The Borneo Post

4G roll-out opens up investment opportunit­ies in Vietnam’s telecoms sector

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The deployment of 4G, combined with increasing demand for advanced IT services, is set to drive growth in Vietnam’s telecoms sector.

Much of the demand is predicted to come from Vietnam’s rising middle- income segment. It is estimated that at least 33 million people in the country – approximat­ely one-third of the population – will fall within the middle- and affluent-earnings brackets by 2020, according to a study by Boston Consulting Group, deepening the potential client pool.

New products and services are also expected to pave the way for increasing opportunit­ies for foreign investors in a market where mobile phone subscripti­on levels are already at near-saturation point. Currently, Vietnam has more than 120 million mobile subscripti­ons, with a penetratio­n rate of around 133 per cent, according to the Vietnam Posts and Telecommun­ications Group (VNPT). 4G roll-out

Four of Vietnam’s mobile telecoms providers will begin rolling out 4G in 2017 – Viettel Group, MobiFone, Vinaphone and Gtel Mobile – after the government granted them licences for the advanced network service in October. The operators will hold the rights to 4G services until the end of the third quarter of 2024.

The country’s three major telecoms companies – state-owned Viettel Group and MobiFone, and VNPT subsidiary Vinaphone, which together account for 95 per cent of the market – have all run pilot 4G programmes. Vietnam’s fourth main carrier, FPT, has yet to be given approval to take the step up from 3G.

Days after awarding licenses to the three telecoms operators, the government also gave the green light to Gtel, a joint venture between state-run company Global Telecommun­ications Corporatio­n and Russia’s VimpelCom.

The operators have already moved to put the necessary infrastruc­ture in place to carry-out 4G services, according to press reports, with the service set to be offered on the 1,800 MHz band.

The launch should also go some way to advancing the government goal to have at least 95 per cent of the population have access to 3G or 4G services by 2020. Market shift

The introducti­on of 4G services is expected to fuel a rise in new products and open opportunit­ies for investors. Currently, out of Vietnam’s 37 million 3G subscriber­s, only five per cent have devices, such as phones and handsets, which are compatible with 4G services.

While to date there has been limited opportunit­ies for foreign investment in Vietnam’s telecoms sector, the shifting focus of the industry away from traditiona­l services, such as voice and messaging, towards digital and data products should open doors for investors, according to Tran Manh Hung, chairman of the member council of VNPT.

“With the trend of convergenc­e of telecoms with IT, content sharing and value-added services are now playing increasing­ly important roles in creating revenues for operators,” he told OBG.

“The transforma­tion to digital services has created many opportunit­ies for investors in Vietnam, such as deploying platforms, cloud computing and big data services.”

This transforma­tion means that foreign firms and investors with services that are applicable to the Vietnam market may increasing­ly look to develop cooperativ­e ventures with local telecoms operators, Tran Manh Hung added. Opportunit­y on the horizon

Another avenue for foreign investment in Vietnam’s telecoms sector may be about to open, with the government looking to privatise a partial stake in MobiFone, the country’s second- largest operator.

Under existing regulation­s, foreign investors can own up to a 49 per cent stake in MobiFone, while VNTP can hold up to a 20 per cent share.

Meanwhile, overseas suitors have already expressed interest, with Singapore’s Singtel, Australia’s Telstra, Malaysia’s Axiata and Norway’s Telenor submitting bids for a stake in MobiFone, according to press reports.

While the line may be long, foreign investors will likely have to wait some time before the share sale takes place, as the proposed MobiFone initial public offering has been deferred a number of times since first mooted at the beginning of the decade.

Should the sale go through, investors would have to raise approximat­ely 20 trillion dong (US$895.8 million) for a 49 per cent stake in the firm, according to industry estimates.

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