Dow+169.67up+1.68%
10,268.81
Nasdaq+30.66up+1.40%
2,214.19
S&P+19.36up+1.80%
1,094.87
Michael Brush

Company Focus1/26/2010 6:00 PM ET

Is your land line phone dead?

Wireless will likely kill off wired telephones in a decade. You could invest in cell phone giants such as AT&T and Verizon, but there are better ways to ride this wave.

By Michael Brush
MSN Money

So long, land line phone.

You've been pretty reliable all these years. When other appliances cut out during blackouts, your dial tone purred reassuringly. Heck, you even worked in New York on 9/11.

But it's time to say goodbye. Frankly, you're just . . . dumb.

You can't take a picture. We can't listen to music together or surf the Web. You're useless when it's time to update a Facebook status.

The economy is shaky, the budget is tight, and we don't use you much anymore. It's time to cut the cord.

Millions of consumers have already worked through something like this process and voted with their cell phones, and millions more will soon, sustaining a trend that smart investors can play.

To date, a fifth of U.S. households have renounced land line phones altogether, according to the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which asks about phone use when doing health surveys. An additional 15% might as well do the same because they hardly ever use their land line phones.

And last month, AT&T (T, news, msgs) made the eventual death of the land line all but official when it asked the Federal Communications Commission for relief from regulations that require it to maintain an analog wired network. The former Ma Bell said in the filing that land line use had dropped 42% from 2000 to 2008.

That's right, land line. Even your mom says you're bad for business.

Going wireless

Sure, there are some die-hards out there:

  • About 30 million people rely on land lines for DSL Internet access, according to tech research company Gartner.

  • Many people want to maintain land lines because their reliability is desirable for use in home security systems.

  • Businesses are turning off land lines at a slower pace because companies like the rich feature set they offer. As of September, business use of land lines at AT&T had declined 12.5% from 2006, compared with a 26% decline among residential customers.

  • Older people remain steadfastly faithful to their land lines, the CDC says.

But, hey, there were people who held on to analog TV until the day it was turned off.

For the rest of us, especially young people, the land line is already as good as dead. Nearly half of adults 25 to 29 years old live in households with only wireless telephones.

Looking ahead, if the rapid rate of decline continues at 10% to 12% a year, land lines will all but vanish in a decade.

There's money to be made in any trend this large. To figure out the best ways, I recently talked with some of the best mutual fund managers and tech analysts around, all of whom work for mutual funds that have beaten their categories over the past few years. Here's a roundup of their take on how to play this trend.

Continued: Avoid cell phone price wars

More from MSN Money

 1 | 2 | 3 | next >

Rate this Article

Click on one of the stars below to rate this article from 1 (lowest) to 5 (highest). Low Rate it 1Rate it 2Rate it 3Rate it 4Rate it 5High
Fund data provided by Morningstar, Inc. © 2009. All rights reserved.
StockScouter data provided by Gradient Analytics, Inc.
Quotes supplied by Interactive Data.
MSN Money's editorial goal is to provide a forum for personal finance and investment ideas. Our articles, columns, message board posts and other features should not be construed as investment advice, nor does their appearance imply an endorsement by Microsoft of any specific security or trading strategy. An investor's best course of action must be based on individual circumstances.
Join the discussion!
Sort by:
1 - 10 of 57
Wednesday, January 27, 2010 5:45:34 AM

I am missing something with this.

 

How do families manage FAX transmission and receiving when cell phones are used? With each cell phone having a different number than that of other family members, what is the solution here? What about directory look up for folks who do not have the number of each family member. What about a common answering machine or voice mail? I would be quick to switch if these items had a known solution.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010 7:22:54 AM

All these are easily done without a landline.  You can send/receive faxes via the Internet.  A common answering system can be had using another free/cheap Internet service.  Directory lookups can be done (again via the Internet) for free.

There is really no need for a landline anymore.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010 7:51:45 AM
I guess I will be the last one to give up a land line. I like cell phones for when I am not at home but much prefer a land line for a long conversation especially around a business call. Cell phones, in my opinion, just cannot compete clarity wise with a land line.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010 8:32:35 AM

I'm not sure I can give up my land line, as much as I'd love to!  I have a security system that requires a land line.  No land line, no home security system.  I know there are radio signal systems, but why would I spend thousands to completely overhaul my security system just to save only hundreds on my phone bill?   Unless someone has a better idea, I'm stuck.

 

Even though 90% of my phone needs are conducted via my mobile line, I'm not sure I want to give out my mobile number to everyone.  Easier to screen calls because I can actually hear the answering machine versus voice mail I only hear when I pick it up.

#5
Wednesday, January 27, 2010 8:40:03 AM

Companies like VONAGE, SKYPE and 8X8 are really eating into residential and commercial landlines using a much cheaper VOIP application. If you read thru the AT&T letter to FCC, you will see that VONAGE and SYKPE have been repeatedly mentioned in it.

 

They are also invading the mobile world via smart phones.

#6
Wednesday, January 27, 2010 8:56:19 AM

@spbigger, we have a really neat toy at work, although I'm not sure the exact name of the device.  It's basically a fax machine that sends the contents to an eMail address in .PDF form.  It's very handy...  it eliminates the need for old style fax machines.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010 9:02:26 AM
Ula, I gave up my land line in 2004. I have the standard home security system with ADT but it's wireless. I'm not sure why you think it's thousands more to overhaul - I never had a landline here and I think I had to pay $50 extra to set up the wireless in the basement. And for you paranoid folks out there, the wire line security system is easy for a robber to dismantle - they can cut the phone wire outside before breaking into the house - not so, with a wireless security system. Just my two wireless cents.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010 9:20:04 AM

Ula.... I screen my calls on my cell. I look at the number and if I don't recognize it then I don't answer. Simple! Or better yet, program a ring tone for callers you want to answer and leave the default ring for everyone else. If a song plays, you answer it.

 

MyklBW...it's probably an all-in-one; a fax, scanner and copier. I have an HP and the menu allows me to choose what format I want my faxes and scans sent to: PDF, email doc, JPEG or text. I love it!

Wednesday, January 27, 2010 10:33:44 AM
I plan on going the opposite direction as I near retirement. Between my wife and myself we pay $125 a month for cell service. We will convert back to regular phone service wia cable company and pay $24 a month with unlimited long distance.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010 10:52:30 AM

I have high speed internet that comes in over a landline.

As well as phones that work when the power goes out.

Wireless is great, but reception isn't perfect, and during emergencies such as Hurricane evacuations, wireless systems get overloaded. (They have an incentive to sell to more subscribers than they have capacity.)

We are 20 years away from the end of landlines. (More people get TV over landlines than from satellite as well.)

1 - 10 of 57
To add a comment, pleasesign in