India likely to have over 519 million data users by 2018: report

Data subscribers will rise by 25 per cent every year

Update: 2014-06-15 14:17 GMT

New Delhi: Driven by falling handset price sand rise in smartphone penetration, data subscribers in India are likely to grow an average 25 per cent every year to reach   519 million by 2018 fiscal, a report by Morgan Stanley said.    

In its report on India's telecom sector, Morgan Stanley said it believes Internet users will rise to 330 million in   2016 financial year, driven by falling handset costs, higher  smartphone penetration, faster bandwidth and higher Internet content or online services. "By FY2018, we expect data subscribers to grow at a 25  per cent CAGR (compound average growth rate), from 210 million  to 519 million and see a 35 per cent CAGR in data usage to750  MB per subscriber, near the Asian average," the report said.    

The report said over the last two years, smartphone  prices in the country have come down from USD 200 to USD 50.  As per telecom regulator Trai's data, total Internet     subscribers in the country at the end of September 2013 stood     at 210 million.     Of those, 188 million (90 per cent users) access it on   mobile devices. Of the rest, 7 million were narrowband subscribers (with speed less than 256kpbs) and 15 million were broadband subscribers (with speed of over 256kbps). "Data is the next growth leg. We expect data contribution to more than double to 23 per cent of overall revenues (as against 10 per cent currently) in the next two years," the   report said. 

The report said data growth will be driven by operator strategy of lower average revenue per mega byte (ARMB) for   higher MB pack and operators having a strong data ecosystem, including strengthening spectrum portfolio. "A 3G, 2GB pack in January 2013 cost Rs 750 or 38 paisa ARMB. Today a 2GB pack costs Rs 450 or 23-paisa ARMB," the  report said.

Morgan Stanley said voice and data rates are the lowest   for Indian operators as compared to Asian counterparts and the    difference between voice rate per minute and data rate per MB  is not significant. "Thus, the risk of data cannibalising voice is very low. Our case study on over the top (OTT) applications like  WhatsApp and Skype indicates exponential rise in data volumes  despite compression," it added.       

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