Rs
2500 JioPhone @ just Rs 1500! How RIL is planning to recover losses
Reliance Industries' telecom upstart Jio is
footing at least 40 percent of the cost of its basic 4G phone, two sources
familiar with the matter said, as it bets on recovering the investment by
luring in millions of new customers.
The
JioPhone, rolling out this week for a refundable deposit of 1,500 rupees
($23.05), will cost at least 2,500 rupees ($39) to assemble, the sources told
Reuters.
That
means Jio will likely carry more than $150 million in costs for every
10 million JioPhones it sells.
And the
company aims to build a subscriber base of between 250 million and 300 million
users in the next two years, said one of the sources.
Reliance Industries
did not respond to a request for comment.
Some Reliance investors
may flinch at the cost of subsidies, but the scale of the outlay is a clear
signal of the level of Jio's ambition, as it targets an audience of some 500
million who still cannot afford smartphones in India.
Jio's
advanced voice over LTE (VoLTE) network only works with 4G enabled
devices, inaccessible to many even at subsidised rates. The significantly
cheaper JioPhone, however, will open the Internet to a less affluent segment of
Indians for the very first time.
"The
3,000-rupee smartphone was not cutting it," the second source said. "Reliance is
making a bold attempt with this phone and data will be the key driver for
them."
Analysts
estimate a majority of Indian feature phone users have an average revenue per
user (ARPU) of rupees 50 or lower. JioPhone's 153 rupees monthly plan for
so-called pre-paid users aims to drive up this ARPU, the first source said.
Jio,
backed by India's richest man Mukesh Ambani, has amassed more than 128 million
subscribers since its launch last year, by offering free voice and cut-price
data for months.
Over half
a dozen wireless carriers compete for market share in major Indian cities, but
Reliance, the first source said, sees the telecom market being winnowed down
into a three-player market with just Jio and current leader Bharti
Airtel and the Vodafone-Idea combine likely left standing.
The JioPhone is
currently being manufactured in China, based on a unit reviewed by Reuters, but Reliance is
likely to tap the likes of Foxconn and Flextronics, which have facilities in
India - to assemble it in the country, a Reliance executive told
Reuters previously.
The
phone's chipset, being supplied by Qualcomm and China's Spreadtrum,
is likely to be its most expensive component while batteries are likely to cost
$3-$4, the first source said.
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