Beyond phones and 5G,
mobile world seeks to reinvent itself
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[February 24, 2017]
By Eric Auchard and Sophie Sassard
FRANKFURT/LONDON
(Reuters) - Seeking to escape a cycle of falling prices and tight
regulation, big telecom operators from Vimpelcom to Telefonica are set
to reinvent themselves as internet players to escape the industry's
straight-jacket of low growth.
Next week's Mobile World Congress in Barcelona will feature phone
companies in various stages of acceptance that the industry's
predictable, decades-old business model based on selling data packages
by the millions is running out of steam.
Beneath the facade of shiny new phones and dusty debates over network
technical implementations, Europe's largest annual technology fair will
see top phone companies parading far-reaching business makeovers.
Spain's Telefonica <TEF.MC> is set to introduce a broad plan it calls
the "4th Platform" to help both consumer and business customers keep
greater control over their data rather than giving it away to web giants
Google, Facebook and Amazon.
Russian and emerging markets operator Vimpelcom <VIP.O> is tearing up
many parts of the telecom rule book to remake itself as a tech player in
the fast-growing world of messaging apps.
U.S. telecom giant AT&T <T.N> has inked a series of huge deals to
diversify by acquiring Direct TV for $67 billion and is awaiting
approval to buy Time Warner for another $110 billion.
"Regulatory and pricing pressure on telecom operators forces them to
look to adjacent areas for new sources of revenue and margins," said
attorney Tom Levine, head of Allen & Overy's global telecoms practice.
"There isn't a consensus on how to do this."
It's also an open question whether the industry is structurally capable
of big change. Telcos have dreamed for decades of breaking free of the
shackles of consumer regulation and branching out into Internet services
in their local markets, only to be consistently beaten by newer, global
upstarts.
RUSSIAN LABORATORY
These dramatic changes come as telcos brace to offer new networks ready
to handle not just spiralling data use on phones but in cars, in
factories and offices and even crop fields. The new generation of 5G
networks will provide them new business options but also spells mounting
competition from computer, internet and industrial players with digital
plans of their own.
Russia has emerged as the world's most advanced laboratory for telecom
companies seeking to reinvent themselves as Internet players, as classic
telecom business pressures, Western economic sanctions and government
rules that reduce Silicon Valley giants to small local players create
space to combine forces.
Vimpelcom, Russia's No.3 operator, has undertaken a top-to-bottom
overhaul of its business while gearing up for deeper Internet
partnerships with the likes of streaming music and online taxi services.
The company also focuses on emerging markets from Bangladesh to Algeria
and is the world's sixth largest operator in terms of number of mobile
customers served.
Megafon, the No.2 network provider, has acquired control of sister
company Mail.ru, a major Russian Internet player - the Russian
equivalent of Verizon buying Facebook - and plans to offer a new mobile
version of social media site VKontakte.
Top Russian telecoms player MTS <MTSS.MM> is so far sitting on the
sidelines, but its executives have signaled they too believe their
long-run future lies in Internet services.
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People are seen near the main entrance during the Mobile World
Congress in Barcelona, Spain February 25, 2016. REUTERS/Albert Gea/File
Photo
Meanwhile, Telefonica sees its "4th Platform" strategy as a way to stoke
faster growth and compete aggressively with globally dominant internet
players while being a logical evolution of existing businesses, a senior
company source said.
The strategy builds on its long-standing investments in communications
services, its broad geographic reach across Europe and Latin America and
efforts to offer advanced money-making services on top of basic
communication connections, but does not require making huge new
investments, the source said.
"Now is the turn of the fourth platform: the data. That is Telefonica's
(new) equity story," the source said of its bid to boost margins by, for
example, enabling customers to analyze mountains of data to make their
own businesses run smarter.
Other phone companies are taking more modest steps.
Norway's Telenor, another emerging markets operator, has pushed into
data analytics, while Vodafone is making inroads in new industrial
internet and connected car applications, through its 2014 acquisition of
Cobra Automotive.
DO THEY HAVE THE DNA?
Still, many telecom operators take a dim view of some of the aggressive
moves being made by these peers, especially when it comes to business
models based on commercializing customer data.
Deutsche Telekom, Europe's largest telecom operator by revenue, sees
this as no-go territory in privacy-conscious Germany. Instead, it is
focused on making strides into new connected industrial arenas and cloud
computing.
Telekom's main growth story is likely to remain the United States where
it revolutionized the mobile industry by offering unlimited data plans
and international roaming packages. Using aggressive marketing, T-Mobile
has gained at the expense of rivals, making it nearly as big Telekom's
core German business.
France's Vivendi, which embarked on a grand misadventure last decade to
combine telecom and media assets, offers a cautionary tale for investors
betting on these new reinvention stories.
For telecom operators used to predictable cash flows and firm regulatory
boundaries, the main issue may be cultural: Most just don't have the
stomach for such drastic transformation.
"Working out how to bring in that entrepreneurial DNA, without
disappointing users' expectations of reliability, and recognizing the
financial expectations of institutional shareholders, is not easy,"
Levine said of healthy dividend payouts which remain the industry's main
draw to investors.
(Additional reporting by Andres Gonzalez in Madrid; Sinead Carew in New
York and Harro ten Wolde and Peter Maushagen in Frankfurt; Editing by
Keith Weir)
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