The Daily Telegraph

BT told to delay fibre price cuts

- By James Warrington

OFCOM has told BT to delay wholesale price cuts after the telecoms giant’s boss said the race to roll out full-fibre broadband would “end in tears” for rivals.

The regulator had provisiona­lly said it would approve a new price plan by Openreach, BT’S network division, that would reduce the fees paid by providers such as Talktalk and Sky.

But in an update yesterday, Ofcom said it was extending its investigat­ion by two months over fears BT could “distort competitio­n in the market”. The move will force BT to delay its new price scheme – called Equinox II – from its original launch date of April 1.

It comes after Philip Jansen, BT chief executive, described his company’s network as an “unstoppabl­e machine” and said the UK’S high-speed broadband push would “end in tears” for many rivals.

He told the Financial Times: “There is only going to be one national network. Why do you need to have multiple providers?”

In a letter to Melanie Dawes, the Ofcom chief executive, Mr Jansen insisted his comments had been taken out of context and said he was “extremely disappoint­ed”. But Ms Dawes said the article caused “significan­t concern”, adding: “Were it to become apparent that BT is able to distort competi- tion in the market, we would not hesitate to take regulatory action to address this.”

Mr Jansen’s comments sparked a furious response from rivals, who have accused BT of trying to undercut them by locking customers into longer deals with lower prices.

One industry executive said: “Ofcom should worry less about whether Philip was misquoted and focus on the real intent from BT, which is to squeeze competi- tion and build as many barriers as possible to deter providers from switching.”

James Fredrickso­n, policy director at challenger broadband firm Hyperoptic, said: “The BT chief executive’s position is clear; his comments questionin­g the need for competitio­n and claiming there will only be one national network openly signal BT’S desire to reinforce its monopoly dominance. No back peddling letter to Ofcom is going to hide that.”

A spokesman for Openreach said: “While we continue to share Ofcom’s initial view that our offer isn’t anticompet­itive, it’s important the regulator has time to consider all the feedback it has received fully and fairly, so our discounted full-fibre prices won’t come into effect on April 1.”

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