Korean regulator wants marketing culled

Tags

Korean regulator wants marketing culled

Nicole McCormick  |   March 08, 2010
telecomasia.net
Thumbnail: 
The Korea Communications Commission (KCC) has announced plans to limit telcos’ marketing spending to less than 20% of sales by 2011.
 
“With the new policy, the Korean government is hoping telcos [make]…higher investments [in]…IT and the content industry to help create additional jobs as well as boost overall domestic economy,” said Credit Suisse.
 
For 2008 and 2009, market leader SK Telecom’s marketing cost to service revenue ratio was 26.2% and 26.9%, respectively.
 
“If the company lowers the ratio down to 22% in 2010 and 20% in 2011, SKT’s ebitda will show year on year increases of 18% and 24%, whilst net profit will increase 44% and 54%, respectively,” forecasts Credit Suisse.
 
It expects both KT and LG Telecom to show a “more or less” similar earnings impact.
 
But there is an expected trade-off for the higher profit.
 
“As a result of lower marketing costs, we are expecting all telcos to face KCC’s pressure to cut telecom tariffs,” said Credit Suisse.
 
Despite sweeping mobile price cuts in 4Q09, senior government officials are pushing for lower prices for new smartphone packages.
 
In particular, with provincial elections scheduled for June 2010, Credit Suisse expects all mobile operators to introduce new smartphone plans as early as April or May.
 
It believes that these cheaper plans will “neutralize much of [the] cost savings from the marketing cost reduction.”
 
KCC chairman Choi See-joong told at the Mobile World Congress last month that the consumer-conscious commission was pushing operators to lower smartphone tariff burdens.
 
In late-February, the Korea Times also reported that KT was gearing up to offer its first Android-enabled device for free.
A potential handset subsidy war has analysts concerned.
 
“The tariff side doesn’t concern me that much as ARPU has not been affected much over the years, but a subsidy war like we have seen in previous years is a risk,” an analyst told telecomasia.net.
Nicole McCormick
COMMENT (0)

Tell Us What You Think

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <a> <p> <span> <div> <h1> <h2> <h3> <h4> <h5> <h6> <img> <img /> <map> <area> <hr> <br> <br /> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <table> <tr> <td> <em> <b> <u> <i> <strong> <font> <del> <ins> <sub> <sup> <quote> <blockquote> <pre> <address> <code> <cite> <embed> <object> <strike> <caption>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Use <!--pagebreak--> to create page breaks.

More information about formatting options

Video from Telecom Channel

M2M boom 'is happening now'
GSMA's Ton Brand talks about the embedded mobile initiative and the factors needed to spur growth and innovation.  
 

Voices_tabs

Robert Clark
Further isolated after Vodafone exit
Joseph Waring
In search of a business case
Shiv Putcha/Ovum
As it prepares to take on Indian vendors
Mike Jude, Stratecast/Frost & Sullivan
Consumers need convincing to get IPv6 ready
John C. Tanner
Wireless must be part of the debate over net neutrality now, not later
Kate Gerwig
The era of cloud computing has arrived: Forrester

businessweek_industryview

Greg Bensinger
Up to $1k devices could replace all laptop functions
Staff writer
Cites six multinational companies for Business Ethernet

Frontpage Content by Category

Telecomasia.net's most popular news stories, blogs, analysis and features in the first six months of 2010

lighter_side_telecom_career

Staff Writer
CTIA sues San Francisco city over radiation labels
Staff writer
Hui Weng Cheong to head SingTel’s international business