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Showing posts with label China Mobile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China Mobile. Show all posts

Friday, October 27, 2017

Connected-Energy Market Expected to Reach US $26 Billion By 2026

Mobile operators deploying IoT networks in Europe will be able to benefit from a connected energy market that could be worth US $26 billion by 2026, GSMA said, citing a research report. The emerging connected-energy market is expected to connect 158 million new smart meters on low-power wide-area (LPWA) networks across the continent. The current connected-energy market, which includes applications related to the generation and transportation of energy, microgeneration, smart grid and distribution monitoring and smart metering, is worth an estimated US $11.7 billion. The European connected-energy market represents 21 percent of all global revenues, with Asia-Pacific taking 54 percent and the Americas 21 percent.

The European Commission recently published a proposal indicating that 200 million electricity smart meters and 45 million gas meters will be rolled out by 2020. The EC also estimates that by 2020, 72 percent of European customers will have a smart meter for electricity and about 40 percent will have one for gas.

In their ongoing quest for new sources not only of revenue but of relevance in an age of looming commodification of mobile services, operators have some fresh choices. One of those is connected energy, one of a number of IoT systems that are gaining traction globally. Unlike some IoT applications such as smart home and various other consumer gadgets, energy is an essential service for industry and consumers alike. Therefore, the revenue potential is very high, as indicated by the figures arrived at in the European study cited by GSMA. As Europe accounts for just about one fifth of the world market for connected energy, the global potential is truly enormous.

As such, we think the development of connected-energy networks should be a priority for MNOs in the coming years. Those operators that have the resources to do so would be very well served by partnering with the appropriate entities to not only devise innovative systems for energy generation, distribution, and monitoring but also to build out the kinds of networks that are necessary for functionality via the IoT.

Examples of this kind of development that could serve as models for mobile operators include the following: In the Netherlands, Deutsche Telekom has deployed NB-IoT networks for smart metering and smart lighting solutions in several municipalities; Vodafone is developing several NB-IoT initiatives, including a water metering project in Valencia, Spain; in the U.S., AT&T is partnering with Capstone Metering to monitor water usage using LTE-M, another IoT standard that uses low-power signals over broadband. China Mobile is exploring NB-IoT for water quality monitoring, while China Unicom is using NB-IoT to take readings from energy and water meters and is partnering with an energy company on a smart cities project. 

Tarifica is the global leader in monitoring and analyzing telecom pricing. Covering hundreds of operators in every region of the globe, Tarifica’s databases of mobile and fixed line data and voice tariffs are among the largest and most in-depth in the world. Tarifica is also a leading publisher of benchmark and other pricing reports, and its analysts are recognized authorities in the telecom industry, relied upon by operators and businesses worldwide for pricing insight and guidance. 
To learn more about Tarifica, please visit www.tarifica.com 

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

China Telecom, Alibaba Partner to Sell Smartphones










China’s third-largest mobile operator, China Telecom, has partnered with Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba to sell inexpensive smartphones to consumers who live in the country’s smaller cities and rural areas. Through this partnership, Alibaba will have access to China Telecom’s 186 million subscribers. The mobile phones, called Tianyi Taobao Shopping Handsets, include six different models that come installed with an app enabling users to access Alibaba’s Taobao online shopping platform, or eight other models that will run Alibaba’s home-grown mobile phone operating system, YunOS, which will provide users with an Alibaba account for shopping, cloud-based storage and other preloaded services. The costs of the devices will range from CNY 299.00 (US $48.20) to CNY 699.00 (US $112.69), and purchasers of the handsets will receive four months of 2G data at no cost.

According to recent reports, China Telecom lagged behind the country’s other operators, particularly China Mobile, in increasing its subscriber growth in 2014. The operator attributed this to its inability to expand its 4G network coverage because the government had not granted the required licenses for FDD-LTE last year. Although FDD-LTE 4G licenses have now been issued and we expect the carrier to aggressively expand its 4G network coverage, China Telecom is smart to partner in initiatives that target its current 2G customers to increase their data use. While it is clear that Alibaba will win from this partnership—through increased retail sales from online shopping, as well as through the potential growth of its operating system YunOS—China Telecom could see increased revenue through customers’ demands for larger data packages, as this whole initiative stems from the rise of mobile shopping in China, especially in rural areas where shoppers are turning to the online marketplace more often.

“Targeting 2G customers may not seem like a good source of revenue for mobile operators, particularly in many developed markets, but the sheer size of China’s mobile market makes targeting this group of subscribers lucrative, especially if the operator has been slow to attract 3G/4G customers in areas where it has this infrastructure already built. Revenue from 2G service in the country’s rural areas is a good supplement until the China Telecom is ready to build out infrastructure in these areas.”
Kamely Hayes,
Managing Editor,
The Tarifica Alert




The above item appeared in a recent issue of The Tarifica Alert, a weekly resource that analyzes noteworthy developments in the telecoms industry from around the world. To access all of the latest articles and issues or to speak with the research team: Click here.





Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Differentiating Mobile Service Plans Through Consumer Value Metrics

Mobile operators face an existential crisis: how to differentiate their brands and make their offers stand out in a marketplace that is increasingly crowded with similar plans. There are several factors that exacerbate this problem:
  • The rate of new plan introductions is accelerating. In some markets, such as Brazil, it is almost real time. As soon as an innovative plan is offered, several other operators release identical versions. Mobile consumers show ever increasing reticence to commit to long-term contracts or high-value plans which increases the likelihood of churn and decreases profitability.
  •  The overall volume of plans continues to grow making it more and more difficult for consumers to confidently make the best choice for their situation.
  •  Relying on the operators’ retail sales people for guidance is not the most reassuring approach. Operators’ services are becoming commodities due to the continual introduction and attractiveness of OTT services and the fierce and visible nature of competition in this market.
  •  In an attempt to overcome this trend towards commodity-like status and increase plans’ attractiveness, operators are adding more and more features and extra value elements to their plans making it even harder for consumers to compare and choose. 

Traditional strategies for dealing with this problem include reducing prices, investing in network coverage and speed, increasing advertising and promotion spends and increasing service inclusions to make plans more attractive. For example, in the US Verizon paid $1B for the rights to carry live NFL football games. These strategies have one thing in common; they cost a great deal and when everyone else is doing the same thing the returns can be meager.



 A differentiation strategy that is used in other consumer markets such as automotive and electronics, is recognition of the value of products by a trusted third party. Two major providers of this type of recognition are J.D. Power and the IIHS (Insurance Institute for Highway Safety) and its companion organization HLDI (Highway Loss Data Institute). J.D. Power conducts surveys to determine product and service factors of most value to consumers and announces the results such as “X ranks second among all nameplates in the automotive Industry in its 2014 Initial Quality Study (IQS).” The J.D. Power website states “our ratings aid consumers in making more informed purchase decisions.” The Highway Loss Data Institute (HLDI) conducts scientific studies of insurance data representing the human and economic losses resulting from the ownership and operation of different types of vehicles and publishes insurance loss results by vehicle make and model.



 Companies receiving high scores from J.D. Power and best safety results from HLDI use this to promote the value of their products.J.D. Power indicates that research results show approximately 70% of consumers said that a J.D. Power award could positively change their willingness to consider recipients’ products. Other organizations, in the US alone, which produce similar recognition awards for consumer products are Consumer Reports, Consumer Choice Awards, Consumer Wine Awards, Consumer Goods Technology, Readers’ Choice Awards, Angie’s List Super Service Awards and American Consumer Council’s Friends of the Consumer Awards, to name a few. 

 While these organizations are willing to describe their methodology, consumers view these awards and selections as holistic. That is, they are not interested in questioning the approach or the details.They like the idea of having a reliable guide to help them make better selections and take it on faith that these are reasonably accurate (or some watchdog organization would have already uncovered problems). Such a guide in the world of mobility could also help customers bypass detailed evaluations and comparisons of such factors as speed, coverage, capacity and cost in order to feel comfortable they are making the best selection. 



Tarifica has designed a similar guide for consumers (and operators) by which they can easily determine the best mobile plans on the market. This guide is designed to strengthen operators’ brands, reduce churn and entice new customers. It is called the Tarifica Score.™

 The Tarifica Score is a proprietary algorithm that computes the aggregate value of every feature of a mobile plan (including usage allotments, geographic coverage, data speeds, value added features such as premium content or free roaming and promotional elements) and divides this by its total charges to calculate its unit cost. The result is a numeric measure of its consumer value relative to all other offers in the same country or region. Scores are scaled to range from 0 (worst) to 100 (best). 



 This formula was developed through a rigorous process which used offers from many operators in many countries to validate its global applicability. Service volumes (voice, data, text) are weighted based on interviews with regulators, operators and industry media and Tarifica’s years of experience studying mobile plans and customer preferences. Customer surveys were used to validate assumptions.Every month, Tarifica’s analysts apply this formula to every mobile plan and promotion available in subscribers’ countries, producing a ranking of plans by their consumer values. These rankings are delivered in two plan categories, “With Phone” and “SIM Only,” which are each further subdivided into five price segments, creating a total of ten groups. Through this process, users can instantly identify both the “Top Value” plan in each price category and the operator which consistently provides the best value. 



 This algorithm has applications for optimizing the consumer purchasing process as well as conducting both regulatory and operator specific market analyses. However, the most popular use of these rankings is in MNO branding and marketing. The Score provides operators a direct means with which to persuade potential subscribers that a given plan is their best choice.

 When purchasing mobile plans, consumers often report a feeling of insecurity. This stems from a lack of understanding of the specifics of mobile services, difficulty comparing all the alternatives, the length of the commitment (which is often substantial) and the recognition that they are often accepting the recommendations of a biased seller.



 Consumers involved in purchasing, renewing or changing mobile service, find the inherently abstract and multifaceted nature of the product to be daunting. Mobile plans are complicated and frequently misunderstood both in terms of the services provided and their associated costs. Mobile plans costs – activations charges, device costs, monthly costs, add-ons and excess usage fees – are viewed (like bank fees) as insidious ways to take their money and often as ambiguous or in some cases, totally hidden. A frequent customer complaint and oft used explanation of high-churn rates is so called “bill shock.” 



A plan’s included services can be equally opaque. Navigating through usage restrictions – on net, all net, peak, off peak – is a challenge, as is differentiating among the operators’ network attributes. While most consumers understand the importance of a strong network, fast download speeds and widespread coverage, they rarely have direct access to these metrics. Even if a customer took the time to research these services the results are unlikely to be useful without further contextualization. 

As an independent guide, the Tarifica Score helps operators move potential customers over these hurdles – it takes into account each element of every mobile plan, saving customers the effort. The Score distills all of the numerous pricing and service characteristics of the hundreds of mobile plans in a given market into a single value score which is simple, intuitive and easy to understand. All that is left for the consumer to consider is how their usage matches the plan’s allotments. 



Regardless of a customer’s price point, the Score serves to reassure them that a plan rated a “Top Value Tarifica Score” represents a great value. Since the Score identifies the “Top Value Plan” in ten unique price segments, operators can highlight their top performing plans at every price point, giving consumers’ confidence that this purchase – which they will carry with them for years – is a sound decision. Even if an operator only has one “Top Value Plan” it can promote that plan to generate recognition as a provider of high value services. 



Instead of trying to explain complex details or engage in point-by-point comparisons with competitors’ offerings, a mobile operator can advertise a plan by citing its easy-to-articulate Score. For example, if a plan won the “Top Value Plan” for its category, the operator can market it as, “You are buying the ‘Top Value Postpaid Plan’ in the U. K. in the under €50/month category.” 



 Even if an operator does not have a single Top Value Plan in any price category, it can review the list of all plan scores each month and look for the ability to make such claims as: “Operator X has six of the top ten highest rated plans in the country, or Operator Y has more plans in the top ten highest rated plans in the country than any other operator.” There are many ways the Score can be used to provide consumers with confidence in the overall value received from an operator, thus keeping them from “churning out,” or the confidence to go out and seek a new plan from that operator. 



This impact cannot be replicated through studies commissioned by mobile operators currently found in the market literature. The Score is a consistent algorithm, created by a well-established third party. It has been evaluated in industry publications and cited by mainstream media from around the world. Any attempt by a mobile operator to reproduce this model (or pay a third party to do so) would be seen as self-serving – drawing skepticism from the media and consumers alike. The Tarifica Score has the credentials and history that substantiate it as an unbiased means to evaluate the consumer values of mobile plans.


 The foundation of the Score is unit cost, which is total plan allotments divided by total costs. Mobile operators tend to offer their best volume discounts in high allotment, high price plans, giving them the best price per unit. Therefore, the Scores trend upward with price. The absolute highest scores are generally awarded to top-end, high margin plans. As such, the Score can be leveraged as a means to increase customers’ monthly mobile spend by demonstrating the cost effectiveness of these plans.



 The impact of volume discounts is generally present in both movement from low to moderate priced plans and in movement from moderate to high priced plans. Customers can sense this by comparing data or voice volumes versus monthly charges but it is very difficult to compare plans mathematically when multiple services and different value added elements are involved. The Score can show customers the exact relationship among these plans and they will clearly be able to see that for a small increase in monthly cost the associated value of their mobile plan can rise dramatically.
At a time when global ARPU has been consistently falling, the Tarifica Score is a tool operators can leverage to move subscribers to plans with higher returns. 



 A significant benefit from the J.D. Power and HLDI analyses is that by utilizing the results, manufacturers can improve those aspects of their products and services most important to consumers. Similarly, the Score can be used to efficiently improve plans in ways that maximize the increase in score values at the lowest additional operator cost. While recognizing the impact of the Score in marketing, one common refrain from operators is: “The Tarifica Score appears to be a powerful way to differentiate plans, but how can we use it if our plans don’t score well?”



 The algorithm is highly sensitive and small modifications to a plan’s included features or cost structure can often have a significant impact on its score.
For example, in the South African market, one operator’s 8 GB promotional plan placed fifth in the overall SIM-only category, with a Tarifica Score of 63. Its generous data allowance of 8 GB came with the restriction that 4 GB could be used anytime, but the other 4 GB could only be used between midnight and 6 a.m. If the restriction had been removed, however, its Score would have been 100. Alternatively, by changing the restriction to 2 GB of nighttime data, lowering the monthly fee from R599 ($52.19) to R549 ($47.84) and lowering the activation fee from R195 ($16.99) to R114 ($9.93), its Score would have jumped to 98. 



Tarifica’s consultants explore options such as those described above to create any number of alternative plan constructs. Expanding any feature (minutes, SMS, data, value added services) or reducing any cost will enhance a plan’s score. By running multiple scenarios through the tool containing all plans in the country they can identify the best options for improving scores that will enable the operator to capture the “Top Value Plan” position. Using this “what if” approach will help operators minimize both additional costs and increases in network capacity required to achieve the desired score. 



The Tarifica Score enables market observers to cut through the hundreds of offers, promotions, discounts and variations in available plans (that may have been formerly analyzed subjectively or with less robust algorithms) and immediately identify those that stand out in their market segment. By using this tool on a monthly basis operators will immediately be able to assess the value of recently introduced plans. One example is the new Sprint “Cut your bill in half” plan. Analysis by the Score instantly showed that it had only average value compared with existing plans, although it was much better than the older competitive plans it was trying to replace.



 When used in conjunction with the Tarifica Mobile Plan Database users can also segment results by cost, plan allowances, device inclusion, regional availability or other selected metrics in order to correlate plan value with those elements. For example, users could easily identify phones that are paired with the highest (and lowest) scoring plans.



 It can also be used by regulators to compare the total consumer value an operator’s plans offer with those of its competitors or, by converting the charges of all operators in a region to a standard currency, it can be applied across countries to not only find the “Top Value” operators and plans in the region but to also measure the gap between best and worse. 



 Every mobile telecom market observer recognizes the rapid pace at which this industry changes. Virtually every major new smartphone offer immediately generates many new mobile plans. 


Operators constantly track their competitors in an attempt to diminish the effects of their innovations while introducing their own. Tarifica’s experience with tracking the market and watching the changes in Tarifica Scores makes it clear that promotions play a major role in increasing sales and changing market shares. Monthly updates provide operators the means to stay abreast of this rapidly changing market, quickly identify new market leading plans and helping operators to create effective responses. This reduces the need to rely on high cost reactive efforts to watch for new offers or manually compile alerts received from multiple sources. 



 The mobile industry is experiencing fierce competition. Consumers are searching for plans that maximize their mobile spend and find this to be very challenging. Operators are spending large sums to improve their networks and promote their services while continually looking more and more like commodities. Operators need to get off the high cost of differentiation treadmill and find a way to gain a distinctive edge without spending a fortune.



 An effective differentiation strategy is the use of third party awards for products, service and customer satisfaction. Companies such as J.D. Power and HDLI offer a tested and reliable means of demonstrating clear differentiation in ways that are meaningful to customers. 

The Tarifica Score is a similar tool for the mobile consumer market and provides many collateral benefits including: 
  • Produces easy to understand, unambiguous numerical scores measuring customer value that can be used to differentiate and promote plans. 
  • Keeps operators current with monthly updates - demonstrates the changes in plan values due to current promotions, discounts and deals that often drive customers to purchase new plans.
  •  Identifies Top Value Plans overall in each market as well as in each of ten price categories providing multiple opportunities for operators to promote their scores. 
  • Enables customized plan development to achieve the highest scores at the lowest development cost. 
  • Makes plan selection easier for customers while assuring them they are buying a high value plan. Reduces outward churn, while enticing customers to leave other operators. 
  • Increases sales in general and increases sales of longer contract, higher margin plans. 
  • Provides market intelligence on competitive plans in terms of consumer value, not just price and service allotments. 
  • Offers unbiased third party perspective and credibility. 
  • When combined with the Mobile Database customers can segment results by plan elements in order to correlate plan value with those parameters. 
Operators seeking a low cost means of differentiating their offers need to investigate the use of the Tarifica Score.   To Contact Tarifica: http://www.tarifica.com/

Monday, October 27, 2014

China Mobile, Deutsche Telekom Partner in Connected Car

China Mobile and Deutsche Telekom have signed an agreement to create an equally owned (each will have a 50 percent stake) joint venture (JV) company, which will enable the roll-out of connected car services in China. The JV, which will begin operating in early 2015, will leverage Deutsche Telekom’s Connected Car platform and telematics services and China Mobile’s 4G/LTE network. According to the operators, German-based Deutsche Telekom will also turn to its experience with European vendors to aid in increasing development and creating a broader market appeal, while China Mobile has promised to work with its country’s manufacturers and regulators to ensure the deployment of the connected car services. Additionally, the operators said they would explore the possibility of retrofitting connected car services in older vehicles.

We have written previously about the automotive industry as a major market sector for the Internet of Things (IoT) and about the increasing involvement of telecom companies in M2M communications, so it is no surprise that Germany and China’s largest operators would move into this very lucrative market. The JV provides telltale signs about each operator’s plans  and about the potential growth of connected car services. It is an expansion opportunity for Deutsche Telekom, which currently has more than 142 million mobile customers and operations in 50 countries, to brand itself in China, the world’s largest telecom market by subscribers (China Mobile has more than 800 million subscribers). For China Mobile, the JV is an opportunity to continue exploiting its 4G network, which the operator has been doing quite effectively since it launched the high-speed service earlier this year.
Overall, mobile operators have been scrambling for ways to become prominent players in M2M communications and not just settle for the “bit pipe” role in the IoT. Additionally, they are looking for new revenue streams to substitute for losses or stagnation they are experiencing with traditional sources such as voice. Deutsche Telekom and China Mobile have estimated that China will have 68 million connected cars by 2018, and as the operators take on dominant roles in connected car services that not only include navigational and infotainment aspects, but also the remote monitoring for safety, security and performance, we expect to see an increase in these types of partnerships between MNOs in addition to collaborations between MNOs and other types of companies that offer connected car services.

The above item appeared in a recent issue of The Tarifica Alert, a weekly resource that analyzes noteworthy developments in the telecoms industry from around the world. To access all of the latest articles and issues:  http://www.tarifica.com/TarificaAlert.aspx

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

China Mobile Dominates Early 4G Adoption

The early returns from the recent 4G launch in China show the world’s largest MNO, China Mobile, leading in this newly introduced service by an even wider margin than that by which it dominates the rest of the market. Earnings reports list China Mobile as now having 30 million 4G subscribers compared to China Unicom’s 995,000. While China Telecom has not released the figures for its 4G subscribers yet, given that it only launched the service in July and that the company has lost over 5 million customers this year, it appears highly unlikely that the operator has a number anywhere close to that of China Mobile.

China Mobile’s 4G launch could be used as a potent example of successful strategies that a leading operator can employ when launching a new service. While the operator has two built-in advantages—its large base of subscribers and resources plus the regulatory holdups encountered by China Telecom and China Unicom’s 4G services, which allowed China Mobile to launch six months early—it leveraged these nearly perfectly. Rather than looking to maximize early returns, it worked to grow the service, in terms of both subscribers and features, as fast as possible. Although China Mobile reports that its 4G customers generate an ARPU nearly three times greater than that of ordinary users—and have more than 10 times the average data consumption—the company’s profitability actually dipped 8 percent compared with last year. This was driven by the large investments made in 4G infrastructure and the significant handset subsidies offered to customers who committed to the new service.
We believe both expenses will prove to be savvy outlays from which China Mobile will likely benefit richly in the long term. The operator now has a near unassailable advantage in terms of 4G infrastructure, with 410,000 base stations compared to 90,000 for China Telecom and 63,400 for China Unicom. Given that users need to actually have 4G coverage in order to experience its advantages, this will likely enable China Mobile to expand its early lead. Similar logic could be applied to the handset subsidies—customers with 3G-only devices will see no improvement when switching to 4G service—which served to lower the barrier to entry. It will be interesting to watch the pace of 4G adoption over the  next six months, as China Mobile plans to drop its handset subsidies to CNY 5.3 billion (US $863 million) for the second half of 2014, from CNY 15.3 billion (US $2.5 billion) over the first half of the year. If the operator’s launch of 4G has been any indication, however, we expect it to handle this reduction deftly and to continue to make strides in the 4G market.

 The above item appeared in a recent issue of The Tarifica Alert, a weekly resource that analyzes noteworthy developments in the telecoms industry from around the world. To access all of the latest articles and issues:  http://www.tarifica.com/TarificaAlert.aspx

Monday, August 4, 2014

China’s MNOs Aim To Save US $6.5 billion in Reduced Capital Spending

China’s three MNOs, China Mobile, China Unicom and China Telecom, have formed a new company—the China Communications Facilities Services —tasked with the construction, maintenance and operation of wireless towers in the country. Despite the MNOs’ major differences in size (China Mobile has 787 million subscribers compared with 293 million for China Unicom and 182 million for China Telecom), the ownership of the new entity is divided relatively equally. China Mobile will control 40 percent, China Unicom 30.1 percent and China Telecom 29.9 percent. The deal has been in discussions since April but took several months to finalize.

At first glance this deal would appear to significantly disadvantage China Mobile. The company currently has around 350,000 telecom towers, which is 40 percent more than both of its rivals combined. This network advantage, which the company built through years of investment, has been a driving reason for its dominant position in the market. Why would the operator not try to continue the strategy that has worked so well by increasing this network supremacy through the construction of additional towers?
We suspect China Mobile’s reasons are twofold. First, Chinese regulators looking to increase competition have been penalizing the company and forcing it to accept lower interconnection rates from the other operators. Setting up a joint venture that will expand the coverage of all MNOs—and likely open the door for new MVNOs—is a strong way to demonstrate to regulators a commitment to open participation and market access. Second, and more important, this decision is likely a reaction to a major shift in the dynamics of the mobile marketplace. China has been at the forefront of OTT usage. MNOs have seen their ARPUs decline as massive numbers of users turn to messaging apps like WeChat, reducing their consumption of minutes and SMS. Compared with this new threat, other MNOs may appear to be not so much rivals as fellow combatants in the same struggle for survival. It is estimated that the three companies will save as much as CNY 40 billion (US $6.5 billion) per year in reduced capital spending, savings that become more critical if revenues are permanently deflated by the likes of WeChat. Given that the Chinese market has represented the tip of the spear for OTT adoption, MNOs worldwide would do well to monitor this new venture in assessing their own strategies to combat OTTs.


 The above item appeared in a recent issue of The Tarifica Alert, a weekly resource that analyzes noteworthy developments in the telecoms industry from around the world. To access all of the latest articles and issues:  http://www.tarifica.com/TarificaAlert.aspx

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Chinese Operators in Talks to Share Infrastructure

Responding to media rumors, China’s three largest telecommunications operators, China Mobile, China Unicom and China Telecom, have confirmed that they are in talks to set up a joint venture for the sharing of mobile infrastructure, with the approval of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. While the talks are still in the preliminary phase, the companies have indicated that the venture would be for the operation of existing base stations throughout the country as well as the construction of new ones, which the three operators would lease from the venture. The venture, likely to be known as the National Tower Company, will initially have up to US $1.6 billion of capital and will collect rent from the three operators.
The idea of sharing network infrastructure makes a good deal of sense for China’s big three. Despite the rapid growth of the Chinese economy and the already huge numbers of customers these operators have, they are all facing challenges. Since the granting of 4G licenses by the Chinese government in December 2013, the operators have been facing the need for large capital expenditures to build out high-speed networks. China Mobile, the largest operator, reportedly plans to build 500,000 4G base stations by the end of 2014, while China Telecom intends to reach 250,000. In addition, all three providers are now operating in a more competitive environment, due to entrance into the marketplace of new entities. The government’s issuance of 19 MVNO licenses promises to shake up the Chinese mobile telecommunications landscape.

In this context, the three traditional operators have a common interest in fostering better coverage and quality of service. Sharing the cost, will help all three—though it is likely China Telecom and China Unicom have more to gain here than China Mobile. While the plan should cut costs in the long run and accelerate the rollout of 4G, the initial investment will likely have a short term negative impact on profitability. 

The above item appeared in a recent issue of Tarifica's "The Story of The Week", a weekly report that analyzes two noteworthy developments in the telecoms industry from around the world. For past issues or to learn more about The Story of The Week :  http://www.tarifica.com/storyoftheweek.aspx