India Touches The Tipping Point in Telecom Sector
India is the world's second-largest telecommunications market, in 2019, technology product managers will have to get more strategic with their portfolio mix by balancing products and services that will post growth in 2019 with those larger markets that will trend flat to down. The worldwide IT spending is projected to total $3.79 trillion in 2019, an increase of 1.1 percent from 2018, according to the latest forecast by Gartner.
This reflects in India with the consolidation of the ever growing telecom sector, with the merger of two telecom giants – Vodafone and Idea Cellular with 387 million subscribers across the country. It plans to extend its 4G network to over 80 percent of Indian users, wireless service mapping company. India’s remaining operators are now seeking other ways to differentiate their services rather than undercutting each other.
Secondly, the merger of state-run PSUs BSNL and MTNL has the potential to increase the overall valuation and make the merged entity financially stronger to compete with private telcos in the country, the merger will help both companies to become leaner and thereby significantly bring down their capex and opex.
With this consolidation happening in the industry, the focus is already shifting towards service quality, whereas, both Airtel trio (Airtel-Telenor and Tata Tele services) and Vodafone Idea talking up their 4G network improvement plans. At the same time, Jio has gone one step ahead with a pledge to bring 5G to India before its rivals, with the rise of Jio to 300 million subscribers base has been the standout story in India’s mobile market in recent years, with the growth of its 4G availability to 97.5 percent — the highest national score we have ever recorded, at the same time Airtel showed the greatest growth in this category, as its average score jumped by over 10 percentage points to cross 85 percent.
Thirdly, Indian has only three private players in the telecom industry, I.e. Airtel, Vodafone, Jio and the fourth telecom PSUs, BSNL and MTNL , are struggling to sustain themselves in a highly competitive market . Now, we can expect the trend to reverse a two-year declining trend with a 7% revenue growth in 2020 fiscal owing to an expected increase in average revenue per user (ARPU) by 11%.
A recent report from Deloitte has estimated that the total investment required to cover India with 5G would be a staggering $70 billion — partly because the country lacks widespread fibre backhaul infrastructure necessary for high-capacity networks. However, the 4G subscriber count to 432 million in India by 2020,
Lastly, all eyes are on the growth of rural markets to add subscribers given low tele-density.
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