RCom: Signals are
weak<http://latestequityresearchreports.blogspot.com/2009/03/rcom-signals-are-weak.html>
http://latestequityresearchreports.blogspot.com/2009/03/rcom-signals-are-weak.html
 The Street is concerned that profits next year could be under pressure.
RCom may have added five million subscribers in January after it rolled out
its GSM network in 2009, but the stock hit a lifetime low on Thursday. Over
the past year, RCom has underperformed market leader Bharti by a wide
margin—it has lost 74 per cent while Bharti has given up just 25 per cent of
its value.
The Street has had come concerns about RCom including the quality of
earnings and the high level of borrowings. Analysts estimate that the
company’s net debt could go up from around Rs 24,000 crore currently to over
Rs 40,000 crore in 2009-10 even though it plans to spend only around Rs
15,000 crore on capital expenditure.
The higher interest and depreciation costs could result in the firm’s net
profit coming off from close to Rs 6,000 crore this year, to Rs 4,000 crore
in 2009-10.
Recent data from the regulator,TRAI, shows that at 16.7 per cent, RCom lost
50 basis points of revenue share in the December 2008 quarter. Since the
subscriber market share dipped by just 10 basis points, it would mean that
RCom’s incremental CDMA subscribers were not of very high quality.
On the other hand, Bharti Airtel’s revenues share at 30 per cent, saw an
increase of 100 basis points sequentially, while its subscriber market
share, at 24.7 per cent, too was up 10 basis points q-o-q.
Since the Street will focus on profitability rather than the number of
subscribers, RCom needs to get its GSM game plan right. The introductory
offer saw lots of free minutes being given but ultimately subscribers need
to start paying enough for the service so that ARPUs (average revenue per
user) are profitable.
Of course, telcos do have differing objectives behind subscriber
acquisitions and it could make sense to lose out on subscriber revenues for
some time so as to acquire spectrum. RCom’s GSM launch is probably focussed
on acquiring the next level of spectrum and it should be somewhere close to
hitting the target base.
However, over the longer run, it’s the operating margins that are going to
determine the course of the stock. Analysts were puzzled that RCom’s January
numbers were so strong even though most of its early stage GSM coverage
would have been in the metros and bigger towns where other operators already
had a presence.
That no operator had reported a slowdown and that the market expanded from
10 million to nearly 16 million subscribers, was surprising.
Source- Business-standard

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