Pakistan’s Telecom sector likely to continue suffering

The analyst predicted that telecom is going to sufer in 2013 as well according to the current situation. Pakistan’s telecommunication industry will continue to face harsh regulatory measures and suffer from bad governance for at least the first half of 2013.
The rates are continuously increasing day by day whereas the telecom industry’s core focus will shift to streamlining regulatory bottlenecks that hurt growth.
Chances of the rollout of the third generation (3G) mobile spectrum will also continue to remain slim, at least in the first half of the year.
2012 is considered as the truly happening year for the telecom sector.they are part of headline s due to both positive and negative reasons .industry is fluctuating due to bad governance and policies.
(CMOs) remained in the headlines throughout the year for both good and bad reasons, but mostly for the bad ones.

Divergence

To cope up with this situation many of operators look f or new way to sustain business like collaboration with banking sector to think out of the box and figure out new possibilities.
During the year, the cellular services sector surpassed the 120 million subscribers mark, and two more operators – Mobilink and Zong – entered the mobile banking sector.

[list style=”unordered” type=”type1″] Mobilink: mobicash
Zong:timepey
Ufone:Upayments
Telenor:Easy Paisa
[/list] On the other side Government instead of taking initiatives to make telecom sector more better the come up with irrelevant policies which badly affect the telecom sector of Pakistan. The government’s performance and regulatory decisions remained a major disappointment. The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority banned popular video-sharing website YouTube, and failed to auction licences for the 3G spectrum despite three attempts – a reflection of the incompetence of those in power to implement major decisions. The incumbent government also failed to pass the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Bill to make it a legal act.

According to the prediction:

[succsess_box]This government cannot do anything for the industry’s benefit. The first half of 2013 will,therefore,will be a continuation of its bad governance.3G should be a high priority,but we may have to wait six more months for the next government.[/succsess_box]

In the year that passed, the government restricted a major sales channel for mobile operators by banning the sale of SIMs through retail outlets, causing a massive decline of about 85% in the industry’s sales. If that was not enough, the telecom regulator, while enforcing the interior ministry’s directives, kept suspending mobile services on various occasions. The periodic service suspensions cost millions of dollars in revenue losses both to the industry and the national exchequer, and added to the psychological stress of a nation already ravaged by terrorist acts.

According to the Mudasir Jahangir, editor-in-chief of more – a Lahore-based publication that covers the telecom sector said:
[quote]The government is entering the election phase: technically, it will need at least about five months for the auction if Public Procurement Regulatory Authority Rules and the Telecom Act are followed.[/quote]

Market Shrinkage

An across-the-board increase in calling rates is very much on the cards in 2013, as the banning of retail outlets has pressurised CMOs. Their sales network has shrunk from 200,000 outlets to a mere 2,000 official sales centers. They will now likely look to other means, including increases in tariffs, to increase their revenues.

Muhammad Raza, a telecom analyst at Elixir Securities predicted that:
[quote]Mobilink has already introduced new call setup charges. Additionally, Zong and Ufone – the two operators that have been fighting a price war – will soon realise that the time for price competition is over.[/quote]

Zong want to the second largest operator in Pakistan but it is very difficult to achive this mission. 2013 will be a year of mergers,” Jahangir added. “Five operators are too many for this country,” he said. Zong has publicly announced that it wants to become the second-largest operator in the country by 2014. The goal will be difficult to achieve in the absence of a strong sales network, something Zong had been counting on. A merger with Warid – which is at the bottom of the list in terms of its subscriber base – is the only logical option for Zong if it wants to achieve the goal.

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