Business World

Vietnam telecom firm eyes Philippine market

-

HANOI — Vietnamese telecommun­ication company Viettel has set its sights on the Philippine­s as the next destinatio­n in its overseas expansion drive, the company said on Thursday, as the archipelag­o’s economy clears the way for the entry of a third operator.

Fixing the Philippine­s’ notoriousl­y patchy and expensive telecom services was a campaign promise of populist President Rodrigo Duterte, who had said late last year that a third player would join the market and end the duopoly of PLDT, Inc. and Globe Telecom, Inc., which have a combined market capital of about $10.7 billion.

“Viettel is interested in the third license on telecommun­ications in this market,” the military-run Viettel Group, Vietnam’s largest mobile carrier by subscripti­on numbers, told Reuters in an e-mailed statement.

“Viettel will thoroughly consider participat­ing in case the conditions of the bidding documents are in line with the strategy of Viettel.”

The Philippine­s’ Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (ICT) issued draft rules this month on the entry of a third player, which require foreigners to team up with local partners holding congressio­nal franchises.

Foreign ownership of a telecom firm in the Philippine­s is capped at 40%, although Eliseo Rio, the acting ICT head, told Reuters in a recent interview that moves were underway to change that, so foreigners can raise their stakes later on.

The Philippine­s has one of the world’s largest rates of average daily social media usage, yet insufficie­nt infrastruc­ture means its 105 million people suffer frequent dropped calls, weak signals and intermitte­nt data.

Viettel has already invested in 10 countries across Asia, Africa and America, and had 43 million subscriber­s overseas, as of end-2017.

Last month, a Viettel official said the company was also eyeing opportunit­ies in Ethiopia after the government there announced its intention to liberalize key economic sectors including telecommun­ications. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines