TPSA will not alter revenue forecast (Poland)

Poland’s dominant telephone operator, Telekomunikacja Polska SA has stated that it won’t need to revise its revenue forecast following a proposal from the telecommunications regulator to cut mobile termination rates.

Polish telecommunications regulator UKE proposed that the country’s three largest mobile operators cut their MTRs by 42% and has given them a month to respond.

UKE proposed that the regulated mobile termination rates be cut to $0.0339 a minute from US$0.05 a minute.

According to the company, while making their estimates regarding 2011 revenue, they took into account MTR being cut to between US$0.02 to US$0.05.

According to TPSA, the regulator’s proposal is a motivator for all operators to complete the negotiations as soon as possible.

Portugal Telecom expects to close Oi deal by March 2011

The Chief Executive of Portugal Telecom, Zeinal Bava believes that Portugal Telecom (PT) can seal its deal with the Brazilian telecommunications group Oi (Tele Norte Leste Participa§µes) before the end of March 2011.

According to Bava, negotiations are progressing very well. The company is confident that it will get all deals done by the end of March, if not sooner… maybe even February.

Oi and Portugal Telecom at the end of October extended the deadline for negotiations over their future partnership until Jan. 31, 2011. Brazil’s telecommunications regulator, Anatel, has approved Portugal Telecom’s plan to take a stake in Oi but the two groups are now finalizing the terms and conditions of their industrial alliance.

As per the CEO, it is too early to give details on plans it has for Oi until the deal is signed. The company will leverage their know-how and their partner’s knowledge to do a better job in the future.

The PT is also interested in acquisitions in Africa, but will consider any opportunity carefully, explained the executive.

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MNP in Serbia delayed by six months

If reports are to be believed, the introduction of mobile number portability (MNP) in Serbia has been delayed by at least six months. The main reason for the delay in MNP is because the tender to supply the necessary equipment has been called off.

However, according to reports citing unnamed officials at the telecommunications regulator Ratel, more information will be available following a 20 November meeting of a working group on MNP, which will make a final decision on when the service can be launched commercially.

Mobile number portability (MNP) enables mobile users to retain their mobile  numbers when changing from one mobile network operator to another.

Antel approves Portugal Telecom to take a stake in Oi (Brazil)

Brazil’s telecommunications regulator has approved Portugal Telecom’s plan to acquire a stake in Brazil’s Oi (Tele Norte Leste Participacoes S/A) although it said the Brazilian phone company must first clear its debts with the government.

According to Anatel’s director, Joao Rezende, there is no concentration of ownership, nor any impeditive of a competitive nature.

According to Anatel, the company owes the government US$44 million related to the Telecommunications Fiscalization Fund, or Fistel. According to Rezende, the companies will only be able to implement the operation after paying off the debts.

Portugal Telecom is planning to pay up to US$4.9 billion for a stake in the Oi group, while at the same time Oi is planning a US$7.03 billion share issuance to raise fresh capital.

Egypt sets new regulations on SMS services

Egyptian telecommunications regulator has set new rules for companies sending text messages to multiple mobile phones. In a move according to activists; they will stifle efforts to mobilize voters ahead of upcoming parliamentary elections.

Reform groups in Egypt, as well as elsewhere in the region such as Iran, have increasingly relied on the Internet and mobile phones to organize, mobilize and avoid government harassment.

According to Mahmoud el-Gweini, adviser to the Egyptian telecommunication minister, companies sending out text messages — known as SMS aggregators — must now obtain licenses. The decision was not meant to curb political activity, but was spurred by concerns that random text messages concerning sensitive issues such as religious tension or the stock market could be sent to consumers. There are over 60 million users. The mobile phone has become a tool in everyone’s hand. People can misuse the tools in the hands of the 60 million and send the wrong messages for one reason or another.

Mahmoud el-Gweini further added that content providers, whether news services or political parties, will also need to get approval from the concerned authorities. Some 15 companies each need to pay $88,000 by next week for registration licenses and an equivalent amount as a letter of guarantee. The ministry is not making life difficult, but is making life organized, that is all.

Text messages were an affective campaign tool for the illegal Islamist Muslim Brotherhood in 2005, which shocked the government by winning 20% of the parliament seats in the last elections.

According to El-Gweini, only registered political parties can register to use mass text messages in the upcoming elections and the ruling party has already been granted a permit. The government has already told the mobile operators, that for the licensed parties, just go ahead and implement. The operators don’t have to come to the government.

In Egypt’s tightly controlled political environment, a government-run committee approves who can form parties and some of the country’s most vibrant opposition trends are not licensed.

Activists claim that targeting the text messaging market constitutes veiled censorship and is just the latest measure to curb independent voices ahead of the heated elections set for the end of November.

Parliamentary elections are taking place this year against a tense backdrop of increasingly disgruntled people, rising food prices and new reform groups who say their demands are ignored by the government.

According to Moustafa el-Naggar, a member of a new reform movement led by Nobel Prize winner Mohamed ElBaradei, his group was contemplating using mass text messages to mobilize its members. They are trying to strip the opposition of all its tools. But the members will find new ones.

Nigeria begins SIM card registration

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: SIM card registration drive has been kicked off by Nigeria’s telecommunications regulator NCC and the consumers who want to purchase and activate new mobile phones will be asked by the service providers to take their photographs and fingerprints for proper identification.

The active phones which are not properly registered will have to submit themselves for the same purpose within six months. There are 78.5 million active phone lines in the country with over 90 percent been the mobile phones and 90% of which is not properly registered.

Keeping a proper record of the phone users for security reasons has been the reason behind the SIM registration exercise.

13.4% growth in Mexico’s telecom sector in the third quarter

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Cofetel, Mexico based telecommunications regulator, announced 13.4% rise in their third quarter sector index. However, the company also said that the figure is 11 % lower than last year, reflecting the effect of the international context and drop in the domestic economy on the telecommunications sector.

Mobile telephony, domestic long distance and satellite TV services grew while paging and international long distance declined during most part of the third quarter. Mobile telephony traffic recorded an increase of 18.7% and domestic long distance traffic rose 0.9%.

7.6% and 22.6% fall was recorded in Incoming international long distance traffic and outgoing long distance traffic respectively. 1.6% year-on-year growth reaching to 20.5 million at the end of September was recorded in the lines of services in fixed-line telephony in Mexico.

Bangladesh among Asia’s top 10 mobile markets

has emerged as one of

‘s top 10 mobile phone markets in terms of adding net subscribers, according to the chairman of GSM Asia Pacific, a regional forum of the Generalised System of Multiple Access (GSMA) mobile operators, reports BDNEWS.
GSM Asia Pacific Chairman Mehboob Chowdhury warned that though Bangladesh the 8th top mobile market in Asia, ahead of Thailand and Philippines, it would be impossible to retain that position unless the government immediately purged the industry of the ‘counterproductive’ policies and shook up the telecom regulators.
Besides, the country has added 8.945 million GSMA mobile users in a single year — from July 2005 to June 2006, according to the latest figure of GSMA association.
In an exclusive interview with the news agency, Chowdhury disclosed thatnow ranked eighth among the top 10 Asian mobile markets in terms of adding net subscribers during January to March, 2006.
Citing the data of Informal Telecoms and Media, a London-based research firm, he saidhas had 1.265 million new users during the first quarter of 2006. The figure is slightly lower than the net addition ofandcombined, and marginally lower than seventh-ranked’s first quarter intake.
, fifth on the list, has added more than two million mobile subscribers during this period, but its total clientele was smaller than whathad in the first quarter of 2006.
GSM Asia Pacific chairman credited the cellular mobile operators with this achievement while being critical of the government’s ‘pounding the industry with disruptive policies’.
“When the operators made new connections affordable and started slashing the call charges; the government came up with this disastrous tax last year. It was a bolt from the blue (for the operators) that slowed down the market for a while.”
The new 8.945 million GSMA mobile users that have putin the global map is the result of the operators’ continuous effort, Chowdhury pointed out.
The new customers belong to the middle-to-lower income bracket that have been perennially ‘harassed’ by the state-run Bangladesh Telegraph and Telephone Board (BTTB) in trying to get regular phone connections.
“The private sector has salvaged them and that’s why the subscribers identity module (SIM) tax is grossly an anti-people move, which the government should scrap ahead of the election.”
“The market could have added at least four million more customers, there could have been an euphoric outbreak of tariff war and the government could have earned more revenue from the boom (if the tax were not there)”, Chowdhury continued.
Liking the slapping of SIM tax to killing the golden goose, he said this testifies to ‘the government’s inability’ to understand the fundamentals of this business.
He refused to give the government much credit for slashing the tax from mobile phone handsets.
“The amount of tax the government has withdrawn from handset is the exact amount it has simultaneously imposed as SIM tax and the burden remains unchanged for new customers”, pointed out Chowdhury, who was GrameenPhone’s marketing director for five years and Banglalink’s Chief Commercial Officer (CCO) for nearly a year until resigning recently .
He said more than two billion people use GSM mobile phones worldwide, accounting for an 82.4 per cent penetration. Asia Pacific region alone boasts 757.13 million GSMA mobile users and the figure is fast growing.
“Every second 18 new GSM users are being added worldwide, which means more than 1,000 customers in every minute and over 1.5 million new GSMA mobile users per day.”
Chowdhury said the next billion GSMA customers are mostly coming from,,,,,,and other similar economies.
He recognised continuous investment as the key component for sustainable mobile phone market growth in.
Effective telecommunications regulatory regime is, however, the precondition to wooing new investments and boosting competition.
“The Bangladesh Telecommunications Regulatory Commission (BTRC) has become merely an extension of the taxation department and that is certainly not the case with,or”, he said.
“[And] That’s why the telecom markets of these South Asian countries have been consistently thriving.”
More than 85 per cent of the mobile phone users have no access to the largest fixed telephone operator BTTB, the state-owned monopoly that has little relevance in today’s mobile market, Chowdhury regretted.
“The mobile operators will not even bother to talk to the BTTB the moment the government ends its monopoly on the international voice gateway”, he predicted.
The BTTB’s denial to provide interconnection is a clear breach of the telecoms law and resents the regulator’s ‘unfair concession’ for BTTB on this issue, the former Banglalink CCO said.
The government is ‘draining’ public funds on ‘impractical projects’ like VoIP platforms, he complained.
“Besides, ignoring the country’s fundamental telecommunication needs, the government is going to waste hundreds of millions of dollars in highly debatable and grossly unproductive supplier’s credit telecoms schemes”, he added.
The government has to deploy reliable nationwide telecoms infrastructure and then ensure the private sector’s equitable access to that resource, Chowdhury suggested.
“This is what Pakistan, India and many other fast developing countries are doing and Bangladesh should waste no time to reinvent the wheel”, he remarked.

Source- http://www.financialexpress-bd.com

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