The Borneo Post

Comcast said to have reached 200,000 subscriber­s with XFinity Mobile service

- By Gerry Smith

COMCAST’S low- cost entry into wireless service, called Xfinity Mobile, has attracted about 200,000 subscriber­s in less than five months, according to people familiar with the situation who asked not to be named, a warning shot to larger rivals locked in a price battle.

The service is available only to Comcast customers who subscribe to internet and TV service. When it launched in May, unlimited data plans cost US$ 65 a month, or US$ 45 a month for those who already subscribe to premiere packages that include video and landline phone services. Users also can pay US$ 12 per gigabyte of data they use. They are some of the lowest prices among the top US wireless carriers. Comcast declined to comment.

Comcast, the largest US cable operator, is seeking new sources of revenue as consumers ditch traditiona­l TV packages while competitor­s like AT& T bundle wireless and video services to entice customers. Comcast also is using the mobile service to get its 29 million subscriber­s to stick around instead of moving to online alternativ­es like Netflix. While 200,000 Xfinity users is far from gangbuster sales, it is a sign that an inexpensiv­e offering can gain traction in a hypercompe­titive market.

“That number is just a rounding error to the other carriers at this point, but what’s interestin­g is that Comcast might be making a profit at this,” said Roger Entner, an analyst with Recon Analytics.

Comcast relies on Verizon Communicat­ions Inc.’s cellular network to provide the service. The Philadelph­ia-based cable giant is buying capacity from Verizon at wholesale prices to resell to XFinity subscriber­s. If Comcast is paying Verizon an estimated US$ 3 or US$ 4 a gigabyte then selling it to consumers for US$ 12 retail, the markup is pretty good, Entner said. The US$ 12 per gigabyte offer has been the most popular option, Comcast has said.

Comcast sees an opportunit­y to offer lower prices than other wireless companies because most people use their phones on Wi-Fi at home or at work. Comcast says as much as 80 per cent of smartphone data in the US travels over Wi-Fi, not cell networks, so it won’t have to pay Verizon much for the capacity needed.

XFinity lets subscriber­s connect their phones using the company’s 18 million Wi-Fi hotspots and Verizon’s cellular network as a backup. In August, Comcast made the service available to customers across its entire territory, which includes Philadelph­ia, Chicago and Boston. Comcast executives have said their wireless business will be profitable once subscriber­s reach a “low-to-mid- singledigi­t” share of the 25 million broadband customers.

“Once we get to some minimal scale, which isn’t a huge number, every incrementa­l customer pays for itself,” Chief Executive Officer Brian Roberts said at a conference last month.

 ?? — Comcast photo ?? The service is available only to Comcast customers who subscribe to internet and TV service.
— Comcast photo The service is available only to Comcast customers who subscribe to internet and TV service.

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