Reliance Jio to offer
bargain rates, crosses 100 million customers
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[February 21, 2017]
By Sankalp Phartiyal and Devidutta Tripathy
MUMBAI
(Reuters) - Reliance Industries' Jio telecoms unit will charge a tariff
for its services from April, but will offer sharp discounts for a year
to those who sign up by the end of March, billionaire Indian owner
Mukesh Ambani said on Tuesday.
In a speech broadcast live on Reliance Industries' social media
accounts, Ambani - India's richest man - said the Jio unit already had
100 million subscribers and that the network was expected to cover most
of the country's population by end 2017.
Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd, launched in September 2016, has roiled
India's telecoms market by offering free voice and cut-price data plans
that are slated to run through March 2017, forcing rivals such as Bharti
Airtel to respond with price cuts of their own.
While there have been concerns over whether Jio will be able to retain
customers once it starts charging for services, with analysts pointing
out that many use Jio as a second connection to take advantage of the
free data, the firm said it expects to add subscribers by offering them
more bang for their buck.
"Jio promises to provide world-class data at prices affordable to all
Indians," Ambani said in his speech.
Customers signing up by the end of March will be able to use unlimited
data and free voice services for a year at a rate of 303 rupees ($4.52)
per month under a special plan, Ambani said, sharply below the prices
offered by its competitors. Enrolment to the plan would cost a one-time
fee of 99 rupees, he added.
Bharti Airtel, India's largest telecoms network operator, currently
offers unlimited voice and 2GB of 4G data a month for as low as 300
rupees although tariffs vary across regions. The company, launched in
1995, has nearly 270 million customers.
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Commuters are reflected on an advertisement of Reliance Industries'
Jio telecoms unit, at a bus stop in Mumbai, India, February 21,
2017. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade
Bharti
reported its lowest profit in four years in the quarter ended December as
competition from Jio eroded its revenues. Idea Cellular, India's No.3 telecoms
network operator, posted its first ever quarterly loss over the period.
The price war resulting from Jio's entry has also spurred consolidation in the
sector with Idea and Vodafone Plc's Indian unit, the market's No.2 player,
beginning talks for a merger of their operations.
Jio's launch came after years of delay and Reliance Industries has already
invested more than $20 billion into the venture.
Shares of some of Jio's rivals fell. As of 1000 GMT, Bharti Airtel's shares were
down almost 4 percent while Idea Cellular shares had slipped 0.5 percent.
(Reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal and Devidutta Tripathy; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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