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TELECOM & INTERNET | Staff Reporter, Singapore
Published: 10 Jan 12
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Singapore telcos starting to feel the pressure

Singapore telcos starting to feel the pressure

It's a do-or-die year for all three telcos to monetize data usage growth.

Kim Eng believes StarHub, M1 and SingTel can no longer rely merely on voice revenues, which make up a big bulk of their business, due to its shrinking profit margins and the increasing alternatives in internet communication.

Here's more from Kim Eng:

The writing is on the wall. SingTel’s new Prestige 75 mobile data plan currently allows users to download 10GB of LTE data and 50GB of 3G data. But once LTE coverage reaches peak levels next year, new users will only get 10GB of LTE quota. We believe this will also be the new reality for 3G data plans, as all the telcos intend to review their existing 3G packages to cut the generous data caps, remove the unlimited option altogether and introduce more usage-based plans in future.

Driven by necessity. With the popularity of smartphones has come more and more ways to communicate. For the most part, they are free. This has eroded the need to pay for expensive voice calls or SMS. As a result, while voice revenues have been relatively stable so far, they may come under greater pressure in future, following Malaysia where voice revenues have been on the decline for more than a year.

Data growth strong but no way to monetise. While strong data growth will offset the loss of voice revenue, telcos have not been able to monetise this growth mainly because of the generous data caps. Margins have trended down over the past few years as data margins are generally lower than voice or SMS margins. Having said that, it seems margins have started to stabilise lately as competition eases.

What’s next for telcos? In the past, telcos could not properly price data as long as unlimited plans existed. We believe they can adapt some of the techniques they now use to optimise yield from voice and SMS, such as customer segmentation, tiered access and overage charges. Singapore telcos can also take a cue from Malaysia, where data caps are much lower and plans are more revenue-focused.

Margin pressure from data can be offset by volume growth. We are optimistic that telcos can better monetise their data investments in future, although our sensitivity analysis suggests that a 5ppt substitution in voice revenue will result in a 1ppt drop in EBITDA margin. However, the actual impact will vary depending on revenue composition and data traffic growth. In general, we believe M1 has the best scope to benefit given its lower earnings base, followed by StarHub and SingTel.

Our top picks are StarHub and M1. StarHub is the best-placed among the three Singapore telcos to sustain earnings in a year of economic slowdown due to its stable domestic businesses. SingTel’s aggression in Pay TV, its biggest headache, also appears to be becoming more rational. M1 was held back by the slow NGNBN pace last year, but this should dissipate this year and sign-ups by consumers should accelerate. There is also scope for capital management by both telcos.

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Tags: Singapore telcos, Singapore telcos 2012, StarHub, M1, SingTel

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