Democratised data will help unleash the next phase of economic growth, believes Mukesh Ambani, and he is pulling out all the stops to make this digital-age currency affordable and available to every Indian
Data is the new oil: When Mukesh Ambani, chairman of Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL), made that statement at the Nasscom India Leadership Forum in February 2017, what he meant was that, simply put, data has the same power to fuel human capabilities which oil has had over the last five decades. He should know: Ambani is, after all, the leader of India’s largest company by turnover, which has generated billions of dollars in wealth over the years by refining crude and manufacturing petroleum products.
At the same forum, Ambani also said it was only four years ago that he “truly understood the true meaning of the term exponential”, adding, “I believe we are on the verge of exponential change, where we have the opportunity to solve large problems in a short span of time.”
Few would have imagined how the key themes of Ambani’s talk—data and exponential change—could come together to change the paradigm of India’s telecommunications industry and alter the way in which Indians consume data. Yet, over the last one year—since Reliance Jio Infocomm (Jio), RIL’s broadband wireless and digital services company commenced operations—that is exactly what has happened.
It took Jio a while to get to this point.
RIL announced its foray into telecom in 2010 after it acquired Infotel Broadband, a company that had won pan-India wireless airwaves through a government auction. The next six years were spent building and testing a greenfield ecosystem using the latest technology, including partners, vendors, and an infrastructure network comprising optic fibre cables and transmission towers. The ambitious project, on which the oil-to-yarn and retail conglomerate has spent close to ₹2 lakh crore, had its fair share of naysayers along the way as well. Some doubted whether diversification away from the core oil refining, marketing and petrochemicals business was prudent; others questioned whether the world’s first all-IP (internet protocol) network over VoLTE (voice over LTE) that Jio was building would work, since there was no global precedence of the same.
But those speculations have been put to rest as Jio has managed to build a ground-up 4G (fourth generation mobile telephony) network with 138.6 million subscribers consuming 1.25 billion GB of data a month and 2.67 billion minutes of voice calls a day—among the highest in the world—since it started commercial services in September 2016.
Despite the fact that RIL’s fledgling telecom venture is yet to report a profit (on a net, full-year basis), the value that investors foresee accruing to the company from this business is evident. In the last one year (till October 24, 2017), RIL’s share prices have soared by as much as 79 percent to ₹947 per share. It is little surprise then that not only is Ambani the richest person on the 2017 Forbes India Rich List with a personal net worth of $38 billion, he is also the highest gainer of wealth in absolute dollar terms, adding a staggering $15.3 billion to his net worth. Much of this gain in Ambani’s wealth, which is also a reflection of the rise in RIL’s market value, has been on account of the value investors have ascribed to Jio. “Mukesh Ambani is doing for India’s poor what Steve Jobs did for America’s rich,” remarked one commentator last July after Ambani unveiled the cut-price JioPhone.
The new telco on the block has not only redefined the rules of the game—by drastically reducing the cost of data and offering voice calls for free—but has also shaken up the telecom sector.
Owing to Jio’s competitive onslaught and the incumbents’ response, the volume of data consumed in the country has grown nine times to 4.3 billion GB in the April-June quarter, says analyst Rohit Chordia, in a Kotak Institutional Equities research report dated October 4. Further proof that most of the new mobile data consumption in the country is happening in the high-speed band is evident in the fact that 40 percent of the data subscriber base is on a LTE (4G) network, accounting for 80 percent of the data consumption in the country, the Kotak report states.
The quantum of increase in data consumption in the country has also gone hand-in-hand with a steep fall in the cost of such data. According to industry estimates, the average cost of a GB of data post Jio’s launch has fallen to ₹50, from a minimum of ₹250 earlier. The result is that Indians are hooked on to their data-driven smartphones like never before. “Jio has brought about a seismic shift in India. As we look at the data coming from our audience of mCent (a web browser) users, we are seeing Jio subscribers consume upwards of five times more data than other users on other operators,” says Nathan Eagle, founder and CEO of Jana, a Boston-based company that sells data to global customers in exchange for them consenting to view ads. “Much of this content comes from the recent adoption of mobile video and local language content. Even the major television networks in India are now making original content for their OTT platforms.”
Sceptics had also argued that Jio’s services would stay popular as long as they remained free, and that volumes would drop as soon as the telco started charging for its services. These concerns have proven to be unfounded as well.
Jio launched its free services in September 2016 and moved to a paid regime in April this year. Despite that, Jio reported a robust net subscriber addition figure of over 15 million as recently as in the September quarter (up from 13 million in the April quarter), with a market share of around 10 percent. An IIFL Institutional Equities research report dated October 16 estimates around 75 percent of Jio’s overall subscriber base has migrated to paid services.
Jio also said that it had realised an average revenue per user (ARPU) of ₹156.4 in the September quarter, and the steady stream of subscribers witnessed by the carrier has encouraged it to even hike its tariffs for some of its plans. A JM Financial report dated October 23 estimated Jio’s ARPU to further increase to ₹165 in FY20. Despite the competitiveness with which Jio has priced its products, its reported ARPU in the second quarter of fiscal 2018 is similar to that of India’s largest telco Bharti Airtel, which reported an ARPU of ₹154 in the first quarter of fiscal 2018 (its second quarter earnings numbers weren’t public at the time of writing this story).
Mukesh Ambani (extreme right) with wife Nita (to his right) and children (from left) Akash, Anant and Isha
Even Jio’s reported revenue and profitability numbers for the September quarter (the first for which it has disclosed these figures) have pleasantly surprised the Street. Jio reported a standalone revenue from operations of ₹6,147 crore, a standalone Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) of ₹1,443 crore, with an Ebitda margin of 23.5 percent. Jio’s earnings statement stated that a positive operating profit in the first quarter of commercial operations was the function of “tremendous uptake by subscribers and cost advantages generated through the use of efficient 4G technology”.
“The strong financial results of Jio demonstrates the robust business model of Jio and the significant efficiencies that the company has built through its investments in the latest 4G technology and right business strategy,” Ambani said in the earnings statement. “As always, the group has demonstrated excellence in execution, vision and commercial acumen.”
The IIFL report cited earlier said that Jio’s performance in the second quarter of fiscal 2018 was a “beat” on expectations, leading the brokerage to revise Jio’s estimated enterprise value to $40 billion from $26 billion earlier. “We also think appearances matter, and regardless of accounting conventions used, Jio’s bright numbers have diluted the predatory pricing arguments incumbents have been using against Jio,” analysts GV Giri and Balaji Subramanian said in the IIFL report.
Tarun Pathak, associate director with the Indian arm of Counterpoint Technology Market Research, a Hong Kong-based consultancy, says that not charging customers for their services from the word go was a “masterstroke”. “They knew that there would be bottlenecks to begin with. They’ve waited to see how their networks would support all the services,” says Pathak. “Gradually, they have shifted consumers from free to pay and have used the time to improve the quality of services as well.”
Jio has 138.6 million subscribers consuming 1.25 billion GB of data a month currently
(This story appears in the 29 December, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)