Growing pains of Indian telecom

Posted by S Peer Mohamed (peer) on 9/25/2012

 The troubles began in 2008, when the government allocated more 2G, or second-generation, mobile licences

His accent is unmistakably Russian, but Vsevolod Rozanov faces one of the toughest jobs in Indian business.

  The chief executive of Sistema Shyam TeleServices found his company’s mobile phone licences abruptly cancelled by the supreme court this year, along with those of other foreign operators, including Telenor of Norway. Both groups, like UK-based Vodafone and India’s market leader, Bharti Airtel, must now choose whether to enter a hastily organised auction in November, potentially bidding more than Rs140 billion (Dh9.1 billion) to win back their licences.

  So the deep-voiced 41-year-old faces a particularly wrenching decision: having invested more than $3 billion in the country’s ferociously competitive telecoms market, should his company double down or go home?

  Yet as Mr Rozanov considers his options, he says companies such as his face an even bigger problem — namely regulators and politicians who fail to recognise how distressed the country’s mobile sector has become.

 “They still think we are living in an earlier time, when mobile operators were becoming very rich,” he says, referring to some of those he has met in recent weeks as he seeks compensation for his cancelled licences. “But in India that time is over.”

  From tentative beginnings in the early 1990s, the mobile sector surged from the middle of the last decade, becoming the largest after China, with more than 900 million connections. A profound economic and social transformation followed, as rising penetration underpinned booming growth and placed modern communications into the hands of hundreds of millions who had never owned a telephone.

 

But now that growth has slowed, with revenues stagnating and debts rising amid price wars, unpredictable regulation and high-profile corruption investigations. The result has dented investor confidence, damaged India’s image as a fast-growing economy and raised awkward questions about the future of this young industry — and the inability of an increasingly dysfunctional government to nurture one of its most admired sectors at the very moment slowing national growth badly needs a boost.

 

The mobile telecoms revolution is thus only half complete: hundreds of millions of potential consumers, especially in rural areas, remain without connections, while lucrative data services are yet to take off, which is why the likes of Sistema and Telenor seem keen to stay put. Meanwhile, international investors and battered foreign operators are watching for signs that regulators and domestic operators can move quickly to reverse the decline in a sector that, almost more than any other, encapsulated their country’s transition from closed economy to aspirant superpower.

  If not, industry leaders warn, one of the most celebrated success stories from any emerging market in recent decades faces an increasingly perilous future.

  “India was once the poster boy for global telecoms, but in the last three years it has become the troubled child,” says Marten Pieters, chief executive of Vodafone India, the country’s second-largest operator by revenue. “This industry is in trouble. You will see a shake-out.”

  The troubles began in 2008, when the government allocated more 2G, or second-generation, mobile licences — offering basic voice and text services — to boost competition. The plan worked only too well: typical telecoms markets have three or four operators, but India’s expanded to 15, creating a market notable for tariff battles that led to rock-bottom prices for consumers.

  This was clearly good news for cost-conscious conversationalists but proved disastrous for the industry, whose profitability quickly declined. “Because of the number of players, there is a structural deformity which has set in,” says Sanjay Kapoor, chief executive of Bharti Airtel. “Consolidation has to happen, and eventually only five or so players will survive.”

  Unfavourable regulations mean this shake-out has been placed indefinitely on hold, however — part of a wider problem of unpredictable rulemaking in New Delhi that has driven operators to distraction. Their most frequent complaint is that inadequate spectrum has been made available: China Mobile, the world’s largest mobile operator by subscribers, owns 70 per cent more than all India’s telecoms companies combined.

  Then came corruption. The 2008 licences were handed out by Andimuthu Raja, the disgraced former telecoms minister until recently in prison awaiting trial on charges, which he denies, of mis-selling the licences; he is now on bail. Investigations by government auditors alleged widespread irregularities and billions in lost revenues, beginning the process that led the supreme court to issue its cancellations in February.

  Their ruling caught the industry by surprise, and kicked off a fresh series of spats with Delhi. These were partly about the justice of the court’s decision: Telenor is in dispute with its Indian partners over the licence loss, for instance, while Sistema insists the decision ought not to apply in its case.

  But the biggest complaint came over the price of the licences to be auctioned. Despite the industry’s financial woes, the government last month unveiled a reserve price roughly 10 times higher than it charged back in 2008 — raising doubts among some analysts as to whether the process will work at all.

  As yet, Rozanov has not said whether his group will participate, although both Sistema and Telenor have said they would like to stay in India, if they can make their sums add up. But other groups have packed their bags already: Etisalat quit this year.

  Either way, the auction will have important implications for the sector, including groups such as Bharti and Vodafone that neither suffered cancellations nor look likely to take part. This is because the price paid in November will almost certainly form the basis of the bill they face when they renew their own 20-year-old mobile licences from 2014 — potentially an extremely expensive undertaking.

  Decisions taken in the next two months will therefore play a crucial role in shaping India’s mobile industry, and the sector’s ability to deepen its already far-reaching impact on the country. “The mobile phone is to my mind the instrument that is most emblematic of India’s transformation over the last 20 years,” says Shashi Tharoor, a politician and author of The Elephant, The Tiger and The Cell Phone, on the nation’s economic rise.

  Tharoor recalls a world where few owned land lines, and those who did found they rarely worked. He recalls, as a student, having to book calls between cities many hours ahead, although those able to pay premium rates could opt for a “lightning” connection taking just 30 minutes. “This being India, even lightning took a long time to strike,” he recalls.

  Early 1990s liberalisation swept away such problems, creating in their place a uniquely Indian business model. Pioneered by groups such as Bharti, it featured ruthless efficiency, outsourcing and sharing of infrastructure, and falling prices. In the process, modern telecoms came not only to companies hindered by antiquated technology but also to millions lacking even electricity or running water. “This mobile revolution will endure because it empowered the underclass of India in a way in which 45 years of talking about socialism never did,” Tharoor says.

 The effect of this cut-price revolt is easy to see in Mumbai, the financial capital. “If a sweeper or banana wala can listen to FM radio, Bollywood songs, watch cricket and multimedia on a Rs1,000 Chinese knock-off mobile phone, why shouldn’t he?,” says Santosh, a 30-year-old phone seller.

 “These days calling, internet, downloading, everything is available for so cheap,” he adds. It is a fact industry leaders know only too well: their hopes now rest on persuading customers from the fast-growing middle class at shops such as these to keep using their phones even as prices rise, while also graduating to more advanced, and more expensive, data services.

 

“There are times when [prices] go up — either taxes are raised or you get less talk time for the same price,” says Naveen Jain, 37, who runs another of the tiny mobile top-up stores that dot the city. “People complain but keep using anyway because mobile phones are too important now. They look more for network quality... some even go for two sim cards to get the best combination of prices for calling, texting and downloading.”

  Multiple sim ownership means perhaps only 600 million actually own a phone — leaving half of the country’s 1.2 billion people still to be connected, most in rural areas. Kapoor, Bharti’s chief executive, calls this the “biggest opportunity market in the world”, arguing that the overwhelmingly youthful population will take quickly to a host of potentially lucrative new offerings, from mobile banking to gaming.

  If they do, it will provide part of the solution to another problem: the sector’s precarious finances. “The total debt of the industry is close to Rs2,000 billion ($33 billion), which is an extraordinary number,” says Pieters of Vodafone. “The balance sheets of many of the players have been completely destroyed.” But November’s auctions will make this worse, with total debt set to more than double to Rs4850 billion in just one year.

 

“The industry is going to be hit by a funding crunch,” says Mohammad Chowdhury of PwC in Mumbai, noting that many businesses have already slashed capital expenditure, threatening rollout plans in rural areas. “Many companies will almost certainly have to sell off stakes, or do some sort of a market listing.”

 

Faced with this crunch, Bharti has already announced plans to float its mobile phone masts business. Vodafone, too, is planning a flotation, although this is on hold pending the resolution of a long-running tax-dispute. Debt levels also make consolidation more pressing, given that revenues are unlikely to increase until competition has abated. However, the industry says it needs greater regulatory clarity on issues relating to future spectrum allocation and mergers before this can begin in earnest.

  Yet behind the worries and dilemmas lies a more conventional business problem, argues Mr Chowdhury. “These companies have made a name for themselves by acquiring zillions of subscribers and building out networks really quickly,” he says. “But now the initial euphoria over growth is over, they must prove they can innovate, and build new business models that give good returns to shareholders.”

 

If they can, he says, the future of this gigantic market will be just as exciting as its tumultuous first two decades: “For India’s telecoms revolution, the party might be over, but the fun is only just beginning.”

 

  Global mobile statistics 2012

  • At the end of 2011, there were six billion mobile subscriptions
  • That is equivalent to 87 per cent of the world population.
  • It is a huge increase from 5.4 billion in 2010 and 4.7 billion mobile subscriptions in 2009.
  • Mobile subscribers in the developed world has reached saturation point with at least one mobile phone subscription per person.
  • This means market growth is being driven by demand developing world, led by rapid mobile adoption in China and India, the world’s most populous nations.
  • At the end of 2011 there were 4.5 billion mobile subscriptions in the developing world (76 per cent of global subscriptions).

 

Mobile penetration in the developing world now is 79 per cent, with Africa being the lowest region worldwide at 53 per cent.

 

  • 30 per cent of the world’s mobile users live in India and China.
  • As of March 2012, there are now more than a billion subscribers in China, with India not far behind. Both dwarf the number of subscribers in third place USA.
  • China: 1,023.7 million subscribers — 76 per cent of population — in April 2012 (see table below for operator breakdown), 159.3 million of these are 3G users.
  • India: 919.2 million subscribers in March 2012 (TRAI, May 2012) — 75 per cent of population. 65 per cent of mobile subscribers are urban dwellers.
  • USA: 331.6 million subscribers (105.8 per cent of population) in November 2011 (CTIA).

   

  — International Telecomunication Union

Source: http://gulfnews.com/business/telecoms/growing-pains-of-indian-telecom-1.1071239

 



 






Other News
1. 13-03-2024 ஏர்வாடி ஆண்கள் மேல் நிலைப்பள்ளி தலைமையாசிரியருக்கு நல்லாசிரியர் விருது - S Peer Mohamed
2. 11-03-2024 தமிழகத்தில் நோன்பின் பிறை பார்க்கப்பட்டது 12-மார்ச் - முதல் நோன்பு - S Peer Mohamed
3. 09-03-2024 ஏர்வாடியில் குழந்தைகள் கடத்தும் வதந்தி. போலீஸார் விழிப்புணர்வு - S Peer Mohamed
4. 09-03-2024 காஸா-153: இஸ்ரேல் 69 ராணுவ தளபதிகள் அழிப்பு - S Peer Mohamed
5. 09-03-2024 காஸா-152: பணிந்தது அமெரிக்காவும் இஸ்ரேலும், போர் நிறுத்தத்தை நோக்கி ஓட்டம்... - S Peer Mohamed
6. 09-03-2024 காஸா-151: ஆயிரக்கணக்கான யூதர்கள் இஸ்ரேலை விட்டு வெளியேற்றம்.. - S Peer Mohamed
7. 09-03-2024 காஸா-150: குழப்பத்தில் இஸ்ரேல் மேலும் 300 ராணுவ வீரர்கள் அழிப்பு.. - S Peer Mohamed
8. 20-02-2024 காஸா-136: வல்லரசுகளை பிரமிக்கவைக்கும் ஹௌத்தீஸ் தாக்குதல். - S Peer Mohamed
9. 20-02-2024 காஸா-135: இன்னொரு போராளி குழு தோற்றம் - S Peer Mohamed
10. 20-02-2024 காஸா-134: ஹெஸ்புல்லாஹ் புதிய ஆயுதங்கள், புதிய தாக்குதல்கள். - S Peer Mohamed
11. 20-02-2024 காஸா-133: 1000 இஸ்ரேலிய இராணுவ அதிகாரிகள் ராஜினாமா.. - S Peer Mohamed
12. 20-02-2024 காஸா-132: ஹமாஸின் முழுமையான கட்டுப்பாட்டுக்குள் காசா. - S Peer Mohamed
13. 17-02-2024 காஸா-131: 20,000 புதிதாக காயமடைந்த இஸ்ரேலிய இராணுவ வீரர்கள். - S Peer Mohamed
14. 14-02-2024 காஸா-130: ரஃபாவில்..20 லட்சம் டாலரும் மீட்கப்பட்ட இஸ்ரேலியரும் - S Peer Mohamed
15. 14-02-2024 காஸா-129: ரஃபாவில் நடந்தது என்ன? - S Peer Mohamed
16. 14-02-2024 காஸா-128: பிசுபிசுத்து போன ரஃபா தாக்குதல். - S Peer Mohamed
17. 14-02-2024 காஸா-127: கான் யூனுசில் இஸ்ரேலிய இராணுவம் முழுமையாக தோல்வி. - S Peer Mohamed
18. 14-02-2024 காஸா-126:தங்களை தாங்களே சுட்டு வீழ்த்தும் இஸ்ரேலிய இராணுவம். - S Peer Mohamed
19. 14-02-2024 காஸா-125: காஸாவிலிருந்து பல படைப்பிரிவுகள் வெளியேற்றம்.. - S Peer Mohamed
20. 14-02-2024 காஸா-124: ஹமாஸிடம் கெஞ்சி கதறும் இஸ்ரேல் - S Peer Mohamed
21. 14-02-2024 காஸா-123: பாதுகாப்பற்ற நிலையில் இஸ்ரேல்.. - S Peer Mohamed
22. 10-02-2024 காஸா-122: ஹிஸ்புல்லாஹ் / ஹமாஸ் இவற்றால் சிதைந்து அழியும் இஸ்ரேல் - S Peer Mohamed
23. 10-02-2024 காஸா-121: இஸ்ரேலின் ஆயுதங்கள் ஹமாஸ் இடம்? - S Peer Mohamed
24. 10-02-2024 காஸா-120: காசாவில் தொடர்ந்து முன்னேறும் போராளிகள்? - S Peer Mohamed
25. 10-02-2024 காஸா-119: காஸாவிலிருந்து தோற்று ஓட்டம் - S Peer Mohamed
26. 10-02-2024 காஸா-118: இஸ்ரேலிய படைகளுக்காக அமெரிக்கப்படைகள் - S Peer Mohamed
27. 10-02-2024 காஸா-117: லெபனானிலும் தோற்று ஓடிய இஸ்ரேலிய இராணுவ வீரர்கள்.. - S Peer Mohamed
28. 10-02-2024 காஸா-116: புதிய யுக்திகளும், புதிய ஆயுதங்களும் வெற்றி முகத்தில் போராளி குழுக்கள் - S Peer Mohamed
29. 03-02-2024 காஸா-115: புதிதாக 9000 இஸ்ரேலியா இராணுவ வீரர்களுக்கு பைத்தியம். - S Peer Mohamed
30. 03-02-2024 காஸா-114: காஸாவில் இருந்து,மீண்டும் தோற்று ஓடிய இஸ்ரேல்... - S Peer Mohamed


News Home Old News Post News

The view points and opinion solely those of the author or source. nellaiEruvadi.com is not responsible for the posted contents..