1. India Telecom Overview by Niraj K. Gupta for Indian School of Business December 2004 Data used here is only approximate and indicative. This presentation is only for discussion and not to be quoted.
3. The Great Chapter 11 filings Telecom Crash Banks and investors lent $1.3 trillion to telecom companies since 1996⊠most of which was lost in Chapter 11 filings Worldcom Global Crossing 360Networks Winstar Comm . PSI FLAG Teleglobe many others⊠Trillions of Dollars lost in market caps Over half a million telecom jobs lost Technology Hype: The Great Telecom Crash
4. 3G over 100 billion US Dollars paid in 3G licence fees Managing Technology: The 3G Hype WiMax WCDMA CDMA1xEV-DO Content Killer Applications HANDSETS availabilty 4G ? ? ? ? Technology obsolescence => Need to recover invetment fast
8. Telecom Scenario Analysis 2003-04 IndiaÂŽs communications industry Tele-density: 7.12 on 31 March 2004 5.35 on 31 March 2003 Revenue Growth FY 2003â04 Rs 56,367 crore ($12.25 billion) ïŸ 20 % FY 2002â03 Rs 47,121 crore ($10.24 billion) ïŸ 5 % Cellular services: - The cellular grew by around 72% in revenue terms and 135% in terms of subscribers. - The star => will continue to grow fast for few years. - contributed more than a quarter of the overall revenues. Key factors for excellent growth : - low pricing and the - calling-party pays (CPP) regime. If low tariffs continue, India will overtake other giants on the numbers front Quality of service (QoS) is still far below TRAIÂŽs benchmark. Source: DoT, TRAI, V&D and other media .
9. Telecom Indicators: Targets Mobile & Fixed Source: Association of Unified Telecom Service Providers of India 3 rd Dec 2004 250 million ~ 2 mn Todayâs level Over 4 mn Monthly additions required 161.5 mn Additions by 2007 44.5 mn 44 mn Mobile Fixed Oct 2004 175 mn 75 mn Mobile Fixed Dec 2007
10. Mobile TRAI expects to achieve this growth rate since the current mobile network coverage in India is only 20% of the population but this coverage is likely to increase to 75%, as shown, in next two years. Dec 2007 fcst=> 175 Mln
12. Cellular industry growth Since the shift in the license fee structure in July 1999 the industry has been growing at a high rate * January 2004 subscribers includes both GSM and CDMA subscribers (Source: Cellular Operators Association of India and Association of Basic Telecom Operators ) Mobile subs 44.51MÂ Fixed 43.96M (Oct04)
13. India is amongst the fastest growing wireless markets As of January 2004, the wireless subscribers in India were approximately 30 Million showing an annual growth rate of 120% over the last 12 months (Source: International Telecommunication Union) 2001-02 >>
15. Mobile Penetration Countries like Japan, China, Brazil, South Korea and Mexico have more mobiles than fixed lines. Czech Republic: 96.5% (mobile subs 9.75 M => thrice of fixed lines). Spain: 91.6% (mobile subs 37.5 M => twice of fixed lines). Taiwan: 111% (25 million subs). China : 21.4 % India : 4% => now growing at about 2 million new subscribers every month. Source: TRAI Source ITU 2002 The wireless penetration has since increased to over 3% as in January 2004 with wireless forming 40% of the total telecom subscribers=> crossed fixed in Oct 2004
16. Mobile 2003-04 Top Mobile Service Providers in Terms of Revenue (FY 2003â04) Rank Company/Group 1 Bharti Tele-Ventures 2 Hutch Group 3 Reliance Group 4 BSNL 5 Idea Cellular 6 BPL Group 7 Spice 8 Aircel* 9 Escotel# 10 Tata Teleservices Group 11 MTNL 12 Hexacom** 13 HFCL Infotel 14 Shyam Telelink  *Includes RPG Cellular revenues #Escotel has been bought over by Idea and from FY 2004â05 it will have a combined turnover **Hexacom has been bought over by Bharti and from FY 2004â05 it will have a combined turnover Group revenues include GSM as well as CDMA services revenues, wherever applicable Reliance Infocomm made history by getting a subscriber base of 6.9 million subscribers taking the overall tally of its cellular subscribers to 7.2 million. Reliance Group #1 in numbers, Bharti #1 player in revenue (Rs 3,261 crore). Hutch increased its service areas. The Subscriber Surge: Mobile subscribers swelled from 14 mln in March03 to 33 mln in March04 => 135% explosive growth
18. Mobile Subs Oct 2004 + Mob) CDMA (F Fixed Cellular GSM 213K 45 40 127 HFCL 776K - 27 749 Bharti 12914K 9116 2409 1388 Total 34770K Total 141K 26 21 94 Shyam 2384K 657 1336 390 Tata Tele 442K MTNL 964K Reliance 1457K Spice 1512K Aircel 2402K BPL 4419K Idea 6566K Hutch 7941K BSNL 9062K Bharti 9399K 8387 984 27 Reliance Total No. of Subs. Mobile WLL F Wireline No. of Subs.
19. ARPU Average Revenue Per User (ARPU) of cellular consistently declining over the past few years due to quest for quick subscriber growth 58 % down from 2001 to Rs 469 in 2004 . Reasons for steep decline : - Entry of CDMA players intensifying competition in the mobile communication space. increasing pressure on voice tariffs (voice 90% of the traffic) - Dominance of the pre-paid user. Prepaid Vs. Postpaid : - TRAI July 2004 data: almost 75% of GSM subscribers are pre-paid (which has seen the most rapid growth in the past 5 years). - Growth: While the pre-paid segment has grown by almost 27 times, post paid has growth of just 5.4 times. - Tata Teleservices had highest ARPU, at Rs 650, with is largely post-paid mobile subscriber base. - Among the GSM-only operators, Hutch has the highest ARPU in the industry, at around Rs 534. In its stronghold Mumbai (higher incidence of post-paid customers) the ARPU was as high as Rs 608. - State-run BSNL and MTNL have lower ARPUs : Less applications => less non-voice usage. BSNL had a large subs base in the B- and C-class cities where even the voice usage is relatively low.
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21. Spectrum Spectrum allocation for 2/2.5 G cellular mobile services  800 MHz International allocation* 824â849 MHz paired with 869â894 MHz Indian allocation 824â844 paired with 869â889 MHz (Used to provide WLL (M) and CDMA-based mobile services) 900 MHz International allocation* 890â915 MHz paired with 935â960 MHz (880â890 MHz paired with 925â935 MHz E-GSM band) Indian allocation 890â915 paired with 935â960 MHz** (Used by 1st, 2nd, and 3rd cellular operators for GSM) 1800 MHz International allocation* 1710â1785 MHz paired with 1805â1880 MHz Indian Allocation 1710â1785 Mhz paired with 1805â1880 MHz (Used by 4th CMSP and for additional allocations to 1st, 2nd, and 3rd CMSPs) 1900 MHz International allocation* 1850â1910 MHz paired with 1930â1990 MHz (North American PCS band) Indian allocation 1880â1900 MHz is earmarked for micro cellular technologies based on TDD *SOURCE: ITU-R Recommendation M.1073-1 & NFAP 2002 / TRAI Consultation Paper
22. Spectrum GSM: 900MHz to start with metros 6.2 MHz after 600K subs entitled for additional=> + 1.8 MHz 8.0 MHz after 1 mln sub entitled for additional=> + 1.8 MHz 9.8 MHz Examples: Delhi: Bharti 1.5 mln subs => 10 MHz idea now 600K => applied for next 1.8 MHZ after 9.8 Hz, given in 1800 MHz band CDMA: given 5.5 MHz 800 Mhz band => enough for over 1 mln subs
23. Spectrum SPECTRUM POLICY TO ADDRESS 1900 MHZ BAND ALLOCATION ISSUE Telecom Regulatory Authority of India âthe spectrum policy to be announced this month will address the controversy between GSM and CDMA operators over allocation of radio frequency for third generation services (3G) services in the 1900 Mhz band. The policy on 3G has to be evolved with caution while at the same time building flexibility in allocation offrequency and making it affordable. The policies would have to be dictated by standards laid down by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) and the availability of equipmentâ. Both CDMA and GSM operators have been clamouring for the 1900 Mhz spectrum. While GSM operators say that allowing CDMA services in 1900 Mhz would create interference in their cellular network, GSM operators are also opposing the entry of CDMA players in the 1900 Mhz on grounds that internationally the band has been reserved for thirdgeneration services. CDMA players say that there is no equipment available for any other frequency. On the other hand, CDMA operators highlight the fact that globally there are only two other countries where CDMA networks arerunning on frequencies other than the 1900 Mhz band.Â
24. Spectrum DoT MAY DELICENSE MORE FREQUENCY BANDS TO PUSH BROADBAND To accelerate the penetration of broadband and internet, Department of Telecom is planning to delicense certain spectrum frequency bands. "With a view to accelerating penetration of broadband and Internet, the 5.15-5.35 Ghz band is also being delicensed for the indoor use of lowpower Wi-Fi systems . For outdoor use , the band of 5.25-5.35 is under active consideration for delicensing in consultation with the existing operators in the band" - Nripendra Misra, chairman, Telecom Commission. He said alternative spectrum frequency bands which are not in high use for other applications could also be deployed for broadband services. The process of siting clearance by the clearing agency SACFA as also the grant of wireless licences has been simplified to some extent and further simplification is on the anvil. A transparent scheme is being outlined separately for time-bound frequency as well as siting clearance and wireless licensing by removing the cumbersome procedure. 2.4 GHz band already free band for WiFi
25. This yearâs 2004 telecom services brand ranking 1 BSNL (usurping the top spot from last yearâs leader Reliance IndiaMobile) 2 Reliance 3 Airtel (# 3 in 2003 too) 4 Tata Indicom (# 4 spot belonged to BPL Mobile in 2003) 5 BPL (??) 6 Hutch inches up one rank taking over # 6 position from MTNL 7 MTNL 8 Idea (# 8 in 2003 too) Overall services list: three out of the top 10 service brands are telecom brands (last year there were two) 3 BSNL (late entrant into the mobile telephony market) 6 Reliance India Mobile (last year # 3) 7 Airtel (# 15 last year, Airtel could well be on its way into the top five next year) 20 Hutch (Orange in Mumbai- has seen the highest ascent in its category, and overall, jumping 14 places from No. 34 to No. 20 this year) Source: The Economic Times 15 Dec 2004 RINGING IN A NEW ORDER Brand Rankings
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27. Technology trends: 3G Wideband CDMA (WCDMA) is an approved 3G standard that uses 5 MHz channels for both voice and data, offering excellent voice capacity and a peak data rate of 384 kbps. NTT DoCoMo launched the first WCDMA service in 2001 and now has millions of 3G subscribers. WCDMA (UMTS) is also the 3G technology of choice for many GSM/GPRS operators, with dozens currently trialing the technology and more than 100 having licensed new spectrum with the intent to launch services in the next few years.
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29. Telecom Scenario Analysis 2003-04 Long distance LD continued southward in FY 2003â04 too. From a negative growth of about 20% in FY 2002â03, it has come down to about 14 percent. NLD National Large infrastructure of about 572,675 Rkm . => need to promote broadband services (triple-play). ILD International DATA: good growth in data => growth est ïŸ 65%. VOICE: good growth in voice minutes ïŸ 22 percent, but a drop in prices led to fall in revenues
INDUSTRY REALITIES AND COMPETITIVE OPTIONS FOR GROWTH LOKESH SEHGAL EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR INSTITUTE FOR COMMUNICATIONS RESEARCH AND EDUCATION 1549 CLAIRMONT ROAD, SUITE 203 DECATUR, GA 30033 404-325-1677 FAX: 404-325-1313