Reliance's 'free'
JioPhone shakes up cheap end of India's billion-strong
market
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[July 27, 2017]
By Sankalp Phartiyal
MUMBAI (Reuters) - At first glance, Indian
telecoms upstart Jio's bet on 'free' internet-enabled phones to win over
poorer customers is a near-fatal blow for low-end handset makers, most
already struggling with paper-thin margins on some of the world's
cheapest devices.
But industry executives and analysts say Jio's crossover feature phone -
not quite a smartphone, not quite a no-frills handset - could, in fact,
be a boon to the lower end of the market and suppliers that feed it,
creating a new in-between category and getting more people online for
the first time.
The JioPhone, they say, creates a new phone segment aimed at millions of
low-paid Indians, currently caught between basic, calls-and-text devices
and fancier smartphones.
Reliance Industries, led by India's wealthiest man Mukesh Ambani, waded
into India's cut-throat telecoms industry last year with its $30 billion
bet on Jio, upending the sector with its cheap smartphones and data
plans.
Last week, it announced a new phone, which allows digital payments and
will come effectively free. Buyers can get a device for a refundable fee
of 1,500 rupees ($23.30).
Currently over 60 percent of India's roughly 750 million mobile users
use phones that allow only calls and basic texts, making so-called
feature phones the country's single largest segment. But many will soon
move up the chain.
"The concept of 4G feature phones is not new, and most Indian firms have
already done their R&D," said Jaipal Singh, analyst with tech research
firm IDC. "Brands such as Micromax, Lava, Intex and Karbonn will launch
similar devices to either compete or partner with Jio."
Micromax, one of India's largest brands, said it was working on a 4G
feature phone that would rival Jio's compromise offering. Lava, which
launched India's first low-cost, 4G-enabled phone this year - selling
for about $50 - said it could launch more if there was demand.
Samsung Electronics, the largest player in India thanks to its range of
offerings, from high-end smartphones to basic $15 handsets, expects the
new offerings to expand the whole market and "boost Samsung's mobile
phone sales in future".
NOT JUST BUSINESS
But the industry will still face tough times for now, as Jio's deep
pockets still squeeze rivals - and its suppliers.
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A woman checks her mobile phone as she walks past a mobile store of
Reliance Industries' Jio telecoms unit, in Mumbai, India, July 11,
2017. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade
"The low-cost JioPhone will place pressure on Indian feature phone leaders such
as Samsung, Intex and Lava, and make life harder for ambitious new entrants like
HMD," said Neil Mawston, an executive director at tech research firm Strategy
Analytics.
HMD Global, a Finnish company that owns the rights to the Nokia phone brand,
this year launched a revamped version of the Nokia 3310, which retails in India
for about $50.
A senior Reliance executive said the company plans to have 5 million phones
available each week, but is concerned its supply chain may not be able to keep
up with demand.
Ambani's bet is not just business. The deal is also a boost for two of Prime
Minister Narendra Modi's key campaigns: "Digital India", which aims to get more
Indians online, and "Make in India", to encourage local manufacturing.
The Reliance executive said it aims to have all the assembly of its JioPhone
devices done in India by the year-end, by the likes of Foxconn Technology Co and
Flextronics Corp.
Smartphones remain popular in India's cities, but the JioPhone will allow Jio to
connect millions of new clients in smaller towns and the countryside, who prefer
a simpler user interface, local language scripts and chunkier batteries, said
Tarun Pathak of Counterpoint Research.
The JioPhone will give them a first taste of high-speed web browsing and is
likely to gradually boost online shopping in the world's fastest-growing
internet services market, analysts said.
Reliance plans to weave NFC (near field communication) - a wireless technology
that allows two devices to connect - in the JioPhone later this year, a move
likely to accelerate the adoption of digital payments.
Jio has acquired more than 125 million customers since its launch last year,
primarily by offering free voice and unlimited data plans, but a further
expansion of its customer base hinges largely on the availability of entry-level
4G-enabled devices.
(Reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal; Editing by Ian Geoghegan)
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