the first time. There have been only minor changes in the rankings on our Risk/Reward Index (RRI) table and in the average segment and aggregate IT scores in Q115. Israel pulled ahead of Qatar into first place, while at the bottom Lebanon slipped below Ghana into 12th place owing to a big drop in its industry rewards score. This, as well as a decline in Kenya's industry rewards score, pulled the average score for the category down by 2 points to 46.7 out of 100. The average country rewards score increased by 0.4 points to 65.0, while the industry risks score remained flat and the country risks score was down just 0.1 point to 56.4. This resulted in an overall 0.8 point decline in the aggregate MEA IT score to 53.2. Industry Rewards Nigeria and South Africa remain the top performers in the industry rewards category, with respective scores of 65.0 and 61.7. We have a bullish outlook for both countries' IT markets in view of Nigeria's strong economic growth and high government spending in South Africa. The high sector growth rates in Nigeria, Ghana, and Kenya are largely due to low base effects. As a result, we believe these countries, along with Egypt, offer long term growth opportunities for investors considering the low level of development of their IT markets relative to the more developed GCC states. © Business Monitor International Page 28 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Wealthy Markets Score Highly MEA IT Risk/Reward Outlook, 2014 Source: BMI Among GCC countries, strong economic growth and governments' determination to promote economic diversification are key determinants of industry rewards scores. Over the last few months the aviation industry has stood out as a key driver of demand for IT products and services in the region. Bahrain's Gulf Airlines, Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways and Saudi Airlines have all recently awarded major IT contracts to global vendors, including Cisco Systems, Microsoft, Amadeus and EMC. Lebanon and Kenya both saw sharp declines in their industry rewards scores in Q115. In Lebanon weak economic growth, forecast to reach 1.8% in 2014, has weighed on the government and the private sectors' ability to spend on IT products and services, dragging on our growth forecast and resulting in a 10-point drop in Lebanon's industry rewards score, to 25. In Kenya, the government's school children laptop programme was postponed yet again when the High Court cancelled the USD285mn tender in September 2014. This resulted in a sharp decline in our growth forecast and a contraction of Kenya's industry rewards score, to 41.7. Although below the regional average of 46.7, Kenya's score is still buoyed by its large population and relatively strong growth outlook, due to low base effects. © Business Monitor International Page 29 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Country Rewards The country rewards category evaluates consumers and businesses' potential spending power on IT products and services, based on macroeconomic indicators such as GDP per capita and the rate of urbanisation. A higher urbanisation rate means that a greater proportion of the population is likely to have access to high quality broadband networks, translating into higher demand and use of IT services. Meanwhile, high income levels mean a larger segment of the population can afford expensive IT hardware products, as well as generally higher private consumption levels, which in turn create increased demand for IT solutions from businesses in consumer facing industries. Qatar, Kuwait, the UAE and Israel had the highest GDP per capita at the end of 2013, at approximately USD93,000, USD53,000, USD43,000 and USD35,000 respectively, according to BMI data. However, the UAE misses out on a higher score in this category as around 16% of the population live in rural areas, compared to 8% in Israel and less than 2% in Kuwait and Qatar. The African countries, including Egypt, all score below 50.0 in this category, but there are growth opportunities for investors with a long-term outlook. Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa and Kenya all have populations of more than 40mn, and this vast potential will attract significant interest from businesses with consumer-centric solutions. Among the leading global IT software and services firms, SAP, Microsoft and IBM have made the most concerted efforts to establish a presence in the region, while local firms such as AfricaOnline, iWayAfrica and SevenC Computing are gradually building their capabilities. Kenya's particularly low score of just 10 is due to its urbanisation rate of just 25% and GDP per capita of around USD1,250 in 2013. © Business Monitor International Page 30 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Risks IP Protection A Key Risk There were no changes in the industry risks category Operational Risk ICT Index, 2014 in Q115. Intellectual property (IP) theft remains the key risk in the category, with levels of software piracy remaining generally high in MEA. According to a survey by BSA | The Software Alliance, published in June 2014, the average rate of unlicensed software use in MEA in 2013 was around 59%, compared to 29% in Western Europe and 19% in North America. BMI believes the level of IP risk throughout the region is the result of consumer spending power, with high demand for low-cost, often pirated, products in low income countries, contrasting with Scores out of 100, with 100 the best. Source: BMI government commitments to limiting access to counterfeit and pirated products. This is reflected in BMI's newly developed Operational Risk Index, which evaluates trade and investment risks for the ICT sector on a country-by-country basis, based on the level of IP protection and legal framework in the sector, among other indicators. Both BMI and BSA data show that the African countries in our MEA IT Index and Lebanon have high levels of software piracy, while enterprises and consumers in wealthier GCC countries and Israel are much less prone to using counterfeit or pirated software. Country Risks Our country risks scores for the IT sector assess key external factors that could affect a country's overall investment outlook and consequently the growth prospects for the IT sector. These factors include shortterm external and financial risk, trade bureaucracy, legal frameworks and corruption perception. The GCC countries and Israel all score higher than 60 (apart from Oman, on 59.2), mainly due to the favourable shortterm external risk factor scores and stronger corruption perception indices. Countries with lower scores all struggle with high levels of corruption and lack of transparency in trade bureaucracy and legal frameworks. The potential for oil prices to slide down to USD80 a barrel or lower over coming quarters is the biggest downside risk to our growth outlook for GCC countries' IT sectors. In most countries the government © Business Monitor International Page 31 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 remains the biggest spender on IT products and services, and a sharp decline in oil prices could result in reduced government spending on non-essential services. For Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the UAE and Qatar, BMI believes depressed oil prices would have limited impact on the IT market, as all they have enormous reserves and lower break even points for oil prices. Among those included in our IT RRI, Bahrain and Oman's governments are most likely to curb IT spending if lower oil prices are sustained, as they are both already expected to run fiscal account deficits in 2014, according to BMI forecasts. Outside the GCC, falling oil prices could also have an important impact on Nigeria's ability to implement IT projects; regardless of oil prices, the government will likely postpone some IT investments in favour of social development projects in the run-up to general elections in H115. The deterioration of the security situation in the Middle East, first with the eruption of violence between Israel and Gaza and then Islamic State's occupation of key cities in Iraq and Syria is a doubled edged sword for the IT sector. The elevated security risk has already affected investment inflows into various sectors in Iraq's economy, a trend that has also contributed to Lebanon's weakened industry rewards score. However, the heightened security risk will likely also encourage government and private institutions to bolster their IT security capabilities in order to insulate themselves from the increased security threats. Many global firms are already positioning themselves to take advantage of this opportunity by investing in various efforts to develop new solutions for the market. In July 2014 Microsoft and cloud services provider Akamai partnered to launch a cyber security-focused start-up accelerator programme in Israel, while several other companies have acquired local cyber security firms to bolster their capabilities. Table: MEA IT Risk/Reward Index, Q115 Industry rewards Country rewards Industry risks Country risks Overall IT score Rank Previous rank Israel 55.0 100.0 65.0 69.7 69.9 1 2 Qatar 57.5 100.0 55.0 67.7 69.4 2 1 UAE 52.5 90.0 60.0 68.3 65.4 3 3 Kuwait 45.8 100.0 40.0 66.7 62.2 4 4 Saudi Arabia 50.8 80.0 55.0 67.7 61.5 5 5 South Africa 61.7 45.0 45.0 59.1 55.1 6 6 Bahrain 28.3 85.0 57.5 61.8 51.7 7 7 Nigeria 65.0 35.0 45.0 44.0 51.5 8 8 Oman 33.3 70.0 52.5 59.2 49.3 9 9 Egypt 51.7 30.0 45.0 46.1 44.6 10 10 Ghana 38.3 35.0 40.0 48.8 39.6 11 12 Lebanon 25.0 65.0 20.0 41.5 37.2 12 11 Country © Business Monitor International Page 32 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 MEA IT Risk/Reward Index, Q115 - Continued Industry rewards Country rewards Industry risks Country risks Overall IT score Rank Previous rank Kenya 41.7 10.0 55.0 32.9 33.9 13 13 Average 46.7 65.0 48.8 56.4 53.2 Country Scores out of 100, with 100 the best. Scores are weighted as follows: 'Rewards' at 70%, of which Industry Rewards 65% and Country Rewards 35%; 'Risks' at 30%, of which Industry Risks 40% and Country Risks, 60%. The 'Rewards' score evaluates the size and growth potential of the IT market in any given state, and broader economic/socio-demographic characteristics in a country that affect the industry's development; the 'Risks' score evaluates industry-specific dangers and those emanating from the state's political/economic profile, based on BMI's proprietary Country Risk Indices, that could affect the realisation of anticipated returns. Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 33 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Market Overview Hardware BMI estimates Israel's IT hardware market declined by 2.6% in 2013 to ILS9.143bn. However, we expect it to return to growth in 2014 and forecast a CAGR of 3.0% over our five-year forecast from 2014 to 2018. In 2013 the value of hardware sales was squeezed by a weaker currency, price competition and the lower unit price of mid-range tablets hitting the market. Despite a slightly weaker private consumption outlook for 2014, BMI believes that increased take-up of tablets and the end of support to older Windows operating systems will boost sales throughout the year. As well as economic and IT market trends, the escalation of hostilities between Israel and Gaza in July poses a potential downside risk to the country's GDP growth for 2014. At the time of writing, BMI's country risk team had not yet altered its growth forecast of 3.2% for 2014, as bombing between Israel and Gaza had extended for less than a month, a period of time which historically has not affected Israel's GDP growth. Nevertheless, wider economic uncertainty means businesses are now investing more to increase flexibility and realise cost efficiencies rather than expand IT hardware capabilities. There should be growth areas, yet lower average prices have meant that revenue growth in most segments has lagged shipments. BMI expects Israel's real GDP growth to continue on its gradual downward trend, falling from 3.3% in 2013 to 3.2% in 2014. However, we forecast a return to growth beginning in 2015. Real private consumption growth and real government spending are expected to slow slightly in 2014, falling from 3.4% and 3.1% in 2013 to 3.1% and 2.6% in 2014, respectively. The decline in private consumption is owing to government austerity measures, such as the 1% rise in VAT implemented in June 2013. BMI expect that austerity measures will continue to have an impact on discretionary spending on items such as PCs and notebooks in 2014. This has an obvious impact on the growth potential of the IT market, as consumers consider reigning in their spending and government faces fiscal constraints on new investments. Despite the weak consumer outlook in Israel there are several factors which present an optimistic medium term outlook for continued hardware sales. The Israeli government has launched various initiatives to increase computer and internet penetration, such as Computer for Every Child, now morphing into 'Tablet for Every Child' according to Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, and 'Digital Israel', a proposed initiative to streamline the digitisation of public sector services, such as education, healthcare and social services. The level of support, however, has been criticised by some industry insiders as too low. Between its launch in 1995 and June 2013, the Computer for Every Child initiative reportedly distributed 55,000 computers in around 2,000 localities, representing a tiny fraction of total hardware sales in Israel. Industry © Business Monitor International Page 34 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 stakeholders see Digital Israel essentially as a duplication of its Government Computing Center. The centre was established in February 2012 and operates under the auspices of the Ministry of Finance, with many of the same goals as Digital Israel. However, Carmela Avner, Israel's first chief information officer who headed the centre, announced her resignation in December 2013 owing to the body's lack of power to implement digital initiatives. Therefore, BMI expects upgrades to new systems, Israel's vibrant local start-up and IT research & development markets, and purchases of personal computing devices to remain the bulk of market sales. Mobile computing devices including tablets, slimline notebooks, ultrabooks and hybrids present a key growth opportunity for vendors as consumers increasingly complement household desktop and laptops with more easily transportable devices. Although tablet computers took longer to reach mass popularity in Israel than other mature ICT markets, we expect demand to strengthen from 2014, further supported by an improving private consumption outlook. Meanwhile, the end of all support for Windows XP in April 2014 and of mainstream support for Windows 7 in January 2015 is expected to result in higher sales of the Windows 8 OS in the retail and enterprise markets. In the retail market Windows 8 will deepen the tablet and hybrid PC markets, while in the enterprise sector the new OS should trigger computer hardware tenders previously delayed because of weakened economic growth. The launch of Windows 8 in Israel coincided with the launch of the Surface tablet and a new suite of mobile handsets using Windows Mobile. Former Microsoft CEO, Steve Ballmer, began an international promotional tour for the new operating system in Israel in November 2012. © Business Monitor International Page 35 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Hardware Market 2011-2018 10,000 7,500 5,000 2,500 0 2011 2012 2013 2014e Personal computer sales, ILSmn 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Servers sales, ILSmn e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: BMI Evolving Form Factors The Israeli IT market is relatively mature, but BMI estimates that hardware will still account for 39.5% of the total market in 2014 (excluding communications hardware). Prior to 2012, notebooks were the fastestgrowing segment of the market, although as recently as 2008 desktops still took around two-thirds of unit sales. In 2010-2011, however the share of desktops declined precipitously, and then in 2012 there was a shift from notebooks to tablets as the fastest growing segment of the market. BMI forecasts notebooks and tablets will account for 78% of total PC sales in Israel in 2014, up from 60% in 2009. This trend of preference for mobility is expected to continue over the 2014-2018 forecast period. Despite its declining share of sales, however, the desktop sector is still significant, largely due to business and government end-users. Although take-up of tablets has been relatively slow in Israel, the country's consumers have embraced the smartphone. According to a Google survey from June 2013, around 57% of Israelis had a smartphone. This chimes with BMI's estimate that 3G subscriptions accounted for around 65% of Israel's total mobile subscriber base at the end of 2013, forecast to rise to 71.7% in 2014, with © Business Monitor International Page 36 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 mobile penetration reaching around 127%. The competition from mobile devices is driving innovation in notebook and tablet design, as slim-line and hybrid devices are increasingly the centre-piece of Windows vendors product ranges. The tablet market in Israel has been dominated by Apple. Although Apple has faced tough competition from a broadening pool of tablet vendors, it managed to maintain its dominance of Israel's tablet market in 2013; a position we expect it to hold on to, at least for the duration of 2014. Data from Statcounter show that iOS, run on Apple's tablets, accounted for 71.7% of all tablet browsing traffic in Israel in September 2014, down by 7.6pps y-o-y. By contrast, Google's Android OS, which is used on Samsung, Asus and Google's own Nexus range, accounted for 27.9% of tablet browsing traffic, up by 8.0pps y-o-y. Although Statcounter data suggest that Apple devices remain by far the most popular among Israeli consumers, IDC estimated that Apple's share of tablet sales dropped considerably in 2013 to 31.4%, down from 49.1% a year earlier. Both data support the trend of a widening range of Android devices - including the Kindle Fire from Amazon, the Nexus 7 and 10 and Samsung's Galaxy Tab range (all launched in 2013) beginning to make a dent in Apple's market share. Statcounter data suggest that Samsung has been the driving force behind the gradual erosion of Apple's dominant market share, with its share of browsing traffic reaching 12.7% in September 2014, up from 8.7% a year earlier. All other vendors, including Asus, Acer, Google and Sony have browsing market shares below 5%, although Asus' rose from 2.3% in September 2013 to 4.7% a year later. One key threat posed to Apple by Android vendors came with the release of lower-cost tablets, which were predominantly the smaller 7" form factor. This contrasted with Apple's larger and more expensive iPad and the popularity of these smaller, cheaper devices, catalysed the development of Apple's own iPad Mini. Apple is set to face competition throughout 2014 from rival Android vendors that will continue to offer consumers a wider choice in terms of price and size, as well as specifications and features. The gap between the strategies of some of the leading players is also worth noting. On the one hand Apple and Samsung are hardware vendors and look to profit from the sale of devices, while on the other side Google and Amazon are services firms and offer tablets almost at cost. The strategies of services firms (combined with low cost OEM tablets from China) will likely put pressure on the margins of hardware centric vendors in the medium term. However, the tablet market remains relatively undeveloped in Israel's hardware sector, which is heavily dominated by Windows machines. When looking at the combined tablet and desktop/laptop computer market, iOS and Android accounted for just 3.3% and 1.3% of total PC browsing traffic, respectively, in © Business Monitor International Page 37 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 September 2014. (This is nevertheless up from 2.6% and 0.9% of browsing traffic a year earlier.) The event with the largest impact on Israel's PC market was the launch of Windows 8 in October 2012, which enabled Windows vendors to introduce touch devices; a number of tablets were released throughout 2013 and 2014. The addition of more vendors and another touch OS has added to competition in the market and put further downward pressure on prices. Another significant development is the medium term impact on innovation and form factors. Windows has a traditional strength in productivity use cases and software, with the OS being central to the enterprise market and Microsoft's ubiquitous Office Suite. There is therefore an opportunity for vendors to leverage this strength over rival iOS and Android devices by designing tablets with strong productivity functionality alongside the passive media consumption features. Early examples have been hybrid devices such as Microsoft's own Surface (RT & Pro), Hewlett-Packard's Envy and Lenovo's Yoga and Helix. Although design innovation has some way to go, and prices of hybrids will need to decline, the multi-use device has scope to capture a share of the tablet market by offering a stronger value proposition to consumers while not compromising on user experience. Another device category that should receive a boost from the launch of Windows 8 is the ultrabook, a higher-performance notebook designed to compete with Apple's MacBook. High prices limited initial popularity of these devices, and vendors subsequently focused on releasing low-end ultrabooks. The success of lower cost Windows 8 powered PCs is reflected in the latest Statcounter data, which show that Window 8 and Window 8.1 accounted for almost 13% of browsing traffic in Israel in September 2014, up 6.5ppts from 6.4% a year earlier. By comparison, Mac OSX's share of browsing traffic increased by 1.2ppts, to 3.9% over the same period. © Business Monitor International Page 38 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Israel PC Browsing Traffic By OS (%) And Y-o-Y Change (pps) September 2014 Source: Statcounter Vendor Performance The Israeli PC market has undergone significant changes in terms of market shares. In the PC market, the top three vendors, HP, Lenovo and Dell, had enjoyed a combined market share approaching 50%, but while Lenovo has gone from strength to strength, HP and Dell have been hit by competition from Asus and Samsung - as well as the shift to tablets. Most PC market growth in 2012 was driven by the mobile PC segment, and in fact notebook sales declined and growth was solely driven by tablets according to research from IDC. IDC's data for 2012 show that laptop sales declined 16.4% from 2011 to 2012, falling to around 427,000, in contrast to a 20.2% increase in tablet sales to around 226,000. In the laptop market Lenovo leapt to top spot with a market share of 21.2%, overtaking HP and Dell. In second position was Asus with 16% market share, up from 12.2% in 2011, also overtaking HP and Dell which both had 15.2% market share in 2012. Based on these figures BMI estimates Lenovo and Asus achieved 8.8% and 9.7% growth in laptop unit sales respectively, standing in stark contrast to the 25.6% and 40.3% respective declines in laptop unit sales for HP and Dell. © Business Monitor International Page 39 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Chinese giant Lenovo has built its strong position in the Israeli market following its purchase of IBM's PC unit in 2005, and in 2012 the company continued to increase its investment into the country. In 2012, Lenovo claimed that it had top spot in the commercial laptop market in the country, and that it was the second largest PC vendor overall. Acquisitions and strategic investments are part of Lenovo's strategy to consolidate its position in the Israeli market, and in February 2012 the vendor announced that it would invest in Vertex Venture Capital's new venture capital fund. The investment is aimed at helping Lenovo to build a solid R&D base in the country, with priority areas including enterprise IT, infrastructure and greentech, and digital media technology and applications. Lenovo is far from the only multinational PC vendor to be increasing its R&D investment in Israel. In 2012 Apple opened a research centre in Haifa and in December 2013 it opened its third Israeli research centre in Ra'anana. In September 2014 Lenovo's Senior Vice President met with hundreds of Israeli start-ups and suggested that the company was considering establishing an R&D centre in the country. Software BMI forecasts Israeli software spending to increase to ILS5.87bn in 2014, up 6.2% y-o-y. We expect growth in the software segment to accelerate, with a CAGR forecast of around 3.8% over the five years to 2018. In the past few years, there has been a pick-up in demand for systems and upgrades in public and private sectors, with investments by government organisations such as the Israeli Ministry of Defense and Israeli Police, and from utilities leader Israel Electric Company. Much of this growth is related to increasing use of cloud services and related rising demand for security services. In 2013, leading software vendors in the Israeli market reported steady, single-figure growth, much in line with our forecast. Leading Israeli software and services group Formula Systems announced that its revenues were up by 7% y-o-y in 2013. However group company Matrix, which derives most of its revenues from the Israeli market, experienced a decline in its revenues and profits in 2013, due largely to seasonal factors. With seasonal factors no longer an issue, Matrix reported improved performance in the first two quarters of 2014. (See Matrix Company Profile for further details.) Opportunities for software vendors in Israel exist across a range of sectors; from government to energy, financial services, telecoms and utilities. Major customers for software solutions in Israel include large and medium enterprises such as commercial banks, loan and mortgage banks, credit card companies, insurance companies, telecoms service providers, hi-tech companies, and the Israeli Defense Forces, government ministries and public agencies. Large organisations investing in SAP-based systems included the Meitav Regional Water and Sewage Corporation and Israel Direct Insurance (IDI). © Business Monitor International Page 40 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Meanwhile, the SME segment, the mainstay of the Israeli business sector, has emerged in recent years as an important growth area for enterprise systems. Spending on enterprise solutions should continue to grow steadily, with reviving or emerging areas of opportunity including security, CRM solutions and business intelligence. However, in the current economic climate, vendors will continue to pitch the efficiency gains potentially offered by these applications. Software Market 2011-2018 10,000 7,500 5,000 2,500 0 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Software sales, mn e/f = BMI estimate/forceast. Source: BMI Migrations to the Windows 8 operating system are believed to have had a positive impact on 2013 sales, despite business caution and the fact that the pre-launch publicity for Windows 8 was more low-key than for its predecessor Windows 7. Microsoft touted the touchscreen capabilities of Windows 8 and Q412 saw the release of a new wave of Windows 8 tablets and notebooks. A large portion of Israeli computer users have switched away from Windows XP, which dropped as a share of browsing traffic from 21.6% to 13.7% between September 2013 and September 2014, to Windows 8/8.1, which saw its share increase by 6.4ppts to 13.0% over the same timeframe. Nevertheless, Windows 7 remains by far the most popular OS, accounting for 62.2% of browsing traffic in September 2014, nearly unchanged y-o-y according to Statcounter data. BMI believes the trend will continue throughout our forecast period, with consumers and businesses only gradually migrating to the Windows 8/8.1 OS. © Business Monitor International Page 41 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Current areas of enterprise demand include management of Microsoft systems and servers, as well as systems management, basic data management, firewalls, enterprise resource planning (ERP) implementation and CRM. The sheer volume of data that enterprises must now handle as a result of device proliferation is fuelling investments in business analytics. In May 2013, Arad Group, a world leader in water meter technology, announced a partnership with IBM to help customers and water utilities manage resources more efficiently through use of big data and analytics technology. The analytics technology was developed by IBM in Israel. The security software segment is one of the fields with the greatest opportunity in Israel, potentially worth hundreds of millions of dollars over the medium term as awareness of security issues grows in tandem with the rise of cloud computing. Owing to the country's geopolitical situation, Israeli companies, organisations and the government are highly sensitive to cyber threats, and local IT firms have responded to the heightened demand by developing some of the world's most advanced IT security software. BMI believes research and spending is likely to continue across all software segments, although with security content and threat management remaining the current priorities. In October 2012 Israel's Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu announced that the government was working to create a 'digital Iron Dome' to protect vital infrastructure from hackers and viruses (the Iron Dome is Israel's anti-rocket defence system). This included the establishment of the National Cyber Bureau to defend the nation against computer terrorism. This policy should see vendors win public contracts, while also serving to focus the minds in the private sector, although at the time of writing no major contracts had been publicly announced. In October 2014, Netanyahu announced further plans to establish a National Cyber Defense Authority, which will protect civilian cyberspace as well as vital security facilities. Due to its sensitive geopolitical position and supported by its well-educated population, Israel has a vibrant domestic cyber security market. Check Point and Imperva are listed companies, while in March 2013 Israeli security services company Incapsula, an Imperva subsidiary, was valued at around USD950mn after proving successful among SMEs. Incapsula provides high-end firewalls to assess incoming traffic and identify possible bugs. Incapsula was established in 2009, created by three Imperva employees. The growing emphasis of many multinational IT vendors on software and services revenues has led several of them to direct more investment into R&D at the Israeli market. In June 2014, Israeli security analytics company Fortscale announced that it raised USD10mn in funding from Intel Capital and Blumberg Capital to expand its R&D program. Also in June, cyber security start-up Hexadite announced a USD2.5mn in seed funding for its operations. © Business Monitor International Page 42 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 In July 2014, Microsoft, cloud services provider Akamai Technologies and Jerusalem Venture Partners (JVP) collaborated to work on a cyber security accelerator. The move is in line with Microsoft's effort to provide start-ups with a programme and market expertise to aid them in accelerating their business and to create milestones in cyber security. At the end of the programme, one of the cyber security start-ups will be provided with an investment of USD1mn. Earlier in 2014, IBM also announced plans to open an IT security centre in Beersheva, while Cisco and Lockheed Martin both announced plans to increase their investments in the development of the country's IT sector. Israel's strong reputation as a hotbed for innovative software development has made Israeli companies popular takeover targets for multinationals. In September 2013, IBM completed its acquisition of Israeli-US enterprise security firm Trusteer, for an estimated USD1bn. Trusteer's customers reportedly include seven of the top 10 US banks and nine of the top 10 UK banks. More recently, in April 2014 US-based Palo Alto Networks confirmed its acquisition of Tel Aviv-based Cyvera, which has developed software to protect computers running Windows software, including ATMs, from unknown, zero-day cyber attacks. Palo Alto did not confirm the value of the transaction, but industry experts estimated it at around USD200mn. Meanwhile, European enterprise software leader SAP is also looking to leverage the skills base of the Israeli market as it focuses on three key technology areas: mobile, in-memory computing and cloud computing. SAP is developing more mobile business applications that could be deployed across a variety of devices, including tablets. In-memory computing, a technology which SAP is developing through its HANA solution, is expected to revolutionise the way companies handle big-data. SAP Labs Israel has been at the forefront of SAP's work in this area, with more than 100 local developers participating in the development of the HANA in-memory solution. Israeli developers were also responsible for the creation of the company's Real Time Offer Management solution, which is currently being tested by French supermarket chain Casino. Given the current focus of many businesses on controlling costs, the pay-ondemand Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) model has grown in popularity and spread beyond the initial core application area of CRM. New cloud computing offerings and increased competition in this segment should fuel further demand from users. As well as cost savings, businesses will look to boost efficiency and increase flexibility of response to customer needs. Large businesses are most likely to put IT applications such as mail, phone systems and document management into the cloud. However, enterprise applications that require a high level of customisation, or which are subject to regulatory or data-sensitivity constraints, are more likely to stay on premise. In terms of verticals, the financial sector has been a mainstay of demand, with other key areas including defence and healthcare. IT spending from the financial services vertical has been positively impacted by regulatory reform and changes affecting banking and insurance in the wake of the global financial crisis. © Business Monitor International Page 43 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Such changes generated demand for specific IT solutions, often in a set time period. Israeli legislation passed in 2010 and 2011 increased Israeli Securities Authority regulatory supervision over the offering of investment services and administration of investment portfolios. This in, turn, increased demand for solutions for entities that became subject to such supervision. Similarly, defence spending on new systems is likely to be maintained, given increased security risks following eruption of violence between Israel and Gaza in June 2014 as well as the destabilising impact of Islamic State on the wider region. In April 2014, Israeli news portal Jerusalem Post reported that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) is developing its own cloud computing network, which it expects to launch by the end of 2014. The cloud computing platform will reportedly allow commanders to receive real-time intelligence on enemy targets and friendly forces from remote locations. The IDF is also implementing other IT solutions to strengthen its operations, such as a specialised training programme for open source technologies Python and Ruby on Rails. In August 2013, the IDF also launched an internal platform called Yohanan, which allows soldiers to use open-source software components created within the military organisation. Services The IT services segment is forecast to reach a value of ILS8.26bn in 2014 and this is expected to grow at a CAGR of 3.9% over BMI's forecast period to reach ILS10.64bn in 2018. In H114 vendors reported a continued flow of new projects in sectors such as government, financial services, homeland security and utilities. Key sectors such as government and financial services had driven a pick-up in growth in 2010 after demand was hit by a slowdown in 2009. Regulatory reforms in the wake of the economic crisis of late 2008 and 2009 proved a driver of IT spending in these sectors. Slow economic growth posed a challenge to Israeli market IT services vendors in 2013. However, demand for IT services has generally been healthy, according to leading vendors, with new projects across public sector, industrial and financial verticals. The defence and homeland security sector has also been solid. In H114, leading software vendor Matrix, which is part of the Formula Systems group and employs 6,500 people, reported revenues of ILS997.9mn, up 5.8% y-o-y from H113. Matrix, which offers custom software development services and sells solutions from international vendors, derives most of its revenues from the Israeli market. Matrix's chief rivals in its domestic market include fellow Israeli IT services giant Ness Technologies (whose local segment Ness Israel was acquired by Hilan Tech in June 2014) as well as Team-Malam, One-1, Taldor Computer Systems, the Elad Group and Yael. These local firms also compete with international players such as HP and IBM. International vendors in the Israeli market often work with local subcontractors. © Business Monitor International Page 44 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 The IT services market is affected by regulatory reform, which influences and drives demand in sectors such as; government, with much spending related to e-government targets; financial services, where an increase in regulatory supervision has necessitated new IT investments; and telecoms, where spending is driven by the roll-out of new platforms and services. In August 2012, Ness was awarded a 10-year contract from Israel's Ministry of Finance to establish and operate the country's new National Long-Term Savings and Insurance Exchange. The new exchange is expected to streamline work processes, and provide the public with information about the retirement savings and insurance plans on offer. So important is the project to Ness that the company will establish a dedicated subsidiary to develop and operate the National Exchange, including a service and support centre. IT Services Market 2011-2018 15,000 15 10,000 10 5,000 5 0 0 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Services sales, ILSmn (LHS) Cloud computing spending, % of IT market (RHS) e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: BMI Defence and government spending represent a significant component of Israeli IT demand and have some immunity to economic vicissitudes. The Ministry of Defence has awarded a number of multimillion-dollar IT contracts, including a USD10mn tender for a new command and control system and a data centre contract awarded to VMware in December 2013, which Jewish Business News valued around USD27mn. © Business Monitor International Page 45 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Growth is expected to reach a higher trajectory in the second half of our five-year forecast period. Key Israeli IT services spending verticals include the financial sector, where international regulatory compliance and structural and market reforms have driven substantial IT investment. The sector accounts for around 25% of total IT services spending, while the government accounts for another quarter. Along with defence, these two key sectors are likely to be a continued source of opportunity, because the factors driving spending in each case are less sensitive to the economic downturn. One potential demand driver will be organisations looking for help to utilise efficiencies from cloud computing, such as SaaS and Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS). Particular areas of opportunity for cloud computing include banking and retailing, as organisations in those fields look to save money on hardware investments. In 2011, vendors such as Alcatel-Lucent have continued to invest in new cloud computing facilities in Israel, leveraging the country's expertise. While large organisations still dominate, SMEs have also been investing more, representing a growth opportunity. Many SMEs are waking up to the need to compete through more direct investment in support and service infrastructures. Similar factors are driving an increase in demand for managed services among SMEs, which are keen to leverage the operational efficiencies offered by SaaS and IaaS solutions. In 2013 HP's IT services operations in Israel suffered a setback as communications equipment vendor ECI sued HP Israel for ILS38mn in April 2013, claiming HP did not meet the terms of an agreement to upgrade its computer systems. In 2010 ECI contracted HP to provide its computing requirements including maintenance support and upgrades in a deal worth USD120mn over 10 years. This made it one of the largest such contracts in Israel, and ECI became one of the first Israeli companies to switch to cloud computing and utilise a server farm in France. However, HP cancelled the contract in February 2013, claiming ECI had breached the contract and was in arrears. ECI claimed HP had failed to provide services promised, meeting none of the eight milestones it had set for April 2011 and the cloud computing element was only supporting 900 users, rather than ECI's 3,000 employees, as required. In May 2013, HP counter-sued ECI for ILS83mn for breach of contract. At the time of writing, there were no further news on developments in the court cases. Outsourcing Although Israel seemingly possesses many advantages as an outsourcing destination (in particular a technologically literate, linguistically skilled workforce and low labour costs relative to most developed countries), the country has failed to capitalise on these strengths. Aside from Israel's small size, security also weighs on the country's attractiveness as an outsourcing destination. However, the government began © Business Monitor International Page 46 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 promoting Israel to multinationals several years ago, which has resulted in a spate of call-centre construction projects. The work seems to be paying off, with Israel starting to emerge as a desirable location for packaged applications and localisation services. © Business Monitor International Page 47 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Trends And Developments Israel stands out as a major investment destination for IT software development in the Middle East. This is due to a combination of factors, including a relatively large defence budget, with a considerable proportion spent on IT products and solutions, a large pool of domestic skilled labour, and a high technologypenetration rate. Many of the biggest global technology firms run Israeli research centres, including Cisco, Microsoft, Google, Apple, IBM, Oracle, SAP, EMC, Motorola, HP, Facebook, and eBay. Intel Makes Record-Breaking Investment In Israel Intel is set to remain ingrained in the Israeli IT market over the long term, following news in April 2014 of plans to invest around USD6bn to upgrade its Kiryat Gat chip plant, according to a statement by Israel's Economics Minister, Naftali Bennett. The Israeli government approved the plan in September 2014, confirming that it will give Intel a grant of USD300mn over five years. Intel will also be allowed to pay a corporate tax rate of just 5% for a 10-year period. In exchange, by 2023 Intel will create an additional 1,000 jobs at the chip centre, which currently employs around 2,500 people. In February 2013 Intel Israel reported its exports more than doubled to USD4.6bn in 2012, from USD2.2bn in 2011. Over the same period Intel's Israeli workforce increased 10% to 8,500, as over the course of 2012 it invested USD1.1bn in Israel. Intel Israel says Intel Corporation has invested USD10.5bn in Israel over the past decade, and received USD1.3bn in Israeli government grants. It is estimated Intel accounts for 10% of Israel's total industrial exports, and one third of exports to China. Without the contribution of Intel, hightech exports would have declined by 10% in 2012, according to the company's own estimates. Israel As A Global Research And Innovation Hub In October 2014 global software security provider Kaspersky Lab announced plans to open a development centre in Israel in 2015. The centre will initially be small, with just six employees, but Kaspersky reportedly has plans to increase its R&D base in the country over time. Also in October, Spanish telecoms company Telefónica teamed up with Israel-based Van Leer Xenia Ventures (VLX Ventures) to invest in Israeli start-up companies. The focus will be on developing the Israeli start-up tech companies in the video, cloud computing, big data, smart homes, wearable technology and future communication sectors. The Israeli companies will be given investment capital along with the opportunity to scale their products to more than 300mn customers of Telefónica throughout the world. © Business Monitor International Page 48 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 In May 2014 French telecoms network equipment vendor Alcatel-Lucent announced plans to open a Bell Labs branch near Tel Aviv. The new unit will be based in Alcatel-Lucent's existing cloud facility in Kfar Saba and focus on further cloud research, in order to help the vendor's transition from telecoms generalist to specialised expertise in areas such as network virtualisation. In April 2014, IBM announced the launch of its Alpha Zone technology accelerator in Tel Aviv, which will recruit start-ups to grow technologies across several areas, including big data, cloud, mobile, security and the Internet of Things. IBM Israel's Country General Manager, Rick Kaplan, also stated that Alpha Zone could play an important role in supporting IBM's push to develop commercial applications for its Watson supercomputer. IBM will recruit start-ups for 24-week sessions, during which time they will provide office space, mentorship and exposure to investors, while allowing the businesses to retain the rights to their innovations. In February 2014, IBM also announced plans to open a Center of Excellence for Security and Protection of Infrastructure and Assets in collaboration with Ben-Gurion University in Beersheva, Israel. This follows IBM's acquisition of US-Israeli enterprise security firm Trusteer in September 2013. Trusteer's customers reportedly include seven of the top 10 US banks and nine of the top 10 UK banks. The value of the transaction was not revealed, but industry experts estimate that it was in the vicinity of USD1bn. In January 2014, Cisco announced plans to invest tens of millions of dollars into Israeli venture capital fund JVP. The main areas of focus for the fund are digital media, cyber security and storage technologies. The cyber security segment of the fund is expected to raise around USD120mn, which will be invested into working with the government and local start-ups to create a cyber-lab. In January 2014, Lockheed Martin and EMC Corporation announced a new partnership to establish a joint centre in Beersheva. EMC is a leading player in Israel's information security market, while Lockheed Martin has mainly operated in the aviation and defence products sector. This news followed the revelation that Lockheed Martin plans to compete in the tender for the IDF Intelligence Corp's Five Industries technology campus in the Negev and expand its computer services segment in Israel. © Business Monitor International Page 49 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Israeli Start-Ups Attract Global Attention IVC Research Center and KPMG Somekh Chaikin reported that 170 Israeli high-tech companies attracted USD701mn in funding during the quarter ended September 2014. Although this did not match total high-tech investments of USD928mn in Q214, it was well above average third quarter fund raising of USD545mn between 2011 and 2014. Moreover, IVC's research shows that investment in the country's hightech start-ups is on the rise in 2014, with Israeli companies having already raised USD2.3bn during 9M13, just shy of total fundraising of USD2.33bn during 2013. In July 2014, Qualcomm completed the acquisition of Israeli wireless gigabit chip developer Wilocity. Qualcomm has been working with Wilocity since 2008 to develop high-capacity and high speed chips for smartphones, tablets and other mobile devices. The financial terms of the deal were not reported, but industry experts estimated the value of the acquisition at USD300mn. In March 2014, US-based Palo Alto Networks confirmed the acquisition of privately held, Tel Aviv-based cyber security firm Cyvera. The financial terms of the acquisition were not confirmed, but industry experts expect the total value of the transaction was around USD200mn. Cyvera's software protects businesses from cyber security threats by blocking unknown, zero-day attacks on computers running Windows software. Palo Alto plans to expand the software for Apple computers and mobile devices running Android and iOS. Also in March 2014, US-based Secure Alert announced plans to acquire Israel-based GPS Global Tracking & Surveillance. The transaction was estimated at around USD11mn. The Israeli company specialises in developing technology for locating and tracking people and vehicles. On the back of the acquisition, Secure Alert intends to set up a research and development centre in Israel, following the lead of many global IT firms. In February 2014, Israeli data protection and management firm Varonis Systems launched its initial public offering (IPO) on Nasdaq. The company raised about USD106mn in the IPO, with a starting price of USD22 on 4.8mn shares. By the end of the first day of trading the company's share price had already doubled to USD44. Despite a strong start as a public company, by July 2014 Varonis' shares dropped down below their initial USD22 valuation. This may have been related to widening losses in Q114. In June 2013, Google acquired Israeli live mapping service Waze for USD966mn. Google intends to integrate Waze's traffic features and crowd-sourced data into its Google Maps platform. In June and August 2013, the US Fair Trade Commission (FTC) and the UK Office of Fair Trading (OFT) both undertook © Business Monitor International Page 50 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 investigations on whether the acquisition posed a threat to competition in the navigation applications segment. The two agencies approved the merger in October and November 2013, respectively. In March 2013 CA Technologies agreed to purchase Israeli app deployment and management company Nolio for USD40-42mn. Nolio provides software that automates application deployment and allows IT staff to maintain, manage and recover these enterprise applications. E-Services As part of its modernisation agenda, the government is also pressing ahead with various other strands of its e-government project. Among other initiatives, there has been spending on computers in healthcare and the nationwide paperless court initiative. The e-government programme is leading to increased demand for computers, with the Israeli government reaching a supply agreement with Dell and HP. The government chose Microsoft search technology to power its government services portal, gov.il. In January 2014 the government of Israel announced it had signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Google, which will help the government improve its online services. Under the partnership, Google will promote the development of e-government services in the education, health and welfare sectors in cooperation with local start-ups. Google planned to do this by sharing its expertise and software in cloud computing and the Android OS with local developers. Israel also signed an MoU with the UK in March 2014 to develop digital services based on open source systems. This is an extension of the two countries' existing relationship in the IT sector, which includes the TeXchange programme which brings Israeli entrepreneurs to London to meet other entrepreneurs, investors and potential customers, and the UK's establishment of a Tech Hub in Israel in 2012. In 2012, Israel's Ministry of Finance launched a major new project to establish and operate the country's new National Long Term Savings and Insurance Exchange. The new exchange is expected to streamline work processes, and provide the public with information about the retirement savings and insurance plans on offer, including pension plans. The project was awarded to local company Ness Technologies, which will establish a dedicated subsidiary to develop and operate the National Exchange, including a service and support centre. When the system comes online, officials expect it to provide a boost to the economy, when hundreds of millions of shekels are freed up as pensions holders claim what is theirs. © Business Monitor International Page 51 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Regulatory Development Table: IT Regulatory Authorities Government Authority Ministry of Science, Technology and Space Minister Yaakov Peri Source: BMI The Ministry of Science, Technology and Space has undergone numerous name changes and received its current name in 2013. The ministry's responsibilities include forming a national science and technology policy, coordinating research areas and technological analysis and organisation. The main priorities for the ministry are as follows: ■ Establishing a national policy and priorities for R&D; ■ Developing scientific and technological infrastructure; ■ Establishing and strengthening foreign scientific relations; ■ Participating in the establishment of research centres, including regional R&D centres; ■ Participating in the development of scientific and technological human resources; ■ Increasing awareness of science within the public, especially the youth of Israel; ■ Developing digital infrastructure (facilitating access to information); ■ Consulting the government and its offices in the area of science and technology. Cyber Security In October 2012 Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the government was working to create a 'digital Iron Dome' to protect vital infrastructure from hackers and viruses (the Iron Dome is Israel's anti-rocket defence system). This includes the establishment of the National Cyber Bureau to defend the nation against computer terrorism. The announcement follows a series of cyber attacks linked to political tensions in the Middle East, including attacks on Israeli institutions, as well as Saudi oil companies and banks in the UAE. In January 2013 Netanyahu opened a national programme to train teenagers in the skills of cyber security. The programme accepts high achieving students for a three-year training program to intercept malicious © Business Monitor International Page 52 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 attacks. The government is hoping the programme will deliver the skilled professionals needed to meet escalating cyber threats in the region and globally. In January 2014, the National Cyber Bureau announced that it intends to launch a task force which will help consumers and businesses respond to cyber attacks. This cyber emergency response team will provide assistance to individuals and companies that fall victim to cyber attacks, as well as facilitate the sharing of information pertaining to cyber threats. Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu announced in September 2014 that the country would further bolster its cyber defense capabilities with the establishment of a National Cyber Defense Authority (NCDA). The new body will protect civilian cyberspace as well as vital security facilities, in order to respond to the government's concerns over Iran's enhanced cyber warfare abilities. The NCDA will work in collaboration with the existing Israel National Cyber Bureau. Government Approves FTTH Build In January 2013 Israel's government agreed to allow a consortium of privately owned companies to join forces with the state electricity utility to begin building the country's first alternative next-generation fibreoptic backbone. The roll-out should increase competition in high-speed internet access and lower prices opening up new opportunities for IT vendors in terms of devices sales and services to consumers. In June 2013, a consortium led by Sweden's ViaEuropa won a tender for a fibre optic communications infrastructure joint venture with the Israel Electric Corporation (IEC). The joint venture, 60% owned by the ViaEuropa consortium and 40% owned by the IEC will build, operate and manage the new 25,000km fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) network. The aim is for construction on the multi-billion shekel network to begin before the end of 2013, and for coverage to reach two-thirds of the population by 2020. ViaEuropa will own a 50% share of the consortium, with four Israeli investors - BATM Advanced Communications and Rapac Communications, Tamares Telecom and Bynet Data Communications - each owning a 12.5% share. Government To Invest In Dual-Use R&D In January 2013 the Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Defence and Ministry of Industry, Trade and Labour announced a joint budget of ILS30mn for R&D for technologies with civilian and military applications. Each ministry contributes one-third of the funds to the programme. The programme has already identified 17 projects of potential dual-use, including some software research. © Business Monitor International Page 53 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Background All major vendors have a direct presence in Israel, employing substantial numbers of staff. For example, IBM has its only IBM Global Services regional subsidiary in Petach Tikva and employs around 2,000 staff at its Haifa Labs and various IBM facilities in Rehovot and Jerusalem. HP has as many as 4,000 employees and offers services and support through its subsidiary HP-OMS. Other vendors such as Oracle and EDS also have a sizeable presence. Foreign direct investment (FDI) first started to play a key role in Israel's economy in the mid-1990s as the country's high-tech sector underwent a rapid expansion. As well as the opening up of the financial and telecoms sectors, the high-tech sector succeeded in attracting large FDI inflows. The government's policy made foreign high-tech companies eligible for government grants covering 38% of the cost of new research and development facilities. Today, Israel has more offshore R&D centres of US high-tech companies than any other country. Local companies also have a significant presence in the Israeli IT market, with seven of the top 10 IT services firms being Israeli. Major players include Matrix, Ness Technologies and Malam Group, with Israel typically accounting for 40-50% of their revenue. Table: Government Initiatives Initiative Details Gov@Net Government intranet A cross-government intranet planned to connect more than 80 governmental networks and hundreds of institutes. The implementation will create the largest Israeli IP-VPN. The project will allow efficient internal communication and resource sharing. Mercava Government ERP Mercava is the largest ever IT project implemented in Israel. It will gradually replace the assortment of unique legacy systems currently operating in governmental bodies with a central, unified enterprise resource planning (ERP) system running on SAP system software. This project will create a unified language for cross-government activities. Government EIP This project is intended to promote enterprise portals within the government. Since a cross-government portal will be based on information received from the different bodies, the first step involves the construction of a ministry-level portal. This portal will draw information from Merkava, ministry-specific operational systems and intra-government shared resources. Tehila Government ISP The Government ISP project has been operational since 1998, providing essential infrastructure for publicgovernment communication. To date, 60% of the governmental bodies have voluntarily joined the project. Shoham - Ecommerce infrastructure and service A central e-commerce service allowing citizens and companies to access a uniform interface to carry out a variety of payments and purchases, including the payment of taxes, fees, fines (VAT, vehicle and driving licence fees, traffic fines), and the purchase of tangible goods (government publications). The service processed more than ILS250mn in its first year. © Business Monitor International Page 54 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Government Initiatives - Continued Initiative Details Lehava project Group of initiatives to help close digital divide. Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 55 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Competitive Landscape International Companies Table: Intel Address Matam Bldg 6, PO Box 1659, Matam Industrial Park, Haifa, HA, 31015 Company History Intel Israel was originally founded in Haifa in 1974 and has grown to become one of the most important enterprises in the country. Intel Israel now employs over 8,500 people, making it the country's largest private sector employer. Intel states it invested USD10.5bn in Israel in the decade to 2012, and received USD1.3bn in Israeli government grants. It is estimated Intel accounted for 10% of Israel's total industrial exports in 2012, and onethird of exports to China. Without the contribution of Intel, high-tech exports would have declined by 10% in 2012, according to Intel estimates. Services And Products Intel operates four design centres and two fabrication plants in Israel, including the Fab28 plant at Kiryat Gat, Intel's largest producer of 22nm chips. Intel's Israeli operations have centred on the development and production of microprocessors for desktops, notebooks, mobile devices and workstations. Intel teams also work on connectivity products and security technologies. Milestones for Intel's Israeli operations include the development of the Pentium M microprocessor, in 2003, a major catalyst for the boom in notebook sales, and the Merom in 2006 which helped boost Intel's presence in the server market. The Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge family of processors were also designed and manufactured in Israel, with Sandy Bridge becoming the fastest selling product in Intel's history. Company Developments ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ In April 2014 Israel's Economics Minister, Naftali Bennett, stated that Intel will invest around USD6bn to upgrade its Kiryat Gat chip plant. This is the largest single investment by a foreign company in Israel. The Israeli government approved the plan in September 2014, confirming that it will give Intel a grant of USD300mn over five years. Intel will also be allowed to pay a corporate tax rate of just 5% for a 10-year period. In exchange, Intel will create an additional 1,000 jobs at the chip centre, which currently employs around 2,500 people, by 2023. In October 2013 Intel Capital revealed it spent USD65mn investing in 16 new companies across nine countries - including the acquisition of three Israeli technology firms - interactive video platform Interlude, hybrid storage provider Reduxio Systems and chip simulation acceleration provider Rocketick. The total investment in the Israeli firms was USD10mn. Intel agreed to take over the chip manufacturing plant owned by Micron in Kiryat in September 2013. Israel had originally built the Micron plant in 1993, before moving to the larger adjacent Fab28 facility, and leasing the original plant to Micron. Intel plans to retain most of Micron's 800 staff. Intel is expected to refurbish the plant to make it capable of manufacturing 10 nanometre chips, although the company will initially manufacture NOR flash memories for Micron. In May 2012 Intel established the Collaborative Research Institute for Computational Intelligence in Israel, which will focus on applying machine learning, brain-inspired computation and advanced computer architecture to software. In 2011 the government offered Intel an ILS1bn grant to build a major new plant, and it has been reported that the government may provide a grant of ILS300-400mn for the upgrade of the Micron plant. Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 56 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Local Companies Table: Amdocs Address 8 Hapnina St, Ra'anana, 43000 Company History Amdocs was founded in Israel in 1982 as an offshoot of Golden Pages, the business phone directory company. After acquisition by SouthWestern Bell Corporation in 1985 the centre of gravity shifted to the US, but Amdocs maintains development facilities in Israel. It listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1998 and by 2013 was the market leader in telecommunication billing services, with more than 20,000 employees and services customers in over 50 countries. Services And Products Amdocs provides software and IT services for communications, media and entertainment providers. Its major products - which it develops, implements and manages - include business support systems such as billing, CRM and operations support. It also provides network control products and managed services. In Israel, Amdocs operations centre on the AT&T Foundry innovation centre (one of three globally), opened in 2011, which Amdocs runs in collaboration with AT&T. AT&T development tracks include mHealth, HTML5, co-location services and application programming interfaces. Amdocs also provides managed services to Israeli operator Cellcom and provides support for VAS launches for Pelephone. In October 2014 Amdocs launched several new products, including a Network Cloud Service Orchestrator, which is a vendor-agnostic solution to activate complex services with virtual network functions (VNFs) from multiple vendors within days, a comparative short time frame. Company Developments ■ ■ ■ ■ Amdocs reported revenues of USD905.2mn for the quarter ended June 2014, up 0.6% q-o-q and 7.3% compared to the same period of 2013. GAAP income declined to USD109.8mn during the quarter, compared to USD119.6mn in the three months to June 2013. In July 2014 Cellcom Israel awarded Amdocs a contract to upgrade its customer relationship management operations. Cellcom has been an Amdocs customer for more than 10 years. In April 2014 Amdocs announced the extension of its contract with US-based carrier Sprint, an upgraded contract for its Convergent Charging and Billing solution with Far EastTone Telecommunications in Taiwan and a contract for a wireline transformation project with Telefonica Argentina. In March 2013 Amdocs and SingTel announced the opening of their joint development centre in Israel. The SingTel L!feLabs@Israel is targeting the local community of entrepreneurs and developers as a driver of innovation at group level. In 2012 Amdocs expanded into the Latin American market by opening a Centre For Development and Operations in Brazil. Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 57 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Table: Check Point Address 5 Ha'Solelim Street, Tel Aviv 67897, Israel Company History Check Point was founded in 1993, and by 2013 had around 2,900 employees worldwide. It has headquarters in Tel Aviv, Israel, and San Carlos in California. Check Point developed one of the first firewall products, and was named firewall market leader in 1996. Its patented Stateful Inspection Technology, on which its first firewall product was built, continues to be the foundation for network security technology in 2013. Check Point was also one the first companies to develop Virtual Private Network (VPN) products. Services And Products Check Point provides software and combined software and hardware for IT security. The fields in which it operates include network, endpoint, virtualisation, mobile and data security, as well as security management services. Its primary products are enterprise network security, which are deployed on x-86 hardware made by Crossbeam and Hewlett-Packard. Its products are secured with 35 US patents, and a further 19 pending US patents. Check Point products are sold to large enterprises and SMEs, with 100% of Global 100 companies and 98% of Global 500 companies among its customers. Company Developments ■ ■ ■ Check Point reported total revenue of USD370mn for the quarter ended September 2014, up 8% compared to the same period of 2013. Non-GAAP net income reached USD177mn compared to USD169mn in Q313. In March 2014 Check Point announced a partnership with VMware to make its private cloud security protection solutions interoperable with VMware infrastructure. Check Point again received favourable ratings in Gartner's Magic Quadrant series in 2013. It was positioned in the leaders quadrant for enterprise network firewall for the sixteenth consecutive year, mobile data protection for the seventh consecutive year and unified threat management for the third consecutive year. In May 2013 Check Point received US Department of Defense approval for its products, as well as meeting the Federal Information Processing Standard in the US. Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 58 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Table: Imperva Address 125 Menachem Begin Street, Tel-Aviv 67010, Israel Company History Imperva was founded in 2002 with offices in Israel and the US. By 2013 it had over 550 employees with customers across 75 countries including 337 members of the Global 2000 companies and over 250 government agencies and departments. It is growing rapidly by focusing on data centre security. Imperva reports that 94% of compromised data involved servers, but security spending has not traditionally addressed the data centre. Its target is to capture growth as enterprises move more of their security spending to their data centres. Imperva launched an IPO on NASDAQ in 2011, raising USD90mn. Imperva's software was used by more than 2,600 customers in over 75 countries in 2013, including global telecoms operators, US banks and government agencies. Services And Products Imperva develops software and services for the protection of databases and enterprise applications by focusing on data centre security. It sells products including data security, monitoring and web application security globally. In April 2013 Imperva released its latest data centre security product SecureSphere 10.0 which uses the crowd-sourced ThreatRadar Reputation service. Its main verticals include the public sector, healthcare, energy, financial services, insurance, retail and e-commerce. In October 2014 Imperva launched new security hardware products SecureSphere X8510 and SecureSphere X10K, which bring an additional layer of security to physical and virtual data centres and have throughput speeds of 5Gbps and 10Gbps, respectively. It also launched pay-as-you-go pricing for its SecureSphere Web Application Firewall (WAF), which is available on Amazon Web Services Marketplace. Company Developments ■ ■ ■ In February 2014 Imperva announced the acquisition of Isreali cloud-based security firms Skyfence, for USD60mn, and Incapsula, for an undisclosed sum. The announcement also coincided with the release of Imperva's SecureSphere Web application firewall for Amazon's cloud-based web services. In March 2013 Israeli security services company Incapsula, an Imperva subsidiary, was valued at around USD950mn after proving successful among small-and medium sized businesses. Incapsula provides high-end firewalls to assess incoming traffic and identify possible bugs. In February 2013 Royal Bank of Canada highlighted Imperva as a potential acquisition target for global giant IBM, which is looking to bolster its position in the security products market. Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 59 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Table: Retalix Address 9 Dafna Street P.O. Box 2282 Ra'anana, Israel 43662 Company History Retalix was founded in 1982 and is headquartered in Ra'anana, Israel, with North American headquarters in Plano, Texas. Retalix started as a developer of point-ofsale software solutions for grocery retailers. Since the late 1990s, Retalix has expanded its solutions and services offerings to cater to a wide range of retailers, developing supply chain management solutions for large chains of department stores and supermarkets. Retalix has a customer base of approximately 70,000 stores in more than 50 countries worldwide. Between 1994 and 2013 Retalix traded on both NASDAQ and the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. NCR Corporation, a global transaction services software provider, acquired Retalix in February 2013 through a cash purchase price of USD30 per share, implying a total value of around USD650mn. The company's shares were subsequently delisted from both stock exchanges. Services And Products Retalix's software solutions, which it develops, implements and manages, cover point-of-sale (PoS) and sales channels, and include m- and e-commerce, store management, customer and marketing solutions such as loyalty programmes, merchandising and supply chain and logistics. In 2012, Retalix worked with Microsoft to launch its latest in-store retail software, Retalix 10 Store Suite, as Software-as-a-Service (SaaS). Retalix's customers include many top international retailers, such as Tesco, Carrefour, Sainsbury's, PetroChina and BP. Company Developments ■ ■ ■ ■ In July 2014 Retalix started laying off of around 100-150 employees in its Ra'anana office, out of an estimated total employee base of 1,000. The lay-offs are reportedly linked to the cancellation of a contraction with US-based retailer Target, which was unsatisfied with Retalix software installed in its Canadian office. In January 2014 Retalix added a Customer and Marketing Suite to its Retalix 10 SaaS retail platform. In November 2012, Woolworths signed a five-year managed services agreement with Retalix. The deal covers Woolworths' 3,000 locations and 25,000 PoS in Australia and New Zealand. Retalix acquired Cornell Mayo Associates, a provider of store systems for top tier department stores, in September 2012. Cornell Mayo software solutions were deployed in 4,000 stores and its customer base included seven of the top 21 department stores in the US. Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 60 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Company Profile Ness SWOT Analysis Strengths Weaknesses ■ Acquisition by Hilan Tech will see new investment into operations. ■ Large international presence and wide client base. ■ Several technology centres in India, one of the fastest growing IT markets. ■ Acquisition by private equity rather than a technology company in 2010 limited access to scale and expertise in the IT field. Opportunities ■ Slow revenue growth. ■ Acquisition by Hilan Tech will allow greater focus on core businesses and core domestic market of Israel. ■ Major deals with banks and governments provide growth. ■ Acquisition of Imano offers strong potential for moving into the mobile app segment. ■ Onshore presence in the US opens doors to high value mobility and analytics software development opportunities for corporates. Threats ■ Israel's IT market is competitive, with several players. ■ Software development and offshoring are areas of intensifying competition, as vendors in emerging markets attempt to move up the value chain. Company Overview Ness Technologies is an Israeli company and global provider of end-to-end IT services and solutions. The company was founded in 1999. On June 10 2011, Ness announced it would be acquired by an affiliate of Citi Venture Capital International (CVCI) in an allcash transaction valued at approximately USD307mn. Ness announced on October 11 2011 that the acquisition was finalised. The company subsequently delisted and ceased trading on the Nasdaq Global Select Market and the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. Since the acquisition, Ness has rarely publicised new contract wins or made announcements relating to the progress on existing contracts. © Business Monitor International Page 61 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 In June 2014 Hilan Tech announced plans to acquire Ness Israel, a subsidiary of Ness Technologies, for USD42mn.Ness specialises in outsourcing, systems integration and application development, software and consulting as well as quality assurance and training. Ness acquired Gilon Business Insight, a business intelligence provider, in H110. During 2010, the company also announced plans to sell its software distribution business in Europe. The company had already signed an agreement to sell its Asia Pacific integration and application development operations. Ness announced it would continue to provide outsourcing services from its development centres in India, Bangalore, Mumbai and Hyderabad, and from its centres in Israel, Eastern Europe and Asia Pacific. With 7,000 employees, Ness has customers in 20 countries and partners with more than 100 software and hardware vendors worldwide. In 2010, the company reported revenue of USD571.8mn, with Israel accounting for 37% of revenue, North America 33%, Europe 28% and the rest of the world just 2%. Ness Technologies has since been divided into four main businesses: Ness Software Engineering Services (SES), Ness Central & Eastern Europe, Ness TSG, which offers IT services for defence and security, and Ness Israel. Strategy Prior to Hilan's acquisition of Ness Israel, the company's plans included a focus on improving margins in its Israeli business and reducing non-core staff, with the aim of creating profitability at the company. Having already divested stakes in non-core operations such as in Asia Pacific and Europe, the company's operations are more focused. The acquisition of Imano in 2012 show's Ness' ability to respond to global trends, increasing its ability to cater to mobile device growth and the demand for products that work on wireless devices. As well as expanding its presence in mobility and analytics, Ness is also opening new offices to offer a range of onshore, nearshore and offshore services. Hilan Tech and Ness Israel have not yet elaborated their strategy once the acquisition is complete. Once it becomes clear we will include it in subsequent updates to the Ness Israel company profile. Financial Results Following its acquisition by CVCI, Ness no longer reports separate financial results. These data are provided for reference only. The company has not reported annual or quarterly revenue since 2011, but is widely reported in Israeli media to be struggling financially. Ness reported revenue of USD141mn in Q211, with just 1% annualised growth. This was up 3% from Q111. Revenue from the Israeli market accounted for 42% of the total, and Ness reported that demand in its market was solid across key verticals such as industrial, government, financial services and defence. Improved results in 2010 © Business Monitor International Page 62 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 followed a 17% decline in full-year 2009 revenue compared with 2008, although around one third of this was due to foreign currency effects. Annual revenues for 2009 were reported at USD547mn. Israel accounted for around 42% of Ness' revenue. Among major developments in H111 was a USD75mn five-year agreement that Ness signed with global finance leader Barclays Capital to develop a high-tech research and development centre in Israel. The outsourced software engineering model was hailed by Ness as pioneering. The company's top 20 customers accounted for only 37% of the company's Q211 revenue, with the largest customer accounting for about 5%. Company Developments In June 2014, Hilan Tech, an Israeli firm which specialises in human resource management services, announced that it will acquire Ness Israel from CVCI for USD42mn. Hilan stated that the net sale would be for USD32mn, in order to create working capital of USD10mn for Ness Israel, which has reportedly struggled over the last several years. When the deal closes, Ness Israel CEO Shachar Efal will acquire 10% of the company. Although Ness Israel does not dominate the country's IT market as much as it once did, it will still massively boost Hilan Tech's position in the market. Ness Israel's turnover reportedly reached around ILS700mn in 2013, compared to Hilan's revenue of ILS430mn. Meanwhile, Ness Israel has a total workforce of 2,700, compared to Hilan's employee base of around 500. In March 2014, Ness became the first unionised high-tech company in Israel. More than a third of the company's employees joined the Histadrut labour federation, in an attempt to protect their interests against company downsizing. In March 2013 Ness Technologies announced the opening of a new development centre in Pittsburgh in the US. The launch of the Pittsburgh Development Centre is part of Ness' strategy of building a strong onshore presence to compliment its offshore and nearshore development centres in India, Eastern Europe, Singapore and Israel. The Pittsburgh centre will specialise in mobility and business analytics, as well as providing a full spectrum of engineering services. The location was selected to provide proximity to US corporate locations, for better collaboration and flexibility of resources, as well as being close to major universities for hiring purposes. In December 2012, Ness announced its intended acquisition of UK-based Imano, a company that specialises in mobile strategy, design and development. The deal is aimed at improving Ness' ability to meet the mobility demand of its customers. Imano designs web applications and created mobile apps for a number of major brands in the UK. On September 14 2009, Ness Technologies launched its stock on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE), having received approval for the listing from TASE authorities. Ness Technologies common stock will continue to be listed on the NASDAQ exchange in the US and will remain subject to the rules and regulations of NASDAQ and the US Securities and Exchange Commission. Ness hoped the dual listing would increase its © Business Monitor International Page 63 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 visibility and status in the Israeli market, with almost a third of the company's business aimed at Israeli customers or delivered by an Israeli workforce. The listing came despite a series of disappointing quarterly results in 2009, which added up to a 17% decline in revenue compared with the previous year. The steepest declines in H109 were experienced by the company's Systems Integration and Application Development division, while Software Product Engineering continued to perform well. Contracts In August 2012 Ness announced a 10-year contract with the Israeli Ministry of Finance to create a new national long term savings and insurance exchange. So important is the project to Ness that the company established a dedicated subsidiary called SwiftNess to develop and operate the National Exchange, including a service and support centre. The new exchange is expected to streamline work processes and provide the public with information about the retirement savings and insurance plans on offer. The first phase of the project was scheduled to begin offering funds transfers and information transmission to insurance brokers and banks in Q213. Later developments will allow individuals and enterprises to access information in the exchange. In January 2011, Ness' software engineering unit became a partner for Pegasus Solutions. The two companies established an extended software development centre in Mumbai. Ness' Software Product Engineering division continued to be a strong performer in Q111, with a major boost from the software engineering outsourcing contract signed with Barclays Capital. In the same quarter, Ness' Commercial and Civilian business unit reported 4% annualised organic growth, with the biggest win being the USD17mn contract with Israel Electric Corporation. The Defence and Homeland Security unit was described as slightly behind plan with revenue, but reported strong operating margins, boosted by a big deal with the Israel Ministry of Defence. In Q111 one big win reported by Ness in the Israeli market in H111 was a USD17mn deal with Israel Electric Corporation, for which Ness will implement a range of SAP solutions and provide support over a five-year period. Other successes included a USD10mn deal with the Israel Ministry of Defence and a USD5mn deal with Derech Eretz, the operator of the Trans-Israel toll road. In September 2010, Ness won a USD3.7mn, five-year contract from Israel's Meitav Regional Water and Sewage Corporation to provide development, improvement and maintenance services for the company's SAP-based ERP and billing system. The contract also included an optional three-year extension, valued at USD2.2mn. The company continued to be strong in the financial services sector, with a USD1.1mn contract win in October 2010 from Israel Direct Insurance (IDI) to implement a companywide, SAP-based ERP system. The new system will comprise financial, logistics and HR modules. At the end of 2009, Ness won a five-year ILS42mn (USD11.2mn) outsourcing deal from Israel's Ministry of Immigration Absorption. Under the contract, Ness will operate and © Business Monitor International Page 64 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 maintain the ministry's IT systems, which support 600 users. The company also won an USD11mn outsourcing contract from the First International Bank of Israel and a USD4mn contract from the Israeli ministry of the interior. © Business Monitor International Page 65 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Financial Data ■ ■ ■ Company Details ■ ■ Revenues (Global, 2010): USD571.8mn Revenues (Global, Q111): USD137.3mn Revenues (Global, Q211): USD141.3mn Ness Israel Ness Tower Atidim Industrial Park P O Box 58152 Tel Aviv 61580 Israel ■ Tel: +972/3 766 6800 ■ Fax: 3 766 6809 ■ www.ness.com © Business Monitor International Page 66 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Matrix SWOT Analysis Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities ■ Global client base in more than 50 countries. ■ Working with different industries. ■ Partnerships with major international IT companies. ■ Reliance on government projects, which can waver with economic outlook. ■ Lacks scale to compete with global leaders. ■ Increased presence in the US opens avenues to higher value software development and testing deals. ■ Broad range of capabilities and expertise creates potential for larger contract deployments. Threats ■ International outlook allows for expansion of services. ■ Contracts with telecom companies offer potential. ■ Israel is emerging as an IT hub, bringing attention to local companies. ■ Israel's IT Market is highly competitive, with several players. ■ Increasing competition from emerging market IT software providers and services providers as they look to move up the value chain. Company Overview Matrix is a leading IT company in Israel that develops and implements technologies, software solutions and products, as well as providing infrastructure and consulting services, outsourcing, offshoring, training and assimilation. It also represents and carries out marketing for the world's leading software vendors in Israel, including IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, RedHat, EMC, SAP, HP and Apple. Matrix is part of the Israeli-owned Formula Systems group, which also includes Magic Software and Sapiens. Unlike those two companies however, which focus more on their global client base, Matrix derives most of its revenues from the Israeli market. © Business Monitor International Page 67 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Matrix, which employs 65,000 people, also owns a large number of subsidiaries, including information security provider 2bsecure, Matrix BI (business intelligence), Matrix Global (offshore and nearshore services in Israel and Eastern Europe), Tact Software (software testing company), Tangram Soft (IT services), Exzac (US subsidiary helping financial services institutions meet regulatory compliance requirements and defend against fraud) and Xtivia (US subsidiary offering database support, data warehouse and business intelligence products). Strategy Services include implementing integration projects, developing and marketing software technologies and products for business systems, providing infrastructure and consulting services, outsourcing contracts, training and assimilation, and acting as a distributor for global leading software products, hardware solutions, and IT infrastructures. Matrix has been restructuring and launching new services in order to meet changing market conditions. In 2013, the company expanded its range of products and vendor partnerships, signed a cooperation agreement with Amazon and established a dedicated cloud computing unit called Cloudzone. In 2012 Matrix increased its focuses on information and cyber security solutions through 2BSecure, which were consolidated with solutions targeting the cyber world at Matrix including fraud and money laundering prevention and the financial regulation of EXZAC. Financial Results For the first six months of 2014, Matrix reported total revenues of ILS997.9mn, up 5.8% compared to revenues of ILS943.4mn in H113. The company's operating costs rose slightly in H114, resulting in a 3.7% y-o-y decline in net profit to ILS39.6mn for H114. Matrix further reported that the IT services segment generated revenues of ILS739.9mn, accounting for 74.2% of revenues, compared to around 72% during the same period of 2013. The software products segment generated revenue of ILS66.7mn, down from ILS71.5mn in H113, while the integration and computer infrastructure segment's revenue increased from ILS113.9mn in H113 to ILS128.8mn in H114. Finally, training and deployment revenues reached ILS62.5mn in H114, down from ILS71mn in H113. Matrix attributed its improved performance to the expansion of its software and services to a greater variety of fields. During the year ended in December 2013, Matrix reported revenues of ILS1.932bn (USD555mn), down 2.7% y-o-y, and net profit of ILS89.1mn (USD25.6mn), down 1.7% y-o-y. However, revenues and net profits for Q413 both increased compared to the same period of 2012. In its 9M13 results, Matrix reported that weak revenues and profits were due to seasonal effects and the timing of Jewish holidays. For 2013, Matrix further reported that the software services sector accounted for 72.4% of revenues, up around 2pps from 2012. The marketing of software products segment accounted for © Business Monitor International Page 68 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 10.7% of revenues, while integration and computer structure accounted for 4.2%, and the training and deployment sector, 6.6% of revenues. Company Developments In its results presentation for the period ended June 2014, Matrix revealed key contracts which drove growth during the quarter. They included setting up and managing a business process outsourcing (BPO) project for a government ministry, valued at tens of millions of shekels, as well as setting up a banking system for the Bank of Israel, also worth tens of millions of shekels. In April 2014, Matrix announced that it had opened a new training centre in Nanjing, China, which will offer services to more than 500 Chinese IT firms. The centre will build its business in China, where it has already trained more than 8,000 IT professionals at its Development Center for Mobile Apps, launched in Changzhou in 2013. In 2013 Matrix continued to secure contracts in the financial, security, technology and public sectors. High profile contract wins included a service-orientated architecture (SOA) project for the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) and a five-year inspection tender for the Social Security Institute. In H112 results, Matrix announced it had acquired USbased company Exzac, which specialises in risk management and regulation in the finance sector. The new acquisition offers clients in 'leading financial institutions' in the US and Israel. Matrix also acquired Netwise, which offers solutions for the digital world and management of effective, continuous, and valuable customer experience. In 2011, Matrix won projects in several areas. In the financial market Matrix deals included a loan system for a leading bank, core financial system in the field of taxes for a leading financial institution, and operation sites for two banking institutions in Israel and abroad, among others. Matrix also completed warehousing projects for large industrial companies and won significant bids for training and deployment projects for the Ministry of Finance and the police. In 2010, Matrix reported growth in revenue and profits thanks to momentum in key sectors and services. The company won new projects in the public sector and the insurance sector, with mobile/cellular projects a growth area. Telecoms was another growth vertical in summer 2010. Major projects included a new interface and integration for a high-tech organisation, a core financial system in the field of taxation for a leading bank and a multi-channel project for a pharmaceutical company. Despite the challenging economic climate of 2008 and 2009, Matrix reported continuing successes in key sectors including healthcare, financial services, defence and government. Among tender wins in the Israeli market were a project to implement a core system in three hospitals, a software and hardware upgrade for a leading credit card company and a large-scale testing project for a government organisation. In 2008, Matrix reported tender wins in sectors including defence, communication and industrial, including an ILS20mn project to implement a CRM system at long-time customer Bezeq, as well as a number of public sector CRM projects. © Business Monitor International Page 69 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Financial Data ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Company Details ■ ■ Revenues (2011): ILS1.758bn Revenues (2012): ILS1.984bn Revenues (2013): ILS1.932bn Revenues (Q114): ILS512.2mn Revenues (Q214): ILS485.7mn Net Profit (2011): ILS93.4mn Net Profit (2012): ILS90.7mn Net Profit (2013): ILS89.1mn Net Profit (Q114): ILS22.3mn Net Profit (Q214): ILS17.3mn Matrix 3 Abba Eban Boulevard P O Box 2062 Herzlia Pituach 46120 Israel ■ Tel: +972/(0) 9 959 8840 ■ Fax: (0) 9 959 8844 ■ www.matrix.co.il © Business Monitor International Page 70 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Regional Overview Industry Risk/Reward Index BMI View: We retain our positive growth outlook for the IT sector in most countries in the Middle East and Africa (MEA). Growth will be driven mainly by government and enterprise spending, with rising demand for software and services in the more mature IT markets of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and Israel. High growth levels in Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya and Egypt are primarily the result of low base effects, with long-term opportunities for vendors as government agencies and enterprises adopt IT solutions for the first time. There have been only minor changes in the rankings on our Risk/Reward Index (RRI) table and in the average segment and aggregate IT scores in Q115. Israel pulled ahead of Qatar into first place, while at the bottom Lebanon slipped below Ghana into 12th place owing to a big drop in its industry rewards score. This, as well as a decline in Kenya's industry rewards score, pulled the average score for the category down by 2 points to 46.7 out of 100. The average country rewards score increased by 0.4 points to 65.0, while the industry risks score remained flat and the country risks score was down just 0.1 point to 56.4. This resulted in an overall 0.8 point decline in the aggregate MEA IT score to 53.2. Industry Rewards Nigeria and South Africa remain the top performers in the industry rewards category, with respective scores of 65.0 and 61.7. We have a bullish outlook for both countries' IT markets in view of Nigeria's strong economic growth and high government spending in South Africa. The high sector growth rates in Nigeria, Ghana, and Kenya are largely due to low base effects. As a result, we believe these countries, along with Egypt, offer long term growth opportunities for investors considering the low level of development of their IT markets relative to the more developed GCC states. © Business Monitor International Page 71 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Wealthy Markets Score Highly MEA IT Risk/Reward Outlook, 2014 Source: BMI Among GCC countries, strong economic growth and governments' determination to promote economic diversification are key determinants of industry rewards scores. Over the last few months the aviation industry has stood out as a key driver of demand for IT products and services in the region. Bahrain's Gulf Airlines, Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways and Saudi Airlines have all recently awarded major IT contracts to global vendors, including Cisco Systems, Microsoft, Amadeus and EMC. Lebanon and Kenya both saw sharp declines in their industry rewards scores in Q115. In Lebanon weak economic growth, forecast to reach 1.8% in 2014, has weighed on the government and the private sectors' ability to spend on IT products and services, dragging on our growth forecast and resulting in a 10-point drop in Lebanon's industry rewards score, to 25. In Kenya, the government's school children laptop programme was postponed yet again when the High Court cancelled the USD285mn tender in September 2014. This resulted in a sharp decline in our growth forecast and a contraction of Kenya's industry rewards score, to 41.7. Although below the regional average of 46.7, Kenya's score is still buoyed by its large population and relatively strong growth outlook, due to low base effects. © Business Monitor International Page 72 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Country Rewards The country rewards category evaluates consumers and businesses' potential spending power on IT products and services, based on macroeconomic indicators such as GDP per capita and the rate of urbanisation. A higher urbanisation rate means that a greater proportion of the population is likely to have access to high quality broadband networks, translating into higher demand and use of IT services. Meanwhile, high income levels mean a larger segment of the population can afford expensive IT hardware products, as well as generally higher private consumption levels, which in turn create increased demand for IT solutions from businesses in consumer facing industries. Qatar, Kuwait, the UAE and Israel had the highest GDP per capita at the end of 2013, at approximately USD93,000, USD53,000, USD43,000 and USD35,000 respectively, according to BMI data. However, the UAE misses out on a higher score in this category as around 16% of the population live in rural areas, compared to 8% in Israel and less than 2% in Kuwait and Qatar. The African countries, including Egypt, all score below 50.0 in this category, but there are growth opportunities for investors with a long-term outlook. Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa and Kenya all have populations of more than 40mn, and this vast potential will attract significant interest from businesses with consumer-centric solutions. Among the leading global IT software and services firms, SAP, Microsoft and IBM have made the most concerted efforts to establish a presence in the region, while local firms such as AfricaOnline, iWayAfrica and SevenC Computing are gradually building their capabilities. Kenya's particularly low score of just 10 is due to its urbanisation rate of just 25% and GDP per capita of around USD1,250 in 2013. © Business Monitor International Page 73 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Risks IP Protection A Key Risk There were no changes in the industry risks category Operational Risk ICT Index, 2014 in Q115. Intellectual property (IP) theft remains the key risk in the category, with levels of software piracy remaining generally high in MEA. According to a survey by BSA | The Software Alliance, published in June 2014, the average rate of unlicensed software use in MEA in 2013 was around 59%, compared to 29% in Western Europe and 19% in North America. BMI believes the level of IP risk throughout the region is the result of consumer spending power, with high demand for low-cost, often pirated, products in low income countries, contrasting with Scores out of 100, with 100 the best. Source: BMI government commitments to limiting access to counterfeit and pirated products. This is reflected in BMI's newly developed Operational Risk Index, which evaluates trade and investment risks for the ICT sector on a country-by-country basis, based on the level of IP protection and legal framework in the sector, among other indicators. Both BMI and BSA data show that the African countries in our MEA IT Index and Lebanon have high levels of software piracy, while enterprises and consumers in wealthier GCC countries and Israel are much less prone to using counterfeit or pirated software. Country Risks Our country risks scores for the IT sector assess key external factors that could affect a country's overall investment outlook and consequently the growth prospects for the IT sector. These factors include shortterm external and financial risk, trade bureaucracy, legal frameworks and corruption perception. The GCC countries and Israel all score higher than 60 (apart from Oman, on 59.2), mainly due to the favourable shortterm external risk factor scores and stronger corruption perception indices. Countries with lower scores all struggle with high levels of corruption and lack of transparency in trade bureaucracy and legal frameworks. The potential for oil prices to slide down to USD80 a barrel or lower over coming quarters is the biggest downside risk to our growth outlook for GCC countries' IT sectors. In most countries the government © Business Monitor International Page 74 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 remains the biggest spender on IT products and services, and a sharp decline in oil prices could result in reduced government spending on non-essential services. For Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the UAE and Qatar, BMI believes depressed oil prices would have limited impact on the IT market, as all they have enormous reserves and lower break even points for oil prices. Among those included in our IT RRI, Bahrain and Oman's governments are most likely to curb IT spending if lower oil prices are sustained, as they are both already expected to run fiscal account deficits in 2014, according to BMI forecasts. Outside the GCC, falling oil prices could also have an important impact on Nigeria's ability to implement IT projects; regardless of oil prices, the government will likely postpone some IT investments in favour of social development projects in the run-up to general elections in H115. The deterioration of the security situation in the Middle East, first with the eruption of violence between Israel and Gaza and then Islamic State's occupation of key cities in Iraq and Syria is a doubled edged sword for the IT sector. The elevated security risk has already affected investment inflows into various sectors in Iraq's economy, a trend that has also contributed to Lebanon's weakened industry rewards score. However, the heightened security risk will likely also encourage government and private institutions to bolster their IT security capabilities in order to insulate themselves from the increased security threats. Many global firms are already positioning themselves to take advantage of this opportunity by investing in various efforts to develop new solutions for the market. In July 2014 Microsoft and cloud services provider Akamai partnered to launch a cyber security-focused start-up accelerator programme in Israel, while several other companies have acquired local cyber security firms to bolster their capabilities. Table: MEA IT Risk/Reward Index, Q115 Industry rewards Country rewards Industry risks Country risks Overall IT score Rank Previous rank Israel 55.0 100.0 65.0 69.7 69.9 1 2 Qatar 57.5 100.0 55.0 67.7 69.4 2 1 UAE 52.5 90.0 60.0 68.3 65.4 3 3 Kuwait 45.8 100.0 40.0 66.7 62.2 4 4 Saudi Arabia 50.8 80.0 55.0 67.7 61.5 5 5 South Africa 61.7 45.0 45.0 59.1 55.1 6 6 Bahrain 28.3 85.0 57.5 61.8 51.7 7 7 Nigeria 65.0 35.0 45.0 44.0 51.5 8 8 Oman 33.3 70.0 52.5 59.2 49.3 9 9 Egypt 51.7 30.0 45.0 46.1 44.6 10 10 Ghana 38.3 35.0 40.0 48.8 39.6 11 12 Lebanon 25.0 65.0 20.0 41.5 37.2 12 11 Country © Business Monitor International Page 75 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 MEA IT Risk/Reward Index, Q115 - Continued Industry rewards Country rewards Industry risks Country risks Overall IT score Rank Previous rank Kenya 41.7 10.0 55.0 32.9 33.9 13 13 Average 46.7 65.0 48.8 56.4 53.2 Country Scores out of 100, with 100 the best. Scores are weighted as follows: 'Rewards' at 70%, of which Industry Rewards 65% and Country Rewards 35%; 'Risks' at 30%, of which Industry Risks 40% and Country Risks, 60%. The 'Rewards' score evaluates the size and growth potential of the IT market in any given state, and broader economic/socio-demographic characteristics in a country that affect the industry's development; the 'Risks' score evaluates industry-specific dangers and those emanating from the state's political/economic profile, based on BMI's proprietary Country Risk Indices, that could affect the realisation of anticipated returns. Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 76 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Demographic Forecast Demographic analysis is a key pillar of BMI's macroeconomic and industry forecasting model. Not only is the total population of a country a key variable in consumer demand, but an understanding of the demographic profile is key to understanding issues ranging from future population trends to productivity growth and government spending requirements. The accompanying charts show Israel's population pyramid for 2013, the change in the structure of the population between 2013 and 2050 and the total population between 1990 and 2050, as well as life expectancy. The tables show key data points from these charts, in addition to important metrics such as the dependency ratio and the urban/rural split. Population Pyramid 2013 (LHS) And 2013 Versus 2050 (RHS) Source: World Bank, UN, BMI © Business Monitor International Page 77 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Population Indicators Population (mn, LHS) And Life Expectancy (years, RHS), 1990-2050 Source: World Bank, UN, BMI Table: Israel's Population By Age Group, 1990-2020 ('000) 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2013e 2015f 2020f 4,499 5,332 6,014 6,604 7,420 7,733 7,920 8,507 0-4 years 483 529 614 666 735 778 793 768 5-9 years 462 510 548 619 666 720 755 792 10-14 years 462 508 527 554 619 648 670 754 15-19 years 430 495 528 536 565 592 613 672 20-24 years 355 451 514 538 555 558 565 615 25-29 years 328 383 463 523 557 557 555 567 30-34 years 315 360 392 470 546 541 534 558 35-39 years 325 346 370 397 500 525 529 537 40-44 years 271 357 359 375 424 472 501 532 45-49 years 188 304 371 362 390 400 415 500 50-54 years 171 204 316 373 372 380 388 413 55-59 years 160 185 215 315 387 384 376 385 60-64 years 150 182 195 213 329 358 364 370 65-69 years 136 165 184 188 217 244 270 352 70-74 years 98 145 161 170 183 185 192 253 Total © Business Monitor International Page 78 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Israel's Population By Age Group, 1990-2020 ('000) - Continued 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2013e 2015f 2020f 75-79 years 87 97 127 138 161 165 165 172 80-84 years 51 70 73 97 120 117 116 135 85-89 years 21 31 43 46 66 74 77 80 90-94 years 6 8 13 19 22 28 32 39 95-99 years 1 1 2 4 6 6 7 10 100+ years 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: World Bank, UN, BMI Table: Israel's Population By Age Group, 1990-2020 (% of total) 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2013e 2015f 2020f 0-4 years 10.73 9.91 10.21 10.09 9.91 10.06 10.01 9.03 5-9 years 10.26 9.57 9.11 9.38 8.98 9.31 9.53 9.31 10-14 years 10.27 9.53 8.77 8.39 8.35 8.38 8.47 8.87 15-19 years 9.55 9.29 8.78 8.12 7.61 7.66 7.74 7.89 20-24 years 7.90 8.45 8.55 8.15 7.49 7.22 7.13 7.23 25-29 years 7.29 7.18 7.70 7.92 7.50 7.20 7.01 6.66 30-34 years 7.00 6.75 6.51 7.12 7.36 7.00 6.74 6.56 35-39 years 7.22 6.50 6.16 6.01 6.74 6.78 6.68 6.32 40-44 years 6.03 6.69 5.96 5.68 5.71 6.11 6.33 6.25 45-49 years 4.19 5.71 6.17 5.49 5.26 5.17 5.25 5.88 50-54 years 3.80 3.82 5.25 5.65 5.01 4.91 4.90 4.86 55-59 years 3.55 3.47 3.57 4.77 5.22 4.97 4.75 4.53 60-64 years 3.34 3.41 3.24 3.22 4.43 4.63 4.60 4.35 65-69 years 3.02 3.10 3.06 2.85 2.92 3.15 3.40 4.13 70-74 years 2.17 2.72 2.67 2.57 2.47 2.39 2.43 2.97 75-79 years 1.94 1.82 2.11 2.09 2.16 2.14 2.09 2.03 80-84 years 1.13 1.31 1.22 1.47 1.61 1.51 1.46 1.59 85-89 years 0.46 0.58 0.71 0.70 0.89 0.96 0.97 0.94 90-94 years 0.14 0.16 0.22 0.29 0.29 0.36 0.41 0.46 95-99 years 0.02 0.03 0.03 0.05 0.07 0.08 0.08 0.12 © Business Monitor International Page 79 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Israel's Population By Age Group, 1990-2020 (% of total) - Continued 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2013e 2015f 2020f 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 100+ years e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: World Bank, UN, BMI Table: Israel's Key Population Ratios, 1990-2020 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2013e 2015f 2020f 67.0 63.2 61.6 61.0 60.4 62.2 63.6 65.2 1,806 2,065 2,292 2,502 2,795 2,965 3,078 3,358 Active population, % of total 59.9 61.3 61.9 62.1 62.3 61.7 61.1 60.5 Active population, total, '000 2,693 3,266 3,722 4,102 4,625 4,768 4,841 5,150 Youth population, % of total working age 52.2 47.4 45.4 44.8 43.7 45.0 45.8 44.9 Youth population, total, '000 1,406 1,547 1,689 1,839 2,021 2,146 2,218 2,314 Pensionable population, % of total working age 14.8 15.9 16.2 16.1 16.7 17.2 17.8 20.3 Pensionable population, total, '000 399 518 603 662 774 820 860 1,043 Dependent ratio, % of total working age Dependent population, total, '000 e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: World Bank, UN, BMI Table: Israel's Rural/Urban Population Split, 1990-2020 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2013e 2015f 2020f Urban population, % of total 90.4 90.9 91.2 91.5 91.8 92.0 92.1 92.4 Rural population, % of total 9.6 9.1 8.8 8.5 8.2 8.0 7.9 7.6 4,065 4,845 5,485 6,044 6,814 7,115 7,296 7,863 434 487 529 560 607 618 624 644 Urban population, total, '000 Rural population, total, '000 e/f = BMI estimate/forecast. Source: World Bank, UN, BMI © Business Monitor International Page 80 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Methodology Industry Forecast Methodology BMI's industry forecasts are generated using the best-practice techniques of time-series modelling and causal/econometric modelling. The precise form of model we use varies from industry to industry, in each case being determined, as per standard practice, by the prevailing features of the industry data being examined. Common to our analysis of every industry is the use of vector autoregressions. They allow us to forecast a variable using more than its own history as explanatory information. For example, when forecasting oil prices, we can include information about oil consumption, supply and capacity. When forecasting for some of our industry sub-component variables, however, using a variable's own history is often the most desirable method of analysis. Such single-variable analysis is called univariate modelling. We use the most common and versatile form of univariate models: the autoregressive moving average model (ARMA). In some cases, ARMA techniques are inappropriate because there is insufficient historic data or data quality is poor. In such cases we use either traditional decomposition methods or smoothing methods as a basis for analysis and forecasting. We mainly use OLS estimators and in order to avoid relying on subjective views and encourage the use of objective views, BMI uses a 'general-to-specific' method. BMI mainly uses a linear model, but simple nonlinear models, such as the log-linear model, are used when necessary. During periods of 'industry shock', for example poor weather conditions impeding agricultural output, dummy variables are used to determine the level of impact. Effective forecasting depends on appropriately selected regression models. BMI selects the best model according to various different criteria and tests, including but not exclusive to: ■ R2 tests explanatory power; adjusted R2 takes degree of freedom into account; ■ Testing the directional movement and magnitude of coefficients; ■ Hypothesis testing to ensure coefficients are significant (normally t-test and/or P-value); ■ All results are assessed to alleviate issues related to auto-correlation and multi-collinearity;. © Business Monitor International Page 81 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 BMI uses the selected best model to perform forecasting. Human intervention plays a necessary and desirable role in all of BMI's industry forecasting. Experience, expertise and knowledge of industry data and trends ensure analysts spot structural breaks, anomalous data, turning points and seasonal features where a purely mechanical forecasting process would not. Sector-Specific Methodology A number of criteria drive our forecasts for each IT variable. IT forecasting is complicated due to the fragmented nature of the market, with little transparency of vendor data and low apparent agreement between many sets of figures in terms of market definition, base and methodology. In addition, forecasts are affected by consideration of a variety of internal and external political and economic factors. Within best-practice techniques of time-series modelling, our quarterly updated forecasts are improved substantially by intimate knowledge of the prevailing features of each local market. Individual variables taken into account in creating each forecast include: ■ Overall economic context, and GDP and demographic trends; ■ Underlying 'information society' trends; ■ Projected GDP share of industry; ■ Maturity of market structure; ■ Regulatory developments and government policies; ■ Developments in key client sectors such as telecommunications, banking and e-government; ■ Technological developments and diffusion rates; ■ Exogenous events. Estimates are calculated using our own macroeconomic and demographic forecasts. Sources Additional sources used in IT reports include national ministries and ICT regulatory bodies, national industry associations, and international industry organisations such as the International Telecommunication © Business Monitor International Page 82 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Union (ITU), officially released company results and figures, and international and national industry news agencies. Risk/Reward Index Methodology BMI's Risk/Reward Index (RRI) provide a comparative regional ranking system evaluating the ease of doing business and the industry-specific opportunities and limitations for potential investors in a given market. The RRI system divides into two distinct areas: Rewards: Evaluation of sector's size and growth potential in each state, and also broader industry/state characteristics that may inhibit its development. This is further broken down into two sub categories: ■ Industry Rewards (an industry-specific category taking into account current industry size and growth forecasts, the openness of market to new entrants and foreign investors, to provide an overall score for potential returns for investors). • Country Rewards (a country-specific category, factoring in favourable political and economic conditions for the industry). Risks: Evaluation of industry-specific dangers and those emanating from the state's political/economic profile that call into question the likelihood of anticipated returns being realised over the assessed time period. This is broken down into two sub categories: ■ Industry Risks (an industry-specific category whose score covers potential operational risks to investors, regulatory issues inhibiting the industry and the relative maturity of a market). • Country Risks (a country-specific category in which political and economic instability, unfavourable legislation and a poor overall business environment are evaluated to provide an overall score). We take a weighted average, combining industry and country risks, or industry and country rewards. These two results in turn provide an overall Risk/Reward Score, which is used to create our regional ranking system for the risks and rewards of involvement in a specific industry in a particular country. For each category and sub-category, each state is scored out of 100 (100 being the best), with the overall Risk/Reward Score a weighted average of the total score. As most of the countries and territories evaluated are considered by BMI to be 'emerging markets', our score is revised on a quarterly basis. This ensures the score draws on the latest information and data across our broad range of sources, and the expertise of our analysts. © Business Monitor International Page 83 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Sector-Specific Methodology In constructing these indices, the following indicators have been used. Almost all indicators are objectively based. Table: It Risk/Reward Index Indicators Rationale Rewards Industry IT market value, US$bn Denotes breadth of IT market. Large markets score higher than smaller ones. Sector value growth, % year-on-year (y-o-y) Denotes sector dynamism. Scores based on annual average growth over five-year forecast period. Government initiatives and spending Denotes spending boost provided by public sector, which can be a crucial determinant of sector development. Hardware, % of total sales Denotes maturity of market. A high proportion of hardware sales, compared to services/ software, indicates that the overall IT market is immature. Country Urban-rural split Urbanisation is used as a proxy for development. Mainly rural states score lower. GDP per capita, USD A high GDP per capita supports long-term industry prospects. Overall score for Country Rewards is also affected by the coverage of the power transmission network across the state. Risks Industry Intellectual property (IP) laws Markets with fair and enforced IP regulations score higher than those with endemic counterfeiting. ICT policy Subjective evaluation of official policy towards IT development, as enshrined in statute and tax code. Country Short-term external risk Score from BMI's Country Risk Index (CRI). It evaluates the vulnerability to external shock, which is the principal cause of economic crises. Such a crisis would cut investment. Short-term financial risk Score from CRI, to denote risk of currency crisis and stability of banking sector. The former would hit revenues in hard currency, while the latter would curtail investment funding. Trade bureaucracy Score from CRI to denote ease of trading with the state. Legal framework Score from CRI denotes the strength of legal institutions in each state - security of investment can be a key risk in some emerging markets. Bureaucracy Score from CRI denotes ease of conducting business in the state. Corruption Score from CRI denotes the risk of additional illegal costs/possibility of opacity in tendering/ business operations affecting companies' ability to compete. Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 84 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Weighting Given the number of indicators/datasets used, it would be wholly inappropriate to give all sub-components equal weight. The following weighting has been adopted: Table: Weighting Of Components Component Rewards Weighting, % 70, of which - Industry 65 - Country 35 Risks to 30, of which - Industry 40 - Country 60 Source: BMI © Business Monitor International Page 85 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. [...]... in 2014 and 2015 respectively Fixed Investment Outlook: We expect growth in gross fixed capital formation to accelerate in 2015, a result of low base effects and accelerating export growth Investment in the Israeli technology and © Business Monitor International Page 24 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 pharmaceutical segments will contribute to the expansion of the component in 2015 Indeed,... trading conditions, vendors have reported a continued flow of IT projects, with large tenders from the Israeli ministries of finance and defence and the Bank of Israel In December 2013 VMware won a data centre contract from the Israel Defence Forces valued at USD27mn in the local media © Business Monitor International Page 16 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Trends - IT Market... Monitor International Page 23 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Modest Increase In Spending In 2015 Israel - Government Revenues & Expenditure 400 -2 300 -3 200 -4 100 -5 0 -6 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Fiscal revenue, ILSbn (LHS) Budget balance, % of GDP (RHS) 2014f 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Fiscal expenditure, ILSbn (LHS) e/f = BMI estimate/forecast Source: Israeli Ministry of Finance, BMI The... underpin our positive view for the Israeli economy over the next five years, and we forecast real GDP growth to average 3.6% over this period © Business Monitor International Page 22 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Conflict Hitting Economy Hard This Year Israel - GDP 400 6 5 300 4 200 3 2 100 1 0 0 2009 2010 2011 2012 Nominal GDP, USDbn (LHS) 2013e 2014f 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Real GDP... Between its launch in 1995 and June 2013, the Computer for Every Child initiative reportedly distributed 55,000 computers in around 2,000 localities, representing a tiny fraction of total hardware sales in Israel Industry © Business Monitor International Page 34 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 stakeholders see Digital Israel essentially as a duplication of its Government Computing Center The... segment contributes comparatively less to the market's overall growth Given Israel' s relatively rich tech skills resource base, many organisations prefer to conduct software development in-house © Business Monitor International Page 15 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 2014 Outlook We project real GDP growth of 2.5% in Israel in 2014, then expect slow but steady acceleration in GDP growth throughout... the future © Business Monitor International Page 14 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Forecast IT Market Table: IT Industry - Historical Data And Forecasts (Israel 2011-2018) 2011 IT market value, ILSmn 2017f 2018f 20,435.7 22,299.5 22,576.0 23,354.8 24,607.9 26,490.5 27,698.4 28,895.0 IT market value, % of GDP 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2.3 2.4 2.3 2.3 2.3 Computer hardware sales, ILSmn... forecasts software sales to account for 28.2% of Israel' s IT market by 2018, up from 24.5% in 2013, while services are forecast to rise from 35.0% of the IT market to 36.8% over the same timeframe © Business Monitor International Page 19 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Broadband Internet Table: Telecoms Sector - Wireline - Historical Data & Forecasts (Israel 2011-2018) 2011 Main telephone lines... y-o-y in July © Business Monitor International Page 25 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 We expect total exports to contract by 1.5% in 2014 and expand by 3.5% in 2015, largely a result of accelerating economic expansion in key export markets Europe - particularly the UK, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany - accounted for 45.2% of total Israeli exports in 2013, and we expect an improvement... International Page 20 Israel Information Technology Report Q1 2015 Industry Trends - Wireline Sector 2011-2018 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 2011 2012 2013e 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f Main telephone lines in service, '000 Broadband internet subscribers, '000 e/f = BMI estimate/forecast Source: Operators, BMI Up until 2018, we envisage average annual growth of around 3.1% for the Israeli broadband sector

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