Sunday Times

Cell C throws down 66c/minute gauntlet

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CELL C this week signalled it would not back down an inch as the price war between South Africa’s mobile operators intensifie­d. The company, South Africa’s third-largest mobile operator after Vodacom and MTN, upped the stakes by cutting its prepaid rate from 99c to 66c a minute (billed per second) on a promotiona­l basis until the end of September.

That’s when communicat­ions regulator Icasa is expected to unveil the new call terminatio­n rates. If those inter-network call rates are kept at current levels or cut further, Cell C is likely to make the 66c rate permanent by lodging it with Icasa. It also introduced new post-paid plans that have reduced contract call rates to 79c a minute.

Although Cell C has cut its headline prepaid rate by 33c, it’s not going to have a deleteriou­s effect on its financial health. It’s a smart move by the operator to be able to claim once again that it has the lowest guaranteed call rate in South Africa, undercutti­ng both Telkom Mobile and MTN without incurring

We have to get to a sustainabl­e level of scale and that is what we are going to do

further financial blood-letting.

The reason for this is that the 66c rate excludes Cell C’s Supacharge rewards, which give prepaid consumers on the 99c tariff plan bonus airtime, text messages and data every time they recharge. In other words, the effective rate on the 99c plan is far lower than 99c.

Cell C chief financial officer Robert Pasley admitted that the 66c plan would prove slightly more profitable for the company than the 99c one. But its new headline rate looks cheaper than MTN’s and Vodacom’s. You can bet that it will play to that in its advertisin­g campaigns.

This latest move by Cell C comes just a month after MTN took the market by surprise, chopping its prepaid rate to 79c a minute. MTN quickly lodged the rate with Icasa, making it permanent. Vodacom has reacted, but only with a short-term and low-key promotiona­l offer.

It has become clear that Cell C is winning market share from rivals. The company claims that at the end of April it had 16.6 million active customers, up sharply from 13.6 million at the end of December. Importantl­y, its revenue share of the market has climbed, it says, from 10% to 12%. In March, it added a net one million new customers (1.6 million gross), a record.

Cell C’s revenues improved by 14%, although it declined to provide rand numbers for its top-line performanc­e. It also declined to discuss its debt position or gearing.

The numbers, at least from the second half of 2013, suggest that it is MTN’s customers more than Vodacom’s that are churning to Cell C. If that trend has continued into the new year, it would explain why MTN got so aggressive with its 79c tariff plan.

MTN’s move has put pressure on both Vodacom and Cell C. I wrote in this column on April 27 that there are reasons to worry about Cell C’s ability to engage in a protracted price war while ensuring it meets its debt covenants. How long will controllin­g shareholde­r Oger Telecom put up with the company’s losses?

I now hear that Cell C’s shareholde­rs applied pressure on management to react to MTN’s lower prices with reduced tariffs of its own. That suggests they’re fully committed to this market. They’ve also signed off on R2.7-billion of capital spending for 2014 (which its customers in Gauteng will admit can’t come soon enough as the network buckles under load).

Last year, Cell C received R2.6billion in new equity from the shareholde­rs and a further R1.5billion has been added in 2014 so far. It raised billions more in new debt, too. That sounds like a company gearing up for a protracted fight, not one dressing itself up for a sale.

“We have to get to a sustainabl­e level of scale and that is what we are going to do,” said Pasley. “We are confident we can do that in a manner that will deliver profits to our shareholde­rs, but it’s a longterm plan — three or five years.”

That Cell C’s shareholde­rs appear to be in it for the long haul won’t be music to its bigger rivals’ ears.

McLeod edits TechCentra­l.co.za. Find him on Twitter @mcleodd

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