Reliance Jio wins first round in battle of telcos
ROUND II Promise of revenue send shares up 11% on BSE; the question now is, will the Mukesh Ambani firm manage to retain customers once it starts charging?
Investors cheered Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd’s move on Wednesday to start charging its customers. The promise of revenues sent shares of its parent Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) to their highest level in almost eight years.
RIL’s shares surged 11% to R1207.65 on the BSE, outperforming the benchmark Sensex’s 0.36% gain on Wednesday.
The mood of the investors seems to suggest that round one of the great Indian telecom battle has gone to Jio, with the company achieving the 100 million subscriber milestone in little over five months, much faster than what analysts had estimated Jio would take to achieve that number.
The company’s free services has accelerated telecom industry consolidation and increased data usage. But it is still early days and a lot will depend on its ability to retain customers once it starts charging.
“If Jio starts charging ₹303 per month, then we consider it to be positive for the industry as the offers may not be dilutive for Bharti/Idea as their average revenue per user is below ₹200. This may lead to some traffic moving back from Jio to top telcos,” brokerage firm Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in an investor note on February 21.
Jio has committed to offer benefits available during the free-offer period for the past six months till March 31, 2018 at an introductory price of ₹303 per month.
Jio’s strategy to become the 30 May 2008 Graphics: Santosh Sharma
THE FALL IN REVENUES AT TOP TELCOS DURING OCTDEC QUARTER WAS MOSTLY A RESULT OF CUSTOMERS SHIFTING VOICE MINUTES AND DATA CONSUMPTION TO THEIR FREE JIO SIM
primary carrier, especially for high-value customers, will face challenges on account loyalty from consumers and a race to the bottom is likely.
“Don’t be surprised if you see some churn at Jio as its rivals will also come up with plans to retain their consumer base,” said an industry executive requesting not to be named.
The fall in revenues and net profit at top telcos during the December quarter was mostly a result of customers shifting voice minutes and data consumption to their free Jio SIM. For subscribers, the stakes were not high since they have been using Jio as a secondary service provider, largely for data.
“The fundamental question is whether Jio has done enough over the last five months to convince these subscribers that it should be their primary operator going forward,” Hong Kongbased Bernstein Research said in a note.
“The collective choices made by these 100 million users will
have a much bigger impact on the rest of the year than the free Jio offer has had on the last five months... In our view, anything over 50 million will signify that round two will also end up going to Jio.” it added.
Nevertheless, consumers will continue to rejoice as rivals seek to counter Jio by bringing down overall pricing levels in the industry. This could erode average monthly revenue per user of the industry even further.
“We would expect them (incumbents) to respond – with or without a lag – to retain their customer bases,” JP Morgan Markets said in a note. “Damned if you do, damned if you don’t – this would be at play here as a race to the bottom unfolds.”