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Indian Telecom Sector Outlook July 2010 Siddharth Vishwanath Associate Director, PricewaterhouseCoopers PwC PricewaterhouseCoopers Telecom Sector – Overview PricewaterhouseCoopers 2 Indian market is full of opportunities…. Telecom Market KPIs Indian Economy KPIs • Population : 1.2 billion • • Increasing urbanization – Indians living in cities and • Wireless penetration : 44.72% - The untapped towns generate over 2/3 of the country’s GDP and account for 90% of government revenues. (source: world bank) mobile market in India is still more than 500mn • Wire line penetration: 3.16% - one of the lowest in the world • Broadband penetration: 0.6% - far beyond the Govt. target of 20 million in 2010 • Relatively large youth population – it is estimated by 2015 the population in the 20-29 age group would have crossed 210 Mn. • Growing middle class - the middle class presently is estimated to be over 300 Mn and growing. • GDP growth (Real, 2009-10): 6.7% • Second fastest growing economy • GDP size (PPP adjusted, FY’09) : USD 3 trillion • Fourth largest in the world Telecom subscribers (June’10) : 635.51 million • • • • Telecom revenues of +US $ 25 billion in FY’09 Telecom sector continues to attract a significant portion (~8%) of the FDI Impending Growth Opportunities • Low rural penetration • Stagnant data usage over the years • Limited broadband services Key Concerns • Hyper competition - HHI Index of 0.15 • Spectrum Management • Declining ARPU Source: DoT & TRAI PricewaterhouseCoopers 3 Telecom leading infrastructure growth in India….. • The Indian telecom sector has charted an impressive growth trajectory. The telecom market has been growing at a CAGR of approximately 30 percent since 1995 • Mobile services have grown at a CAGR of more than 117 percent during the period 1995-2009. More than 14 million subscribers added every month in the calendar year 2009 • Extremely low tariffs, availability of ultra low cost handsets, encouraging regulatory environment, increasing income levels and change in consumer behaviour, have combined to produce remarkable growth in the last decade. Mobile Subscriber Growth ( in millions) Wireline Mobile Teledensity 600 60% 500 50% 400 40% 300 30% 200 20% 100 10% 0 0% 1995 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Source: TRAI PricewaterhouseCoopers 4 Mobile services driving telecom growth…… • The mobile services have been growing at CAGR of 65 percent over the last 5 years. • Mobile services revenue contribution to the total telecom services revenue has increased over the years, contributing 90 percent in FY 2009. • Wireline service revenues have not only declined in terms of overall contribution to the total telecom services revenue but also in absolute terms. Growth in overall teledensity is mainly attributable to the exponential growth of mobile services in both urban and rural areas. Telecom Services Revenue (Rs. Billion)* Wireline Services Mobile Services Teledensity Others Rural Teledensity Urban Teledensity 111% Overall Teledensity 269 89% 182 117 650 66% 833 1,019 39% 21% 286 2006-07 275 2007-08 236 2008-09 7% 2% 2003 26% 9% 2% 2004 48% 46% 37% 26% 13% 2% 2005 18% 6% 2006 9% 2007 21% 15% 2008 2009 *Including inter-segment revenue Source: TRAI Source: TRAI PricewaterhouseCoopers 5 Challenges for Indian Telecom Sector PricewaterhouseCoopers 6 Bridging the Rural-Urban divide… • Mobile teledensity is lower in India in comparison to countries such as Indonesia, Philippines and Nigeria which have a similar level of GDP per capita (purchasing power parity) • Only 21 percent of Indians living in rural areas have access to mobile phone connections. • More than 500 million un-served population located mainly in rural areas with moderate to low capacity to pay for the telecom services International Precedent- Mobile Teledensity and GDP per Capita 12,000 Brazil GDP Per Capita (PPP) 10,000 South Africa 8,000 China Egypt 6,000 Sri Lanka Indonesia 4,000 India Morocco Pakistan 2,000 Nigeria 0 0% 20% 40% 60% Teledensity 80% 100% 120% Source: PwC Analysis PricewaterhouseCoopers 7 Managing spectrum efficiently… Large number of operators per circle • India has more operators per circle than other countries. While most countries have assigned spectrum to three to five operators to compete in a given area, the Indian government has assigned spectrum to as many as 11 or 12 operators which use a mix of GSM and CDMA technologies • Mobile operators in India must use assignments which are around one quarter of the spectrum available to mobile operators elsewhere in the world • Mobile operators in India are using their spectrum far more intensively than operators elsewhere. Indian operators are extracting much more capacity than operators in the developed nations through the deployment of a higher density of base stations per square kilometre and through the use of advanced technologies to maximise the traffic carrying capacity of the available spectrum. • In the deployment of advanced technologies to maximise spectrum capacity the Indian operators are one of the leaders in using technologies such as AMR and synthesised frequency hopping. Despite these efforts , it has been claimed that there is scope for GSM operators to substantially increase the capacity of their networks through the further deployment of advanced technologies. PricewaterhouseCoopers 8 Stagnant data usage over the years… • With rapid decline in ARPU due to the continuously falling tariffs and addition of marginal subscribers the telecom operators are focusing on value added services (VAS)/data services for bridging the ARPU gap • However, the data revenues have remained stagnant at 11-12 percent of mobile services revenue in last 2-3 years. International Benchmarking - Data Revenue Share 52% 32% 27% 26% 19% 12% Malyasia Philippines China Singapore Australia India Source: PwC Analysis PricewaterhouseCoopers 9 Limited uptake of broadband services.. • Broadband subscriber base in India is currently at a very low level. • Total broadband subscriber number stood at 8 million as of December 2009, this is far less than the target set by the Government of India (20 million) for broadband by 2010. • India continues to be one of the least broadband penetrated markets. High cost involved for both the operators and subscribers act as an impediment for growth of wireline based broadband services. Broadband Subscriber Growth (Million) 7.8 5.5 3.1 2.1 0.9 Dec'05 Dec'06 Dec'07 Dec'08 Dec'09 Source: TRAI PricewaterhouseCoopers 10 Mobile Services – Outlook PricewaterhouseCoopers 11 The growth story of the mobile services is expected to continue for 3-5 years…… • The growth of the mobile services is expected to continue for 3-5 years driven by high subscriber additions in mostly non-urban areas and multiple SIMs purchased by the existing subscribers in urban India. The majority of the next 500 million subscribers are expected to be added in the semi-urban and rural areas. • The mobile subscriber base will cross 1 billion in 2014, growing at a CAGR of more than 9 percent (2010 to 2015). • The mobile penetration in India is projected to cross 80 percent in next 4 years. The market will begin to saturate in terms of subscriber numbers starting 2013. Rural – Urban Teledensity - 2015 Mobile Subscriber Projections - 2015 Total Mobile Subscribers 76% Mobile Teledensity 84% 82% 80% Rural Teledensity Urban Teledensity 69% 59% 712 2010F 117% 844 2011F Source: PwC Analysis 940 999 1,048 2013F 2014F 122% 124% 125% 125% 54% 58% 61% 63% 46% 2011F 2012F 2013F 2014F 2015F 1,078 33% 2012F 120% 2015F 2010F Source: PwC Analysis PricewaterhouseCoopers 12 Over hundred million 3G broadband subscribers by 2015 and growing….. • Broadband volumes are likely to be driven on the mobile platform leveraging 3G • Key Drivers - Introduction of new innovative applications, enhanced user experience and decreasing prices of 3G enabled handsets. • Initially, the uptake of mobile broadband services will almost exclusively be in urban India; in 2015 rural subscribers are likely to comprise 24 percent of overall 3G subscriber base. • 3G subscriber numbers are projected to cross 107 Mn by 2015 growing at a CAGR of 190% between 2011 and 2015 3G Subscriber Forecast* Urban 3G Subscribers Rural 3G Subscribers 107mn 24% 26mn 18% 0.1mn 100% 2010F 1mn 95% 10mn 86% 82% 2011F 2012F 2013F 60mn 23% 77% 76% 2014F 2015F *Unique subscriber numbers. Figures are as of year end. Source: PwC Analysis PricewaterhouseCoopers 13 VAS revenue shares realign…. • Open internet access allowing direct access to subscribers and increasing value proposition of content to customers, will reflect in the bargaining power of content developers and aggregators. • Content will be the key differentiator which will see new alliances being forged between handsets vendors/ operators and application developers to attract new customers. • Mobile operators will leverage proprietary content create customer stickiness. Projected Revenue Shares in 2015 Tech. Enabler 2% - 6% Content Developer 12 - 16% Content Aggregator 15 -19% Mobile Operator 63% - 67% Source: PwC Analysis PricewaterhouseCoopers 14 Imperatives for Telecom Sector PricewaterhouseCoopers 15 Imperatives • Margins • Rural Focus • Applications and Data driven Services • Blurring of the lines between Value Chain players • Carbon Footprint • Spectrum Management PricewaterhouseCoopers 16 www.pwc.com/telecom © 2010 PricewaterhouseCoopers. All rights reserved. “PricewaterhouseCoopers”, a registered trademark, refers to PricewaterhouseCoopers Private Limited (a limited company in India) or, as the context requires, other member firms of PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited, each of whichPricewaterhouseCoopers is a separate and independent legal entity. 17