Wireless broadband will be a game changer in India
Monday, 14 June 2010, 15:33 IST |
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68,000 crore (over $15 billion) for the 3G spectrum auction in May, India closed part two of the spectrum auction - this one for broadband at Rs 38,300 crore ($8.5 billion). Bidding for two slots of 20 MHz each of pan-India spectrum were all the usual suspects, including Airtel, Reliance, Idea Cellular, Aircel, Vodafone and Tata.
Reliance Infocom of Anil Ambani Group mysteriously withdrew from the auction, citing high fees. Vodafone dropped out when the prices "went beyond rational levels". Aircel won eight circles, and Airtel and Qualcomm got just four each. Mumbai and Delhi, of course, got the highest amounts, of over Rs 2,200 crore (Nearly $500 million) each.
As with 3G, the two government-run firms got broadband wireless spectrum well ahead, with the proviso that they'd match the winning bid in each service area. With 3G and broadband, the spectrum auction licence fees added up to nearly $23.5 bn for the government.
The highlight: A remarkably unknown 'Infotel Broadband Services' picked up the sole pan-India licence of all 22 circles. And the Reliance Infocom withdrawal mystery was solved when Reliance Industries announced that it was investing $1 billion in Infotel. How sweet, said the media: Anil withdrew to give Mukesh a chance...the estranged brothers have really made up.
Now how will the players recover the licence costs, along with the equipment and rollout costs? That is the genius expected of Indian operators: In this regime of low average revenue per user (ARPU) market, they have to do it, and still keep their services competitive. India's short mobile history, since 1995, has shown that they can do it.
What does all this mean for the user in India?
From the licence fees and rollout capex and other costs, one might guess: Overpriced services. But that won't work. Offerings have to be competitive with wireline broadband and 3G data, so we're looking at long, long break-evens for the operators. The good thing is that the sole pan-India player is now backed by deep pockets.
So I expect the first effect (by end-2010) to be wider availability of true broadband across cities and towns. Keep in mind that even in New Delhi, a major player like Airtel does not have broadband services everywhere. That will change. And the bar will be raised to 1 Mbps unlimited as the minimum available. Already Airtel's selling 4 Mbps unlimited wireline broadband for Rs 1,399 and BSNL and others have even cheaper plans. Wireless broadband has to match those prices.
By end-2010, increased competition and availability will force prices down to the
299 level for 1 Mbps unlimited broadband, wireline or wireless. That will take affordable high-speed broadband beyond the cities.
The caveat: Cheap broadband alone will not drive penetration. It's already there in major cities and penetration is still low there. We need compelling applications. But I'm optimistic about the ramp-up, driven by a host of applications, from government services to entertainment. It's all gradually coming together now.
Source: IANS