Move will draw private capital and inject new
vitality into industry
The Ministry of Industry and
Information Technology officially issued the first group of
licenses for mobile virtual network operators on Thursday, allowing
private domestic companies to offer repackaged mobile
services.
'Virtual' era opening up for telecom users,
firms
People try out mobile handsets at a
store in Guangzhou, Guangdong province. The government issued
licenses for virtual network services to 11 privately owned
operators on Thursday. LU HANXIN / XIN\HUA
According to an announcement on
MIIT's website, 11 companies — including an Internet service
subsidiary of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, as well as e-commerce
giant Beijing Jingdong Century Trading Co Ltd (JD) and mobile phone
retail chain store D.Phone Group — received mobile virtual network
operator licenses.
Encouraging private capital to enter
the nation's telecom industry, the ministry said, will inject new
vitality into the market and bring further prosperity to the
sector.
At the same time, Chinese
consumers will have more service choices and a better user
experience, the ministry added.
"We will continuously explore areas
in which domestic companies can be further involved in China's
basic telecom service sector," said Miao Wei, head of the MIIT, at
a November meeting.
The MIIT won't restrict the total
number of mobile virtual network operators through a two-year trial
period ending on Dec 31, 2015, but companies must submit
applications by July 2014.
"Every qualified enterprise can
receive permission," the announcement said.
China has long considered opening up
its basic telecom services market, which includes telecom network
operations, call services and broadband connections.
However, State-owned telecom carriers
still have a tight hold on the market. Private companies and
foreign enterprises only have limited businesses focusing on
value-added telecom services.
The MIIT published draft proposals on
allowing Chinese private companies to buy mobile network resources
from the nation's three telecom operators in January this
year.
The proposals became official
policy in May, allowing private enterprises to rebrand mobile
services and sell them to customers under a two-year
trial.
In an e-mail to China Daily, JD said
it had signed strategic partnership agreements with China Unicom
(Hong Kong) Ltd and China Telecom Corp Ltd. JD will build up its
own telecom services, including voice services, short messages and
mobile data packages.
"JD aims to become China's biggest
mobile virtual telecom operator, or the fourth-largest telecom
carrier after China Mobile Ltd, China Unicom and China Telecom,"
said Zhao Guoqing, vice-chairman of JD.
JD's advantages, according to Zhao,
are that the company has more than 140 million registered users,
mostly aged between 23 and 45, who are the key consumers for mobile
phones in China.
Alibaba said it aims to team up with
all telecom carriers and work in close collaboration with them to
provide the best telecommunications services.
In developed economies such as the
United States and Japan, virtual network operators have legally
existed for a long time. Their participation diversifies products
and services and helps lower customers' costs.
Yang Guang, senior analyst with
research firm Strategy Analytics, said traditional telecom
operators are set for both gains and losses.
New mobile virtual network operators
"will compete with the three network operators directly. This may
exert huge pressure on the retail services of all three Chinese
operators," Yang said.
But telecom carriers can also
leverage the new operators' distribution channels, brands and
customer relationships to develop new market segments, Yang pointed
out.
"In the long term, competition from
and innovations by MVNO players will improve the performance of the
mobile communication market in China and benefit the whole industry
chain, including network operators," Yang said.
Being the challengers in the market,
China Telecom and China Unicom should have stronger motivation to
cooperate with MVNO players than China Mobile, according to a
report from Strategy Analytics.
China Mobile, as the market leader,
looks a bit reluctant to cooperate with MVNO players. According to
the MIIT, none of the 11 private companies had signed agreements
with China Mobile.
Li Jun, a spokesman for China Mobile,
told China Daily that the company is completing cooperation
negotiations with 17 domestic private companies and is about to
apply for licenses from the government.
Considering China Mobile's ambitious
plans for TD-LTE development, the mobile virtual network operators,
particularly those having strong distribution channels, could also
be an opportunity to develop the TD-LTE business, analysts
said.
http://europe.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2013-12/27/content_17199497.htm
Meng Jing and He Wei contributed
to this story.