The Borneo Post

New leader to aid DiGi’s strive for more efficienci­es

- By Ronnie Teo ronnieteo@theborneop­ost.com

KUCHING: Analysts are sanguine on Digi.Com Bhd’s (DiGi) prospects following the official introducti­on of its new chief financial officer (CFO), Nakul Sehgal, in light of tightening competitio­n within the telco sector.

Kenanga Investment Bank Bhd (Kenanga Research) said the new CFO has taken over the group’s financial seat since August 1.

Before this appointmen­t, Nakul served as CFO of Telenor Hungary since January 2016, overseeing all financial matters and holds the responsibi­lity for establishi­ng and executing company’s strategy, and the enterprise risk management efforts.

Nakul joined Telenor Group in May 2010 as head of financial reporting in Telenor India and had held various leadership positions within the finance department. This paves the way to deliver 2017 guidance, Kenanga Research added.

“DiGi remains confident in delivering its FY17 targets -- a lowto-mid single-digit YoY decline in service revenue, stable margins, and capital expenditur­e at 11 to 13 per cent of service revenue.

“This was despite competitio­n to continue to be fairly active in the second half of the year,” it said in a report yesterday.

“Management believes the aggressive competitiv­e pricing model is not sustainabl­e for the long-run and thus will continue to focus on strengthen­ing its network quality – via the newly assigned 900Mhz spectrum – as well as digital innovation­s to sustain its long-term growth.

“Besides, DiGi will continue to move away from the non-profitable segments to other segments such as providing total business solutions for both the SME and enterprise segments, to yield better margin.”

On the other end of the spectrum, AmInvestme­nt Bank Bhd (AmInvestme­nt Bank) does not expect DiGi’s efforts in monetising its digital platforms to materialis­e in the near to medium term.

“Recall that management has recently lowered its FY17F service revenue guidance to a low-to-mid-digit decline amid the unabated competitio­n amongst cellular operators given the need to constantly offer more attractive value propositio­ns to consumers.

“Hence, the prospects for Digi’s service revenue trajectory next year are ambiguous at this stage,” it said in a separate report.

Even though subscriber­s rose by 254,000 quarter on quarter to 12 million in 2QFY17, AmInvestme­nt Bank saw that Digi’s 2QFY17 prepaid service revenue fell four per cent q-o-q as the segment’s subscriber increase materialis­ed towards the end of the quarter as opposed to a generally lower base on average.

“Given the highly competitiv­e landscape, we expect Digi’s subscriber growth and ARPUs to remain under pressure as both Maxis and Celcom are already aggressive­ly improving 4G coverage and service quality,” it opined.

All in, Kenanga Research believe DiGi is heading towards in the right direction given that market prices offered by telecom players are already at a very competitiv­e level, thus the key differenti­ating factors will likely come from the value- added services and consumer experience.

To note, DiGi has plans to enhance its operationa­l efficienci­es via expediting digital transforma­tion as well as efficient use of the strategic spectrum.

“The group is set to introduce more digital services in the coming months that cater to customers’ evolving needs and digital lifestyle as well as drive differenti­ation through strategic business themes, cross networking, products and services, and channels,” it added.

“Besides, management also plans to transform its network to the cloud-based model (which is able to accommodat­e higher data capacities) and leverage on Telenor’s global scale on sourcing, infrastruc­ture collaborat­ions and talent.”

 ??  ?? DiGi remains confident in delivering its FY17 targets – a low-to-mid single-digit YoY decline in service revenue, stable margins, and capital expenditur­e at 11 to 13 per cent of service revenue.
DiGi remains confident in delivering its FY17 targets – a low-to-mid single-digit YoY decline in service revenue, stable margins, and capital expenditur­e at 11 to 13 per cent of service revenue.

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