Du expecting half a million subscribers

Telegeography writes…The United Arab Emirates’ second mobile phone operator Du, which has yet to launch services, has said that when it commences commercial operations it will have 500,000 customers. According to the cellco’s chief Osman Sultan, over 450,000 numbers have been reserved to date. The Telecoms Regulatory Authority (TRA) has already warned that it may take action against Du if it has not launched services by 12 February, the first anniversary of the award of its licence.

Wireless 

 

Du given deadline

The Telecoms Regulatory Authority (TRA) in the United Arab Emirates has warned that it may take action against cellco Du if it has not launched services by 12 February 2008, the first anniversary of the award of its licence. The regulator said it was too early to speculate what sanctions might be taken against the country’s second mobile operator, but a daily fine had not been ruled out. Du responded by saying that a launch date would be announced imminently.

Source-  telegeography  Wireless 

 

12,000 new subscribers in three weeks

The sole broadband provider in the United Arab Emirates, Etisalat, has seen 12,000 new customers sign up for its Al-Shamil broadband service in the last three weeks, taking advantage of a price promotion that could result in savings of up to AED549 (USD149). The normal installation fee of AED200 is being waived, as it the first month’s subscription (up to AED349 for the fastest connection). Equipment costs can now be spread out under the promotion, with wired and wireless modems being offered on the never-never, with payments of AED9 and AED20 respectively. According to TeleGeography’s GlobalComms database, Etisalat had an estimated 186,000 broadband customers at the end of September 2006.

Source-  telegeography   

Nokia’s Mobile Search finds its way to new corners of the world in the Middle East and beyond

Now Nokia users around the globe and the Middle East can benefit from the easy, fast and direct search capabilities of Mobile Search. The addition of new services for Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates further strengthens Nokia’s dedication to bring extensive local directory information directly to your pocket with Mobile Search.

Nokia has teamed with the most comprehensive local directory companies in each respective market to enable easy and precise local searches. Mobile Search users will be able to access local content for Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

‘You can get lost in many parts of the world now, but connect to Mobile Search and you’re soon on the way to your destination, whether it’s a restaurant, business or other local destination. We’re thrilled to be adding so many new local search providers to our Mobile Search offering, it certainly reinforces our dedication to provide local Internet services directly to your pocket,’ said Neil Gordon, General Manager, Middle East Africa, Multimedia, Nokia.

‘Al Wahda-Express is delighted to enhance their value proposition by connecting buyers and sellers through Nokia Mobile Search,’ said Wayne T Foster, CEO of Al Wahda-Express.

Mobile Search has already seen a tremendous increase in users across Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom, the markets where Mobile Search was initially launched.

The addition of Al WahdaExpress Group of Companies will more than likely have a similar effect in the Middle East region when it becomes fully available. The UAE Yellow Pages directory will officially launch at this year’s Gitex 2006 event, with Egypt and Saudi Arabia Yellow Pages directories being introduced shortly afterwards before the end of the year.

Source-  ameinfo     

Nokia Adds Middle Eastern Directory Providers To Mobile Search Offer

Nokia has added still more providers to the stable of local directory companies that make up its mobile search offer. This time (according to this press release) it’s local directory providers from the Al Wahda-Express Group of Companies, official publishers of Etisalat Yellow Pages, Saudi Arabia STC Yellow Pages and Egypt Yellow Pages. The tie-up means mobile search users will be able to access local content for Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The UAE Yellow Pages directory was launched today at the Gitex 2006, a Middle East telecoms trade show. The Egypt and Saudi Arabia Yellow Pages directories are slated for launch before end-2006.

The end-game for Nokia is to develop a mobile search approach for every category and search situation. (Not to be overlooked Nokia also has a partnership with Medio Systems, a U.S. white-label search engine provider, allowing users to search for mobile content worldwide. However, this is overshadowed by the importance Nokia places on building out its local search capabilities.) To this end Nokia offers country specific plug-ins that are available to users when they roam to that country or choose to change the phone’s country settings in the options menu. Put simply, users are automatically connected to a network in a new country, and new content specifically relevant to the location is updated automatically.

Nokia claims mobile search has already seen a tremendous increase in users??? (but offers no figures to support this) across Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the U.K. (These are also the countries represented in Nokia’s Mobile Search Application through a web of partnerships with comprehensive directory providers in each of the countries.)

Source-   moconews     
 

Bangladesh’s GrameenPhone tops 10 mln subscribers

Bangladesh’s top mobile phone operator GrameenPhone Ltd. said on Sunday the number of its subscribers has passed 10 million, rising more than 80 percent since January.
The number of mobile phone users in Bangladesh will grow to 50 million during the three years to 2009, Erik Aas, managing director of GrameenPhone, told a news conference.

“Reduced entry cost for new subscribers will be the main driver for this growth. This can be achieved with lower handset prices and reduced connection taxes,” Aas said.

He said GrameenPhone’s client network was expected to expand to 20 million over the next one and a half years. GrameenPhone is majority-owned by Norway’s Telenor .

At the beginning of 2006, GrameenPhone’s subscribers totalled 5.5 million, company officials said.

“Constantly declining tariffs, affordable prices of handsets and superior network coverage all over the country are the main drivers for our success,” Aas said.

GrameenPhone, the top cell phone operator in the South Asian country, was founded in 1996 by Telenor and Grameen Telecom, which was launched by Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus.

Telenor owns 62 percent of GrameenPhone, while Grameen Telecom owns the rest.

GrameenPhone has invested around 60 billion taka ($1 billion) in its network and services, including 20 billion taka in 2005, and expects to invest another 20 billion taka this year, Aas said.

“GP shareholders are very much positive to list in the stock markets. They are considering the issue actively… (but it’s) difficult to give concrete timeframe,” Aas added.

AMBITIOUS PROGRAMME

GrameenPhone dominates the local mobile market with a 62 percent market share, offering the largest network and the widest coverage, which reaches nearly 95 percent of Bangladesh.

The company has started an ambitious programme to establish 500 community information centres by the end of the current year.

These centres provide shared high-speed Internet access and other information-based services in the rural areas through GrameenPhone’s nationwide network based on the EDGE technological standard.

Mobile phone services are taking off rapidly in Bangladesh, which introduced them in 1992. The number of subscribers rose to 16 million in 2006 from 200,000 in 2001.

Bangladesh is one of the poorest nations, with nearly half its 140 million population living on less than one dollar day. But the country remains one of Asia’s fastest growing cellular markets, with a mobile penetration rate of around 12 percent.

The booming mobile phone industry has emerged as a key driver of the cash-stapped nation’s economy, adding $650 million to gross domestic product and creating nearly 240,000 jobs, a study by the international consultancy firm Ovum said in May.

GrameenPhone’s contribution to the government exchequer, including all taxes and VAT from the services, will be more than 20 billion taka this year, Aas said.

GrameenPhone posted about $150 million in revenues in the second quarter.

The company’s competitors include AKtel, which is majority owned by Telekom Malaysia International; Egyptian Orascom Telecom’s Banglalink; CityCell, a joint venture between Pacific Bangladesh Telecom Limited and SingTel ; and, state-run Teletalk.

Another operator, Warid Telecom International (LLC) of the United Arab Emirates, is set to start operations next month. ($1 = 68.75 taka)

Source-  asia  

Hello?

It seems like cellphones are everywhere today and can do nearly anything. They are MP3 players, video cameras, even Internet portals. In some of the networks in Asia, they are even used as credit cards and mobile banking devices. Which economy has the highest level of cellular phone subscribers in the world?

A. Hong Kong B. Bahrain C. Canada D. Italy

A. Hong Kong is correct.

Hong Kong has about 1,184 cellular phone subscriptions per 1,000 people, an average of nearly 1.2 phones per person, as of 2004. This makes it one of seven economies in the world that average more than one phone per person, according to the World Bank’s World Development Indicators.

The next highest rate in Asia is Singapore, which ranks 19th worldwide and has a subscription rate of about 910 subscribers per 1,000 people. Hong Kong’s subscription rate is more than 50 percent higher than Japan’s (715.96) and South Korea’s (760.91).

B. Bahrain is not correct.

Bahrain has the highest rate of cell phone subscribers among Muslim countries with a rate of about 907 subscribers per 1,000 people, ranking it 21st worldwide. The United Arab Emirates and Kuwait rank 28th and 32 d respectively. All three rank higher than the United States, as does Qatar, which ranks 48th.

Indonesia, the most populous Muslim country, has only about 138 subscribers per 1,000 people; meanwhile Egypt, the most populous Arab country, has only 101 subscribers per 1,000 people. This is only half the rate of the West Bank, which ranks 92 d worldwide with a rate of about 277 subscribers per 1,000 people.

C. Canada is not correct

Canada ranks 66th in the world with about 469 cellular subscribers per 1,000 people. Similarly, the United States, with almost 617 subscribers per 1,000 people ranks, only 49th in the world.

These subscription rates put the United States and Canada behind most of Europe and the Asian tiger economies. Mexico, ranking 74th worldwide, is just behind Saudi Arabia (73 d) in cellphone penetration rates.

D. Italy is not correct.

Italy actually ranks third worldwide in rate of cell phone subscriptions and has the highest rate among Western European countries.

The United Kingdom ranks seventh, while Germany ranks 25th, and France places 42nd worldwide.

Among the newcomers to the European Union, Estonia and Slovenia rank among the top 20 in the world, and have about 940 subscribers per 1,000 people. The Russian Federation ranks 59th with about 517 subscribers per 1,000 people.

Source- http://www.boston.com

 

No cheap call for cellular network acquisitions

RAMPANT acquisitions in the cellular network industry have seen four players grow to dominate Africa by serving 40% of all subscribers.
 

Yet there are still 115 operators on the continent, providing plenty of fuel for the acquisition frenzy. The largest operators are MTN, Vodacom and the Middle East’s MTC and Orascom.

But the price tag for acquisitions is reaching a point where even the richest Africans may have to bow out and let the oil rich Arabs muscle in instead.

Recent takeovers have cost more than $1000 for each subscriber — an anomaly when Africans are among the poorest, lowest-spending users in the world. Africa has 165-million users and an average penetration of 18%. That means the potential for growth is still there, analysts agreed at the GSM Africa forum in Cape Town last week.

Of 472-million new users expected to join networks around the world this year, 48-million would be in Africa, said Devine Kofiloto, a principal analyst for Informa Telecoms. Yet the growth potential cannot be gauged purely by Africa’s population, as the majority are too poor to afford cellphone services and penetration would stabilise at about 32%, he said. The payback for acquisitions is also taking longer, as the average revenue per user is plunging as cellphones reach the poorer echelons of society.

Nigeria, with 140-million people, is the one country where growth appears almost limitless. Nigeria will surpass SA as Africa’s largest cellular market by next year with 43-million users, compared with an expected 39-million in SA. Even then only 32% of Nigerians would have a cellphone, said Kofiloto.

MTN is enjoying enormous success in Nigeria, and its rival, Celtel, hopes to emulate that after acquiring 65% of V-Mobile for $1,2bn. Celtel CEO Marten Pieters said Celtel was pumping in cash to upgrade V-Mobile’s network, which had stagnated during a legal battle by V-Mobile’s 5% shareholder, Econet, to scupper its sale. We will pump in at least $700m in the next two years. We need at least that much investment to catch up,??? he said.

Nigeria has 30-million subscribers and Pieters believes that will rapidly touch 50-million. In 2011 there will be at least 50 million customers and I think that’s understated. I think customers will at least double in the next three to five years.???

Celtel itself was bought by the Kuwaiti operator MTC for $3,3bn last year, and its oil-rich parent is willing to fund Celtel’s expansion across Africa. Middle Eastern players may be the only ones with the money to continue the merger splurge, Pieters said.

Not only did they have the cash, they also took a longer view on the return on investment, unlike European or African investors that sought a payback in a handful of years.

Even so, the deals were getting crazy, Pieters said, with Etisalat of the United Arab Emirates paying $2,91bn for Egypt’s third cellular licence. A third licence to operate cost more than the market capitalisation of the number-one player there, so you have to ask if that was reasonable,??? Pieters said.

Etisalat bid almost 20% more than the next best offer, prompting MTN to say it would not be goaded into overpaying. Vodacom beat MTN to that conclusion months ago, saying the price of new licences or takeovers was increasingly unrealistic.

Vodacom may soon be allowed to bid for licences or acquisitions north of the equator, as its 50% stakeholder Vodafone is scrapping a restriction that has stymied Vodacom’s expansion. However, its freedom may be too late, given the inflated prices.

Opportunities are bubbling up in Ghana, which may offer a new cellular licence and privatise the state-owned operator. Senegal is issuing a third licence and Angola is also expected to open up to new players.

Meanwhile, delegates to the telecoms conference debated how operators can make more money in poverty-struck markets.

Although watching TV and accessing the internet on a cellphone will gradually become more popular, income from those services will merely offset the declining profits from voice calls.

Operators need to look for revenue from data but let’s not deceive ourselves into thinking data will generate incremental revenue. It will merely offset declining revenue,??? Kofiloto said. He believes most Africans will get their first taste of the internet through mobile handsets. The future of internet access in Africa is definitely wireless,??? he said.

The operators agreed African governments were doing little to help the industry or their people. Rural Africa was not an attractive area to tackle, said Vitalis Olunga, chairman of the GSM Africa interest group. Rolling out services to remote areas needed government participation and regulatory approval to use a mixture of wireless, terrestrial technologies and satellites.

Africa’s cellular networks cover 350-million people who cannot afford to use them, and that would only change when governments removed tax and sales duties on handsets and mobile services, Olunga said.

Increasing the coverage also needed co-operation between rival players, said Gateway Communications CEO Peter Gbedemah. By 2008, calls from one African country to another could be routed directly and not via Europe — as they are now under a legacy of colonial telecoms systems.

Source- http://www.mybroadband.co.za
 

GrameenPhone sees Bangladesh mobile users tripling

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Bangladesh mobile operator GrameenPhone Ltd, majority-owned by Norway’s Telenor, expects the total number of mobile phone users in the country to triple by 2009, CEO Erik Aas told Reuters on Tuesday.

GrameenPhone, the top cell phone operator in the South Asian country, was founded in 1996 in close cooperation between Telenor and Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus.

“I believe at least, that within three years (Bangladesh) will triple the number of subscribers to 45-50 million users, or about 30 percent penetration,” Aas said in an interview on the sidelines of a conference in Singapore.

“Subscribers have doubled every year for the last five years, but I don’t estimate it to double continuously. Of course, (average revenues per users (ARPU) will also go up.”

With a mobile penetration rate of around 10 percent and a population of roughly 147 million population, Bangladesh remains one of Asia’s fastest growing cellular markets.

Asia-focused Telenor controls GrameenPhone with a 62 percent share, while Grameen Telecom, a not-for-profit company that works in close collaboration with microcredit pioneer Grameen Bank, owns the rest.

NEW COMPETITION

GrameenPhone has about 9.5 million users in Bangladesh, a 62 percent market share, but Aas says he sees that number settling to about 50-55 percent in the next year as a sixth operator enters the market.

“There’s going to be tough competition, but we also have a good advantage – we have the best network, and we have data services,” he said.

“I can still imagine keeping a very, very good market share; whether 62 percent — that remains to be seen, but we should be able to keep a very premium position.”

GrameenPhone competes with Aktel, majority owned by Telekom Malaysia’s International unit, Egyptian Orascom Telecom’s Banglalink, CityCell, a venture between Singapore Telecommunications and Pacific Bangladesh Telecom and state-run Teletalk.

Warid Telecom International (LLC) of the United Arab Emirates, is set to start its operation in Bangladesh soon.

GrameenPhone is still a private firm and Aas declined to say if there are plans afoot to take the firm public.

“You can imagine GrameenPhone being on the stock exchange in Bangladesh would have a huge impact,” he said.

“We have to see what the shareholders decide. But it’s no secret that the government would like us to do it, for many reasons — like strengthening the capital market.”

In Telenor’s second quarter, GrameenPhone was the Norwegian firm’s biggest contributor to subscriber growth, adding 2 million users. As at its second-quarter, Telenor had 96 million mobile subscribers around the world.

GrameenPhone posted about $150 million in revenues in the second quarter, Aas said, but declined to provide forecasts.

Source- http://in.today.reuters.com
 

Telecom Egypt hurts Case index

CAIRO: Egypt’s main index fell for a second day, posting the biggest fluctuation among Arab equity markets. Telecom Egypt, the largest fixed-line operator in the Middle East by market value, paced the decline.

The Case Index dropped 0.8%, taking its two day decline to 2.9%. The measure rose 7.3% in September, boosted by Telecom Egypt’s move on September 19 to increase its stake by 23.5% in Vodafone Egypt Telecommunications.

The Abu Dhabi Securities Market Index fell 0.7% to 3514.16 as 22 stocks fell, 14 rose and 17 were unchanged. The measure has lost a third of its value this year on concern that prices have outpaced the prospects for corporate earnings growth. The Dow Jones DIFC Arabia Titans Index, a measure of 50 stocks in 10 Arab countries excluding Saudi Arabia, declined 0.4% to 350.96 as 19 stocks fell, 12 rose and 19 were unchanged.

The National Bank of Abu Dhabi dropped 2.3% to 25.2 dirhams. Emirates Telecommunications Corp, the largest telephone operator in the United Arab Emirates, decreased 0.8% to 19.05 dirhams.

Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index added 0.6% to 10832.8 as 69 stocks rose, 10 fell and 2 were unchanged at the end of the morning session. Bloomberg

Source- http://www.gulf-times.com