Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Jio effect: Airtel net plunges for fourth straight quarter

Net profit declines 77% to ₹343 crore; revenue falls 10.4%

- Amrit Raj amrit.r@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Bharti Airtel Ltd’s profit plunged 77%, its fourth straight quarterly decline, as ultra-cheap tariffs offered by new entrant Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd, backed by India’s richest man Mukesh Ambani, took a toll on telecom operators.

Airtel’s net profit declined to ₹343 crore in the quarter ended September 30 from ₹1,461 crore a year earlier, the company said on Tuesday. That missed the ₹351.3 crore profit estimate of 16 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

However, what made Airtel’s net profit look better was the contributi­on from its African subsidiary, which posted a net profit of ₹306 crore, an indication that the New Delhi-based firm’s efforts to revive its operations in the continent have started to pay off.

Consolidat­ed revenue for the quarter was at ₹21,777 crore, a decline of 10.4%.

The lower-than-expected earnings came at a time when pressure has eased on Airtel after Jio started charging customers in April; it has increased tariffs thrice since then, after offering services for free for almost six months. Airtel said that the mobile phone services market continues to “experience value erosion and financial stress led by competitiv­e pressures”.

Increased competitio­n from Jio has forced operators to boost spending on their networks to deliver faster data services.

As a result, Airtel’s quarterly consolidat­ed net debt increased to ₹91,480 crore from ₹87,840 crore in the June quarter. Net debt excluding deferred payment liabilitie­s to the telecom department and finance lease obligation­s rose by ₹2,554 crore sequential­ly.

Lower earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortisati­on, along with rising spectrum costs and continued investment­s in India, have resulted in return on capital employed deteriorat­ing to 5.1% from 7.4% in the correspond­ing quarter last year, the company said.

According to Gopal Vittal, managing director and chief executive of Airtel for India and South Asia, the financial stress in the industry has continued due to double-digit revenue decline and “will be further accentuate­d by the reduction in IUC (interconne­ction usage charge) rates in the next quarter”.

“This will force operator consolidat­ion and exits as we have witnessed in the recent past. Airtel remains committed to its goal of increasing revenue market share in this competitiv­e environmen­t by providing superior customer experience and strategica­lly investing behind building more data capacities,” Vittal said.

The company said its mobile data traffic grew four-fold to 784 billion megabytes (Mb) in the quarter compared with 178 billion Mb in the correspond­ing quarter last year.

Airtel’s monthly average revenue per user, or ARPU, fell sharply to ₹145 in the June quarter from ₹185 a year ago.

The number of minutes spent on calls on its network, however, grew 40% during the quarter.

Amid competitiv­e pressures and efforts to make the organisati­on more efficient, Airtel reported that it employed 17,657 people at the end of the September quarter as against 19,462 in the year-ago period.

Airtel’s shares rose 0.98% to ₹497.65 on the BSE on a day the benchmark Sensex shed 0.16%. The company announced its results after the end of trading on Tuesday.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India