We have 9 players (Airtel, Reliance, Vodafone, BSNL, Idea, Spice, BPL, Aircel, MTNL) in the circuit. 6 more players are ready to join the market. What this means is India will be having 15 players operating by 2010. If 9 players have fought for 300 million subscribers, then its 15 players fighting for 400 million subscribers. This would mean heavy competition and severe cost-cutting. Though, this is good for the subscriber the companies operating would face serious challenges. Network roll-out and gaining subscribers are the biggest challenges.
New entrants cannot roll their networks as aggressively as the big boys. For example Reliance after acquiring its GSM license has rolled out its network very aggressively and ready to eat some of the Airtel’s GSM pie. It has built 1600 towers by spending 300 crores. It added 1.76 million subscribers and some of them might be GSM subscribers. Now, does the new operators have this kind of cash to roll out a network? I guess not.
Without even rolling out a network, let alone having a subscriber Unitech sold 60% stake to Telenor. Which means it either does not have the money or the technology to roll out services. Swan telecom and Shyam Telelink have followed the similar route. What this means is, consolidation is already happening in the form of stake sales. The next wave is mergers and acquisitions.
Airtel and Reliance had bid unsuccessfully for South Africa’s MTN. This does not mean that they have stopped looking. They will look for acquisitions. Be it local or global. They do realize that India is still unfinished business.
If Indian telecom is a movie, what we have seen is the first half. New GSM licenses and 3G auction is the interval. Second half is left and promises to be interesting.
It is not the matter of ‘if’, but ‘when’ and ‘who’.