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Business
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Mobile phones: more opportunities than threats
By C. R. L. Narasimhan
A recent news item, quoting industry sources, says that the
number of mobile phone users in India would soon touch the 2
million mark. Delhi has the maximum number of users followed by
Mumbai. The four cell operators in these two cities have a
subscriber base of over one lakh each, while those in Calcutta
and Chennai have fewer subscribers. Among the four metros,
Chennai has the least number of mobile phone users. At the
moment, the largest private cellular provider is the Delhi-based
Bharti Cellular (almost 2 lakh subscribers), while the Mumbai-
based BPL Mobile is second with 1.77 lakh connections.Interesting
as these tidbits are, there are important question marks over the
immediate future of the cell phone industry as indeed over the
entire telecom sector. New policy initiatives - permission given
to the private sector to set up international gateways, the sharp
reduction in import duties on cellular handsets, and the
reconstitution of the regulatory authority - have revived hopes
in the telecom industry. A special report prepared by the rating
agency Duff and Phelps Credit Rating (DCR) highlights the recent
performance and the near term prospects of the Indian industry.
The key conclusion of the DCR report is that survival and growth
of the sector will depend on the nature of value-added services
(mobile phone banking, and Internet access through cell phone)
that the cellular operators can provide. Increased competition
would result in a few successful companies leveraging on the new
technologies. The latter in turn will depend on the speed at
which convergence takes place within the IT, communication and
entertainment (ICE) sectors.
New welcome policy initiatives
With the announcement of the NTP-99 (National Telecom Policy) and
the reconstitution of the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India
(TRAI), the telecom sector will be in a better position to
attract private investment. The TRAI will decide on revenue-
sharing arrangements and set terms for interconnections. The
likely introduction of a `calling party pays' (CPP) regime will
increase the number of cell phone users as well as air time
usage. Since the NTP has mandated the entry of a third player in
each circle, market dynamics will alter for ever. Cellular
telephony will, according to the DCR report, witness price wars
which will ultimately benefit Indian consumers.
Mobile telephone services are now available in 22 circles. The
cellular phone companies face threats as well as opportunities.
Competition, especially driven by fast-paced technological
changes, will threaten many. Consolidation through mergers and
acquisitions (M&A) will become inevitable just as they have been
in the telecom industry globally. (In the latter category there
have been several mega deals running into billions of dollars:
example, MCI Worldcom-Sprint and Vodafone-Mannesman).
In the Indian telecom sector too M&As and buy-outs are becoming
common. Note for instance the Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa's
purchase of a 49 per cent stake in Sterling Cellular and its
interest in acquiring a stake in Fascel, the cell phone provider
for Gujarat. Bharti Telecom, so far the most successful company,
has acquired a 20 per cent stake held by the Sanmar group in JT
Mobile (operating in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh) and has also
agreed to take over the 40.5 per cent stake held by Crompton
Greaves in Skycell, one of the two service providers in Chennai.
Value additions and convergence
The Tatas and Birla AT&T have come together for a joint venture
in Andhra Pradesh. AT&T may establish another direct presence in
India when it takes over Media One, the company which owns U.S.
West. The latter has a collaboration with BPL in Tamil Nadu and
Kerala.
The above is only a sample of what has happened even in India.
Almost certainly the main consequence of technology induced
competition will be to reduce the number of players. There will
therefore be special regulation to curb monopolistic power. But
enlightened regulation will help rather than hinder the business
prospects of the cellular companies that survive.
Future growth will most certainly come as much from technology-
driven value additions as from expanded coverage. A major barrier
here - high costs which will meet with consumer resistance - will
be progressively lowered though not dismantled altogether. Courts
have forced the cell companies to reduce their tariffs. And the
budget has reduced the customs duty on handsets and spare parts
from 25 to 5 per cent and on battery packs from 25 to 15 per
cent. The move to a revenue sharing regime from a fixed licence
regime will also have the effect of lowering the service charges
by the service providers.
The outlook for cell providers is thus bullish. The cellular
sector has attracted 49.3 per cent of the Rs. 4,220 crore foreign
direct investment that has come to the telecom sector between
August 1991 and October 1999. Most of the service providers are
already on to value added services such as mobile banking, and
receiving and sending e-mails. It is from these that the bulk of
their future revenues will come. Experts say that the convergence
of the mobile phone and the Internet is being acknowledged as
potentially the strongest growth driver in the industry. Internet
service providers (ISP) are on a price war. A manifold increase
in Internet usage is a certainty. That can work wonders for the
cellular operators too.
If the grey areas in cellular services are sorted out the
industry will show phenomenal growth. Of course, problems such as
lack of interconnection agreement among the operators and
inadequate availability of frequency spectrum have made the
cellular services expensive.
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