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Vodafone’s NZ mobile market share falls below 50%

Vodafone’s NZ mobile market share fell below 50% last year, regulator says

By Paul McBeth

April 23 (BusinessWire) – Vodafone New Zealand, the local subsidiary of the U.K. phone operator, saw its market share sink below 50% last year as new kid on the block Two Degrees Mobile Ltd. entered the market after a lengthy lead-in time.

The country’s biggest mobile phone company had an estimated 49.6% as at Dec. 31, according to the Commerce Commission’s annual telecommunications monitoring report out today, as 2degrees tempted some 206,000 mobile phone users, or 3.8% of the market, from the dominant players Vodafone and Telecom Corp. Mobile connections grew 20% to 4.9 million between 2005/06 and 2008/09. That’s a penetration rate of 114% of the population.

Telecom’s market share fell to 46.6% from 47.9%.

Voice calls made on mobiles rose “strongly” over the period, mainly due to the “popularity of restricted on-net calling offers,” according to the report.

Vodafone’s latest on-net offering prompted Communications Minister Steven Joyce to query whether that should have a bearing on his decision on whether to regulate mobile termination rates, the fees charged for terminating calls on a rival network.

Telecommunications Commissioner Ross Patterson told Joyce that it should probably be taken into account as it could have a material impact on competition.

“In the mobile market, the entrance of a new network operator, 2degrees, has had an immediate impact in terms of consumer choice and competitive offering,” Patterson said in a statement. “Although there is evidence that competition in the mobile market is increasing following the launch of 2degrees, mobile voice usage remains low by international standards.”

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The Commerce Commission’s report suggested increased competition in the sector hadn’t broken the concentration of market share among a “few large firms” and said New Zealand lagged behind other countries such as the U.K. and Australia.

Telecom invested some $1.2 billion into telecommunications over the past three years, making up about 71% of the total investment. This came after the previous administration began implementing a tougher regulatory regime for the country’s largest phone company. Shares of Telecom rose 0.9% to $2.20 on the NZX today.

Though broadband performance has improved since 2005/06, with 78% of connections able to deliver faster speeds, “many consumers have demonstrated a preference for purchasing cheaper plans offering lower speed and/or lower data caps,” the report said.

Retail revenues across the telecommunications sector shrank to about $4.74 billion last year, from $4.92 billion three years earlier, led by a 3% decline in last year’s voice calling revenue.

(BusinessWire)

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