Fourteen years after its first entry into telecom, the Mukesh Ambani-led company is set to bring in a new revolution by redefining the dynamics of the sector again with free voice calls, rock-bottom 4G prices, and low-cost handsets
Christmas has come early this year for India’s telecom subscribers as India’s richest man and Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) chairman Mukesh Ambani came bearing gifts at the company’s 42nd annual general meeting (AGM) held in Mumbai on Thursday.
In the process, a paradigm shift is imminent in the way the Indian telecom market functions as Ambani doled out promises of lifetime free voice calls and national roaming, 4G-enabled smartphones priced as low as Rs 2,999 and data services priced as low as Rs 50 per GB. The rates at which Jio, RIL’s telecom brand, promised to make data services available to its subscribers is perhaps the lowest in the world, costing less than $1 per GB. Ambani sweetened the offering by announcing further freebies spanning from the next few months up to a year, to attract users on its expansive network.
This is the second wave of revolutionary telecom services that RIL intends to introduce in the country. The first was in 2002 when RIL entered the telecom business, offering calls at rates cheaper than what it cost to send a postcard; and mobile handsets priced as low as Rs 501. That business has since been demerged and taken over by younger brother Anil Ambani's Reliance Communications.
“Jio’s mission is to take India from (a scenario of) data shortage to data abundance,” said Ambani at the AGM. “In this era where things are going digital at an exponential rate, those not going digital will become uncompetitive and not survive. India and its 1.2 billion people cannot afford that.”
The stock markets reacted immediately to the announced comping from Reliance Industries. Stocks of rival telecom companies Bharti Airtel and Idea Cellular plunged even as Ambani started announcing details of the Jio Services. Idea Cellular closed down 10.48 percent at Rs 83.70 at the BSE while Bharti Airtel slid 6.37 percent to Rs 310.7. Reliance Industries finally closed down 2.73 percent at Rs 1,029.15.
Ambani, who believes RIL’s consumer-facing businesses like telecom and retail have an earnings potential similar to its refining and petrochemicals business in the long-run, put a date to the much-anticipated commercial rollout of the conglomerate’s telecom services on Thursday. September 5, 2016, is the date from when services will be available to potential customers across the country.
Key takeaways from Ambani’s speech at AGM: