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India’s Bharti Airtel profit doubles, first rise in 4 years

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India's top mobile phone firm Bharti Airtel reported Wednesday its quarterly profit leapt by 115 percent, the first rise in four years, boosted by surging data use and easing of cut-throat price wars.

Bharti, the fourth-largest telecom firm globally, said net profit for the third financial quarter to December climbed to 6.1 billion rupees ($98 million) from 2.84 billion rupees in the same period a year earlier.

The company's focus on Internet operations "has increased adoption and usage" of Bharti, said Indian chief executive Gopal Vittal.

"Data is now a huge source of revenue," Vittal added.

Data services have become the new battleground for Indian telecom companies as they seek to boost revenues in an increasingly saturated domestic mobile market.

Bharti, controlled by billionaire founder-chairman Sunil Bharti Mittal, had clocked 15 straight quarters of profit decline before Wednesday's rise.

The logo of India's top mobile firm Bharti Airtel  fourth largest globally by customers  is see...
The logo of India's top mobile firm Bharti Airtel, fourth largest globally by customers, is seen on a shop window in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, on May 20, 2011
Tony Karumba, AFP/File

Despite the better performance, the figures still undershot market expectations of a 10-billion rupee profit for the three-month period.

Shares were up just 0.13 percent at 306.55 rupees in early afternoon trade.

But analysts said the quarter was positive overall.

"Competitive intensity is declining in India thanks to (the) fruits of consolidation and the data numbers give quite a bit to be excited about," telecom analyst Harit Shah at Mumbai's Nirmal Securities told AFP.

The Indian firm, with 287 million customers and operations in both Africa and Asia, said Internet revenues soared 105 percent year-on-year to 17.36 billion rupees.

Total revenues climbed 13.3 percent in the third quarter to 219.4 billion rupees from 193.6 billion rupees a year ago.

Motorists ride past a billboard advertisement for India's Bharti Airtel  in Colombo  Sri Lanka ...
Motorists ride past a billboard advertisement for India's Bharti Airtel, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on July 18, 2010
Ishara S.Kodikara, AFP/File

Average revenue per user, a key industry profitability benchmark, jumped five percent in India.

Bharti operates in 20 countries and is nearly one-third held by Singapore's SingTel.

India's telecom sector was a market star before fierce tariff competition pushed call rates down to among the world's lowest.

But the number of major telecoms players has fallen, with just three firms -- Bharti, Vodafone and Reliance -- accounting for nearly three-quarters of revenues. A 2012 Supreme Court ruling scrapped the licences of various smaller firms over a scandal-tainted spectrum sale.

The easing of market congestion has allowed companies to start hiking calling rates. While there is still a price battle for data customers, that has been more than offset by the volume of new customers, analysts say.

But the industry faces a new deep-pocketed rival, Reliance Jio Infocomm belonging to Reliance Industries, controlled by India's richest tycoon Mukesh Ambani.

Bharti must bid to purchase new spectrum in an auction of mobile airwaves starting February 3 to keep providing services in several areas where it already operates.

Aggressive bidding by Reliance Industries could boost prices at the auction, at which the cash-strapped government is hoping to raise at least $1.8 billion, analysts say.

Reliance's planned entry could force Bharti and other telecom players to invest more on capital expenditure to improve service and may even trigger a new tariff price war, analysts say.

Bharti's Africa operations, which it purchased for $10.6 billion in 2010 to expand its global footprint, meanwhile, continue to face headwinds.

The Africa division has yet to declare a profit and it added 36 percent fewer customers during the third quarter from a year earlier, the earnings statement showed.

India’s top mobile phone firm Bharti Airtel reported Wednesday its quarterly profit leapt by 115 percent, the first rise in four years, boosted by surging data use and easing of cut-throat price wars.

Bharti, the fourth-largest telecom firm globally, said net profit for the third financial quarter to December climbed to 6.1 billion rupees ($98 million) from 2.84 billion rupees in the same period a year earlier.

The company’s focus on Internet operations “has increased adoption and usage” of Bharti, said Indian chief executive Gopal Vittal.

“Data is now a huge source of revenue,” Vittal added.

Data services have become the new battleground for Indian telecom companies as they seek to boost revenues in an increasingly saturated domestic mobile market.

Bharti, controlled by billionaire founder-chairman Sunil Bharti Mittal, had clocked 15 straight quarters of profit decline before Wednesday’s rise.

The logo of India's top mobile firm Bharti Airtel  fourth largest globally by customers  is see...

The logo of India's top mobile firm Bharti Airtel, fourth largest globally by customers, is seen on a shop window in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, on May 20, 2011
Tony Karumba, AFP/File

Despite the better performance, the figures still undershot market expectations of a 10-billion rupee profit for the three-month period.

Shares were up just 0.13 percent at 306.55 rupees in early afternoon trade.

But analysts said the quarter was positive overall.

“Competitive intensity is declining in India thanks to (the) fruits of consolidation and the data numbers give quite a bit to be excited about,” telecom analyst Harit Shah at Mumbai’s Nirmal Securities told AFP.

The Indian firm, with 287 million customers and operations in both Africa and Asia, said Internet revenues soared 105 percent year-on-year to 17.36 billion rupees.

Total revenues climbed 13.3 percent in the third quarter to 219.4 billion rupees from 193.6 billion rupees a year ago.

Motorists ride past a billboard advertisement for India's Bharti Airtel  in Colombo  Sri Lanka ...

Motorists ride past a billboard advertisement for India's Bharti Airtel, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on July 18, 2010
Ishara S.Kodikara, AFP/File

Average revenue per user, a key industry profitability benchmark, jumped five percent in India.

Bharti operates in 20 countries and is nearly one-third held by Singapore’s SingTel.

India’s telecom sector was a market star before fierce tariff competition pushed call rates down to among the world’s lowest.

But the number of major telecoms players has fallen, with just three firms — Bharti, Vodafone and Reliance — accounting for nearly three-quarters of revenues. A 2012 Supreme Court ruling scrapped the licences of various smaller firms over a scandal-tainted spectrum sale.

The easing of market congestion has allowed companies to start hiking calling rates. While there is still a price battle for data customers, that has been more than offset by the volume of new customers, analysts say.

But the industry faces a new deep-pocketed rival, Reliance Jio Infocomm belonging to Reliance Industries, controlled by India’s richest tycoon Mukesh Ambani.

Bharti must bid to purchase new spectrum in an auction of mobile airwaves starting February 3 to keep providing services in several areas where it already operates.

Aggressive bidding by Reliance Industries could boost prices at the auction, at which the cash-strapped government is hoping to raise at least $1.8 billion, analysts say.

Reliance’s planned entry could force Bharti and other telecom players to invest more on capital expenditure to improve service and may even trigger a new tariff price war, analysts say.

Bharti’s Africa operations, which it purchased for $10.6 billion in 2010 to expand its global footprint, meanwhile, continue to face headwinds.

The Africa division has yet to declare a profit and it added 36 percent fewer customers during the third quarter from a year earlier, the earnings statement showed.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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