Etisalat plans to spend $1.9bn on fiber optic links

Author: 
REUTERS
Publication Date: 
Fri, 2011-03-04 00:06

The telecoms operator, which is majority owned by the government, is bidding to make the UAE capital Abu Dhabi fully connected through fiber optic cable this year.
“Etisalat has invested 7 billion dirhams so far. We will invest a similar amount in the next three years,” Ahmad Abdulkarim Julfar, Etisalat’s chief operating officer, told a conference.
Etisalat, whose $12 billion bid for a controlling stake in Zain stalled this week after it missed a due diligence deadline, said on Wednesday it was still interested in the Kuwaiti firm.
Meanwhile, UAE telecoms provider du plans to expand its fixed-line operations across the country, putting more pressure on Etisalat.
Dubai-based du broke Etisalat’s monopoly in 2007 and has been rapidly gaining ground on its larger rival, prompting Etisalat to seek acquisitions to expand.
Etislat this week said it was still interested in Zain after it missed a due diligence deadline in its $12 billion bid to buy a controlling stake in the Kuwaiti company.
“We will expand our fixed business nationwide,” Du Chief Executive Osman Sultan told reporters on Thursday after du said fourth-quarter profit more than doubled, driven by a jump in mobile and fixed-line subscribers.
Sultan said capital expenditure would rise to around 1.7 billion dirhams ($463 million) in 2011, from 1.3 billion last year.
The company - partly owned by the ruler of Dubai’s investment company Dubai Holding and Abu Dhabi-owned investment vehicle Mubadala - also plans to boost its market share of mobile customers.
“In 2011, we will increase our market share in mobile,” Sultan told reporters. “Our results show one of the highest growth rates in ... one of the most penetrated markets in the world.
“We expect growth (in data revenues) to be significant.”
Sultan said du had no plans to expand outside the United Arab Emirates.
Du added 252,000 active mobile customers in the fourth quarter, giving it a nearly 40 percent market share in the UAE, Sultan said.
Its fixed-line customer base climbed to 561,000 from 405,900 a year earlier.
The operator’s shares ended 1.7 percent lower, tracking declines on Gulf markets as fear of growing political unrest weighs on region investor sentiment.
Profit before royalty jumped to 431 million dirhams for the quarter ended Dec. 30, from 209 million dirhams in the prior-year period. Revenue jumped 34 percent to 2.05 billion dirhams.
Profit after royalty was 912 million dirhams, including the effect of the UAE federal government’s decision last month to slash the annual royalty fee du pays to 15 percent of net profit for 2010. Du was able to add back provisions it had made to pay royalties at a higher rate.
The 15 percent royalty rate is far below the 50 percent analysts had expected it to pay and which Etisalat is levied.

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