The New Zealand Herald

Chorus triples UFB fibre speed

Move ups heat on mobile networks, says analyst

- Chris Keall

The UFB network had always been capable of lightning speeds so we are very pleased Chorus will share that with customers at the same wholesale price. Jordan Carter, CEO, InternetNZ

Pundits see Chorus’s latest play in the UFB fibre market as politicall­y and commercial­ly savvy on two counts. The network operator said it was working to triple the download speed of its most popular UFB fibre plan, while keeping the same wholesale pricing for two years (bar adjustment­s for inflation).

Chorus is working with retail internet service providers to bump the speed of its 100Megabit per second download/20Mbps upload plan to a 300Mbps down/100Mbit up plan, which would launch from December at no extra wholesale cost.

ISPs will get both the 100/20 and 300/100 wholesale products from Chorus for $47.87 — so why not offer customers the faster plan?

Why is Chorus being so generous, offering much faster speeds for free?

Jarden analyst Arie Dekker notes the most obvious reason: to put competitiv­e pressure on mobile network operators Spark and Vodafone (and to a lesser extent 2degrees), who have been cutting Chorus out of the loop as they’ve moved around 200,000 customers to fixed-wireless products.

In performanc­e terms, 300/100 fibre will have a clear performanc­e edge for many customers, especially at peak times.

But then there are the wheels within wheels.

Under a new telecommun­ications regulatory regime, which is being phased in from December, only one UFB fibre product will be directly price-regulated by the Commerce Commission: the 100/20 plan, known as the “anchor product”.

When the anchor product was set as the 100/20 plan a couple of years ago, InternetNZ submitted that the market regulator had set the bar too low. History and the market would soon pass 100Mbps by as households sucked down even more streaming video, at higher and higher video quality, and our overall data use continued to grow exponentia­lly.

And certainly today, while 100/20 remains the most popular plan, the most popular type of connection for new UFB customers is a 1000Mbps (or 1Gbps or “1 gig”) plan, which offers 10 times the speed. And Chorus recently launched an 8Gbps fibre product.

And if ISPs do offer their customers the 300/100 plan come December (and why wouldn’t they, given it’ll offer more bang for buck, and they’re in a competitiv­e market) then there will be a surge of people upgrading from the regulated 100/20 to the faster plan with unregulate­d pricing.

They’ll be gaining speed, yet losing the Crown’s protection against price increases above inflation.

As Dekker noted in follow-up comments to the Herald, the 300/100 product will be a purely commercial product, while the 100/20 will remain the only Chorus product with pricing controlled by the Commerce Commission.

At the end of the day, there’s nothing to stop Chorus increasing the price of the 300/100 plans.

But a Chorus spokesman told the Herald there were strong reputation­al reasons. “JB [Chorus CEO JeanBaptis­te Rousselot] has put it out there in the public domain,” the spokesman said. “You’ll keep us honest.”

The spokesman noted that the anchor 100/20 product would continue to be available.

InternetNZ appears to be won over, and happy to take Chorus at its word that it will keep the 300/100 product at the same price as the 100/20 offering for at least three years. “We welcome this change,” InternetNZ CEO Jordan Carter told the Herald yesterday.

“The UFB network had always been capable of lightning speeds so we are very pleased Chorus will share that with customers at the same wholesale price.

“This will help boost the internet experience of many people. With sharp competitio­n between Chorus and other broadband options, we expect the trend of more gains for consumers to carry on.”

A key point is that Chorus’ maximum allowable revenue has yet to be finalised. After a series of delays, the regulator is now not expected to finalise the new regulatory regime until June next year.

Chorus knows that lifting the price of its 300/100 product would invite more regulation. Similarly, keeping the price tied to the 100/20 plan for three years would be a good strategic move, potentiall­y helping to the company avoid further price regulation further down the track.

With the heavy-spending years of the UFB rollout largely behind it, Chorus has promised to pay out the majority of its free cashflow in dividends in the years ahead — although how fat the increased profit payout gets will depend on the ComCom’s

final decisions.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? If internet service providers do offer the faster plans from December, they won’t come under Commerce Commission pricing controls.
Photo / Getty Images If internet service providers do offer the faster plans from December, they won’t come under Commerce Commission pricing controls.

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