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Bharti Airtel Q4 profit leaps 115pc

Published: 30 Jan 2014 - 08:35 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 07:42 pm

NEW DELHI: India’s top mobile phone firm Bharti Airtel said yesterday its quarterly profit leapt by 115 percent, the first rise in four years, boosted by surging data use and an easing of price wars.
Bharti, the fourth-largest telecom firm globally, said net profit for the third financial quarter to December climbed to Rs6.1bn rupees ($98m) from Rs2.84bn in the same period a year earlier.
The company’s focus on Internet operations “has increased adoption and usage” of Bharti, said Indian Chief Executive Gopal Vittal.
“Data is now a huge source of revenue,” Vittal added.
Data services have become the new battleground for Indian telecom companies as they try to boost revenues in an increasingly saturated domestic mobile market.
Bharti, controlled by billionaire founder-chairman Sunil Bharti Mittal, had clocked 15 straight quarters of profit decline before yesterday’s rise.
The figures still undershot market expectations of a Rs10bn profit for the three-month period but analysts said the quarter was positive overall.
“Competitive intensity is declining in India thanks to (the) fruits of consolidation and the data numbers give quite a bit to be excited about,” telecom analyst Harit Shah at Mumbai’s Nirmal Securities said.
The Indian firm, with 287 million customers and operations in both Africa and Asia, said Internet revenue soared 105 percent year-on-year to Rs17.36bn. 
Total revenue climbed 13.3 percent in the third quarter to Rs219.4bn from Rs193.6bn a year earlier. 
Average revenue per user, a key industry profitability benchmark, jumped five percent in India.
Bharti operates in 20 countries and is nearly one-third held by Singapore’s SingTel.
India’s telecom sector was a market star before fierce tariff competition pushed call rates down to among the world’s lowest. 
But the number of major telecoms players has fallen, with just three firms — Bharti, Vodafone and Reliance — accounting for nearly three-quarters of revenues.
A 2012 Supreme Court ruling scrapped the licences of various smaller firms over a scandal-tainted spectrum sale.
The easing of market congestion has allowed companies to start raising calling rates. While there is still a price battle for data customers, that has been more than offset by the volume of new customers, analysts say.
But the industry faces a new deep-pocketed rival, Reliance Jio Infocomm belonging to Reliance Industries which is  controlled by India’s richest tycoon Mukesh Ambani.
Bharti must bid to purchase new spectrum in an auction of mobile airwaves starting February 3 to keep providing services in several areas where it already operates. 
Aggressive bidding by Reliance Industries could boost prices at the auction, at which the cash-strapped government is hoping to raise at least $1.8bn, analysts say.
AFP