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Evaluating TechLahore’s Predictions for 2011

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TechLahore's 2011 predictions turned out to be the least accurate EVER! Hmph!

TechLahore's 2011 predictions turned out to be the least accurate EVER! Hmph!

We’ve been publishing since 2007 and TechLahore is hence not exactly a “new” blog. As institutions age, they accrue tradition, and TechLahore is no different. Our December evaluations of the past year’s predictions have been happening now for the past several years. In January, we’ll follow-up with a new set of predictions for 2012.

Here are the past evaluations, in case you’re interested:

1. Evaluating TechLahore’s predictions for 2010
2. Evaluating TechLahore’s predictions for 2009
3. Evaluating TechLahore’s predictions for 2008

So, without further ado, let’s see how we fared this year:

Political Predictions

The parliament is not going anywhere. This PM may or may not last, but the Parliament is well on its way to completing its 5 years. I think it will navigate 2011 in tact. And if that happens, with less than a year to go in 2012, term completion will be well within sight and all but certain.

Spot on. The parliament is here and if the Army Chief’s recent statements are to be believed, no coup is in the offing.

The Congress Government in India will continue to get less popular and Mr. Manmohan Singh’s “clean” image will become a thing of the past. Corruption is going to be a massive story for India in 2011.

The Congress government has become a symbol of inefficiency and corruption in India. India has actually fallen further on the Transparency corruption index. Manmohan has lost the Mr. Clean image for sure. I’ll claim full credit here.

Mr. Obama will see an increase in his popularity rating. It currently stands at -12 according to the Rasmussen Reports. We’ll see how he ends the year up in 2011, but my guess is he could be close to neutral territory. This improvement will come from the improvement in economic conditions in 2011, as well as a greater willingness to work with the Republicans in the House.

Well, I was wrong on this one. Despite the fact that the Republicans were busy ripping each other apart, the Congress being a veritable ball and chain around the Presidency has resulted in a low approval rating. We said we’d use the Rasmussen Reports as our measure, and as per the latest poll in December 2011, Obama is still roughly where he started the year (-13).

Security and the situation in Northwest Pakistan

2010 saw a 35% reduction in the number of terror attacks. 2011 will continue that trend. There will be a close to 25% further reduction in the number of terror attacks. The reach of these attacks will, for the most part, stay limited to the Northwest. The Pakistan Army will make moves in the NWA region, but these will not be in the form of a full-fledged onslaught at the scale of the Swat operation.

According to the Pakistan Institute of Peace Studies, the number of deaths in 2011 fell by almost 40%! This was good news for Pakistanis, and in fact, the last half of the year saw an almost complete halt in terror attacks throughout the country. The few instances that did occur were limited to checkposts near or in the FATA areas.

NATO will begin to significantly ease up on operations in Afghanistan. They will still be there at the end of 2011, but will no longer be looking to aggressively take on the Taliban. Most of the fights between the two parties will occur as the Taliban attack NATO convoys, posts or bases. NATO may retaliate, but will not run a strategic campaign of any significance. 2011 is the year that will see an increase in outreach to Taliban and the beginnings of negotiating at a post-NATO agreement. The biggest priority for the US will now be negotiating an exit for themselves and NATO which will allow them to claim a victory, even though the reality will be far from it.

NATO has done almost nothing against the Taliban in Afghanistan. A couple of half-hearted thrusts here and there, with no real resolve for meeting any tangible goals. They have also talked about allowing the Taliban to setup an office in a Gulf state and have been engaged with negotiations with the so-called “enemy”. In fact, the only military action NATO engaged in this past year which made waves was an attack on two Pakistani checkposts, resulting in the martyrdom of 24 Pakistani soldiers. Viz the Taliban, the NATO mission in Afghanistan is pretty much finished. What remains is a negotiated settlement that allows the US room to depart without being chased.

2011 will see a reduction in the number of drone strikes in FATA, as compared to 2010.

The number of drone strikes this year was significantly less than last year. Here is the data.

Technology Predictions

Android will end 2011 as the dominant mobile platform. Apple will not be able to reverse the trend that began in 2010. I would predict that Android will go from its current 22.7% of the US smartphone market to close to 33%. Overall, while 30% of the current US population of cell phone users use smartphones, by the end of 2011, this 30% will grow to 45% at least. All these 2010  statistics are based on December estimates from Nielsen.

Hear hear! Android is now the defacto King of the mobile OSs. Android now accounts for 53% of smartphone shipments. I had said the US market share for Android will increase to 33%, and in reality, according to Nielsen it has gone past 42%. So I’ll take this one…

Tablets will be the major consumer device story in 2011. This shouldn’t come as a surprise. But non-Apple tablets will continue to increase their market share. Today, the iPad has 95% market share, but by the end of 2011, this will be reduced to 75%.

Yes and yes. Tablets were THE story of the year and non Apple tablets are now coming out the wazoo. As I had predicted, not only did the iPad’s market share fall, it fell a bit faster than I had predicted. According to IDC, it stands at 68% going into the holidays.

Mobile apps for phones and tablets will continue to attract more and more developer talent. I see 2011 ending with close to 700,000 apps available for all the major platforms. Currently, iOS and Android have about 400,000 apps between them and Blackberry probably another 12,000 or so. Windows Phone7 is so new, it hardly has any. By the end of 2011, you will likely see 400,000 iOS apps, 250,000 Android apps, 20,000 Blackberry apps and about 15,000 Phone7 apps. With tablet apps thrown in, this will get close to 700,000.

Apps grew much faster than even I had predicted. Apple announced that there are 500,000 iOS apps. Android stands at 250,000 apps. And Microsoft Phone7 is at 25,000. Blackberry hasn’t grown as fast, but net-net, the prediction I made of the total number of mobile apps exceeding 700,000 has come true. We are actually probably closer to a million than 750,000.

Pakistan’s software industry will see a good year. The momentum on the mobile development side will continue, and I see most of the established companies growing their teams and bringing on more talent. There are few metrics available to truly judge this, but we’ll pick a few leading illustrative cases in December 2011 and see how we fared.

Measured in almost every way, 2011 was a great year for Pakistani software. At APICTA, Pakistanis won more awards than ever before. Whereas 2010 saw one Pakistani mobile app make it to World #1, in 2011 there were two more. And the growth we are seeing has made many experts very hopeful. Current estimates suggest that we will exceed $10B by 2020.

Apple will launch the iPhone 5 this year, but it will be a defensive, bug fix kind of product rather than anything particularly innovative to help it leapfrog the numerous Windows Phone7 and Android devices hitting the market on a monthly basis. The biggest issue with the iPhone 4 was the antenna, and so the iPhone 5 will revolve around better antenna performance. Apple will do the usual dog and pony and claim that the iPhone 5 has the best designed antenna of any phone ever made etc. But in the end, the iPhone 5 will not succeed in stemming the tide of Android and Windows Phone7 phones. The important thing here is that 2011 will be the year of the commoditization of the Smartphone. There will be so many makes and models, with so many different OS choices that will offer basically equivalent functionality, that the market will start to make a shift towards the less expensive devices (i.e. Android).

I felt a shudder when I read that part about the new iPhone not being particularly “innovative”. Look at the new device. It wasn’t even a significant enough upgrade to merit the iPhone “5″ moniker. Apple stuck with 4S. And rightly so. The antenna issue is fixed, and other than the bundling of Siri, which was available as a free download for older iPhones prior to Apple’s acquisition of the company, there isn’t much to write home about. Android has left the iPhone in the proverbial dust. Yes, the iPhone is very much a market leader from an ease of use and proliferation of apps perspective, but Android phones now have faster radios, better screens, faster processors, more storage, better cameras and pretty much everything else.

We’ll learn a lot more about Windows 8 this year. While the central themes will be integration with the Cloud, make no mistake, this will be an honest-to-goodness PC operating system. It will showcase better visualization, add support for bigger, faster GPUs and will standardize 64-bit. We may see the first 128-bit mainstream OS among Windows 8′s several SKUs. No release in 2011 though, just more specificity on what the product will be and perhaps an alpha/CTP.

Windows 8 not only provides better visualization, it has an entirely reinvented Metro based UI for tablets. It does in fact standardize 64 bit and yes, there isn’t going to be a 2011 release. However, as predicted the CTP was launched this year. I’ll take this one… I was even right about it being an honest to goodness PC OS – one click and you’re back to the traditional Windows desktop.

Virtualization, which has commanded the enterprise IT airwaves since 2007-8, will begin to take a back seat to other trends. As services that were once virtualized start to migrate to the cloud and outsource PaaS infrastructures, the value of virtualization in the enterprise will diminish somewhat. Obviously, the level of adoption is tremendous so it will take some time to happen, but 2011 will be the turning point and this will become evident with the decreased “cool” factor and reduced coverage. On the desktop side, inexpensive PCs, numerous new form factors like tablets with native apps and cell phones equipped with projectors etc. will begin to chip away at the desktop virtualization value proposition. I don’t think this shift will be visible enough to most to cause a major reduction in, say, VMware’s stock price (hovering around $90 right now).

Cloud has overtaken the IT airwaves and while Virtualization remains a persistent meme, it is getting less airplay because it is becoming part of the “assumed” stack of capabilities. PaaS infrastructure has definitely grown, along with IaaS ala Amazon. Inexpensive PCs and tablets have been a core IT story throughout 2011, whether it be the Indian Akaash tablet, the Ainovo novo 7, the Amazon Kindle Fire or the about to be released Raspberry Pi. It’s all about sub-hundred dollar price points… So now let’s look at my VMware stock price prediction. I said there won’t be a huge increase because virtualization’s cool-factor will start to subside, but it won’t be significant enough to warrant a big price drop. Well, VMware stands at around $84 right now. A little less than last year, but just a little, as predicted.

Wateen and/or Warid will cease to be an independent operation in Pakistan. Their poor execution has cost them dearly. If it weren’t for the seemingly limitless capital available to them, they wouldn’t have survived as long as they have. They will likely be acquired by another major operator in the Pakistani market.

Wrong. Wateen is around. Crippled and in need of direction. But around.

Netsol stock on the NASDAQ (NTWK) will have a good year, with at least one close above $2.25 during the year.

Wrong. Netsol didn’t have a good year. I was right that it would close about $2.25, because it touched $2.39 in February. But it’s been a slide since then. So even though I was half right at least about the annual high, I won’t take this one.

 

Financial and Economic Predictions

Pakistan’s GDP will grow by at least 4%, likely 4.3%. The current estimates of two point some are utter nonsense.

Wrong. GDP was actually 2.37%, below what I had expected. Shucks.

The KSE will continue to rise. I expect it to benefit from the improvement in the global economic environment and the greater clarity in the regional strategic equation. I’m projecting an at-least 15% rise, but it could be as high as 25%. If it comes close to the latter, then we may approach KSE’s all-time highs in the 16K range!

Wrong. The KSE, along with world markets, declined. There was a high around 12,700 in January 2011, but the market trended southward given everything that has happened in the world from an economic standpoint this year. It ended the year about 4% in the red.

The US markets, the Dow and Nasdaq, will see an increase of about 8-10%.

Half right. The Dow went up by about 6%, but the Nasdaq declined by slightly less than 2%.

Job data will be watched super closely in the US. There will be some improvement this year, but I don’t think it will be very rapid. My estimate would say a .4-.6% reduction in the unemployment rate by the end of 2011.

Absolutely spot on. In Jan, unemployment was at 9%. By Nov 2011 it had declined by .4% to 8.6%.

The housing market in the US will begin a tedious, painful and slow journey to recovery. With properties having dropped anywhere from 30-70% over the last couple of years, this year will probably see a 5% increase in average home prices.

Wrong. While the housing market does appear to be turning around, it didn’t happen in 2011. There was probably a roughly 3% decline in average home prices across the US.

The Pakistani Rs. will see some weakening this year. It fought off pessimistic estimates of a drop to 100/$ but in 2011 we may see a 5% or so weakening with respect to the US$.

That’s just how it happened. Didn’t touch Rs. 100 to the dollar, but we’re at 90. So that does translate into a little over 5% weakening through the year.

Real estate prices will start to improve in Pakistan in 2011. More importantly, the number of deals being done will go up. I will use the index price of a 1 kanal plot in Gulberg, Lahore as an index when we revisit this in December 2011. The market price is currently at 1 crore 50 lacs.

This one is really hard to call. I have done a few informal tests with a few plots throughout the city and while there hasn’t been a decline, it’s not clear to me whether the asking price is something that is attracting buyers readily. I just don’t have enough data on this one to make a call. If you look at the lahorerealestate.com data for plots in Defence etc. the prices have risen just slightly.

So, where did we end up? 15 right (I’ll claim half credit for a couple) and 7 wrong. I think that might be the worst I’ve ever done. Most of where I fell short had to do with the economy in the US and Pakistan. Essentially, I was expecting a faster recovery than what has materialized. So what do I think will happen in 2012? Well, stay tuned for that post in January! Till then, HAPPY NEW YEAR!

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