Mexico's Wireless Subscribers Reach 79.4 Million At End Of March
14 May 2009 - 4:32AM
Dow Jones News
Mexico's wireless subscribers rose 11.8% year on year to 79.4
million at the end of March, according to data from the country's
four mobile operators.
Market leader Telcel, a unit of Latin America's largest
mobile-phone company America Movil SAB (AMX), said in its
first-quarter earnings report that its subscriber base grew 11.6%
to 57.53 million, while its market share was unchanged at
72.5%.
America Movil is controlled by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim,
who also owns Mexico's largest fixed-line telephone company,
Telefonos de Mexico SAB (TMX).
The local unit of Spain's Telefonica SA (TEF), which operates
under the Movistar brand, grew its client base 17% to 15.52 million
at the end of March. The company's market share rose to 19.5% from
18.7%.
The No. 3 operator, Grupo Iusacell (CEL.MX), which is owned by
Mexican media and retail tycoon Ricardo Salinas Pliego, saw its
subscriber base shrink nearly 10.7% to 3.54 million after the
company disconnected prepaid subscribers who weren't using their
phones during the fourth quarter. That caused Iusacell's market
share to slip to 4.5% from 5.6% a year earlier.
The smallest operator, Nextel Mexico, a unit of wireless carrier
NII Holdings Inc (NIHD), grew 24.1% to 2.82 million clients.
Prepaid subscribers represented 88.4% of total wireless
subscribers at the end of March, and the more lucrative postpaid
clients 11.6%.
Telefonica said in its first-quarter earnings release Wednesday
that Mexico's wireless penetration rate stood at 72% at the end of
the quarter, an eight-percentage-point gain from March 2008, but
flat compared with the end of December.
Telefonica attributed the slowdown in the wireless market to
"lower commercial activity following the Christmas campaign and the
country's current economic situation."
The Bank of Mexico expects the economy to shrink between 3.8%
and 4.8% this year due to a recession in the U.S. and weak
international trade flows as a result of the global financial
crisis.
-By Ken Parks, Dow Jones Newswires; 52-55-5001-5723;
ken.parks@dowjones.com