Telecoms companies must adapt

Comment: Telecoms companies may face a bleak outlook for revenues, but they can still create value by cutting the cost of 'the factory' and leveraging their unique relationship with their users.

Powered by automated translation

When telephones moved off the desk and into the handbag, the mobile revolution offered licences to print money.

More Business news: Editor's pick of today's headlines

Last Updated: May 10, 2011

Thomas Cook hit for £22m amid Middle East cancellations Thomas Cook reports that it has lost GBP22 million because of unrest in the Middle East and North Africa. Read article

HSBC posts first-quarter profit surge HSBC sees big gains in the Middle East in spite of the recent unrest, but cost-cutting measures worldwide are still looming for the bank after its layoffs in the region earlier this year. Read article

Market braced forTamweel return Tamweel's shares are expected to fall sharply on its first day of trading for two years but analysts are more optimistic on its bond. Read article

Hard times ahead for operatorsThe global telecoms industry faces stagnation but Middle East players stand to benefit from consolidation and cost-saving.  Read article

Prices for luxury London property climbing on foreign demand Industry Insights // Prices in London's elite neighbourhoods are soaring, boosted by strong overseas demand, but they are barely moving elsewhere in the UK. Read article

Investors in the industry enjoyed stellar growth in subscriber numbers from markets where profits were protected by regulators. Even after the threat from unregulated communications on the internet had reared its head, telecommunications companies prolonged their comfortable existence by replicating old business models in new markets such as the Middle East region.

Today those companies would like us to believe there is a similar opportunity for fat profits in the broadband revolution - but investors are sceptical. After the global economic recovery, telecoms companies have been left with the lowest cash-flow valuations of any industrial sector and bankers do not see telecoms reaping outsized profits. Investors expect global brands such as Skype, Google, Facebook and Microsoft to unlock the value from this broadband revolution, leaving telecoms companies behind.

Lumbered with the costs of installing new fibre-optic networks and limited by national boundaries, telecoms companies risk relegating themselves to a servile role to the internet brands in their quest for global dominance.

Telecoms executives across the globe are now being forced to look where their true value lies.

Bankers question whether they really need to own the cables, switches and licences, or recast themselves as service providers.

The challenge for telecoms companies is to cut the costs of "the factory" and strengthen their brands. Financiers holding the purse strings want to see more operational efficiency even if this means sharing resources.

Mobile companies must get smart with their user relationships, combining with innovations from the media sector to monetise content and enhance brand identity.