Bangkok Post

Fitch sees modest dip in telecom revenue

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Service revenue for Thai telecom operators will likely decline modestly in 2020 due to a slowing economy amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to Fitch Ratings.

Fitch expects the sector’s free cash flow to turn negative in 2020, as higher capital expenditur­e (capex) and spectrum payments exceed cash flow from operations.

Fitch predicts mobile service revenues for Thai telecom operators to decline 2-3% in 2020 (after 3.6% growth in 2019), which would still outperform Fitch’s GDP forecast of a 5.1% contractio­n for Thailand.

The ratings agency believes that the telecom sector will be more resilient in a downturn relative to other sectors, given the essential nature of its services.

Mobile service revenue grew at a modest pace of 1.9% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2020 but declined 2.1% quarterly. The sector grew 3.6% in 2019.

Internatio­nal roaming revenue, which accounted for 2% of service revenue, fell by 22% year-on-year in the first quarter, due to the plunge in inbound and outbound tourists since February.

Quarterly revenue was also affected by a slowdown in new subscriber acquisitio­n and slow migration of existing subscriber­s to higher-margin postpaid mobile services from low-margin prepaid ones, due to the temporary closure of telecom service shops in late March 2020 as part of measures to curb the pandemic.

Total mobile subscriber­s in the first quarter of 2020 shrank 2.4% from Q4 2019 and 1% year-on-year, compared with the fourth quarter of 2019 where they grew 1.4% quarterly.

Fitch expects service revenue in the second quarter of 2020 to decline further should the economic slowdown deepen in April and May. The temporary closure of some non-essential businesses will continue to put pressure on enterprise spending, while a higher unemployme­nt rate could weaken consumer sentiment.

Growth in telecom revenue is likely to lag the increase in data consumptio­n, with operators offering tariff discounts and reintroduc­ing unlimited data plans to bolster data consumptio­n.

Fitch predicts the industry’s free cash flow to turn negative in 2020, underscori­ng a negative outlook on Thai telecom. Neverthele­ss, telecoms will have some flexibilit­y to manage their leverage profiles, including scaling back 5G investment or reducing dividends if demand is weaker than expected.

Fitch believes that high capex and spectrum payments will raise leverage for Thailand’s largest mobile operator, Advanced Info Service (AIS), and the third-largest operator, Total Access Communicat­ion (DTAC), in 2020.

AIS has said it will increase capex (excluding spectrum payment) to 35-40 billion baht in 2020 from 23 billion baht in 2019, mainly to support its 5G network rollout.

While DTAC has yet to provide its full-year capex guidance for 2020, citing uncertaint­ies about the operating environmen­t, Fitch expects the company to maintain capex (excluding spectrum payment) at 15-18 billion baht in 2020.

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The ratings agency believes that the telecom sector will be more resilient in a downturn relative to other sectors, given the essential nature of its services.

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