'Sun' upsets celfon giants? Dats good 4us subscribers
POSTSCRIPT By Federico D. Pascual, Jr.
The Philippine Star 02/17/2005
MONOPOLY OGRE: I am not a Sun Cellular phone subscriber, but I welcome this small company's offering cheap, unlimited 24/7 text and call service among users of its system.
As a rule, monopoly is bad for consumers. We need not prove that all over again.
In the booming cellphone business ruled by the giants Smart Communications and Globe Telecom, a small player that bucks the system stokes consumers' hope of lowering rates, improving the service and cutting down the arrogance of dominant players.
Our minimum expectation as cellphone users is that Sun's brash entry will force Smart and Globe to lower their rates. Indications are that the two big operators are beginning to feel the pressure as subscribers continue to migrate to Sun.
That is good, di po ba?
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NTC HEARING: But instead of allowing market forces to operate freely, the giants Smart and Globe have asked the National Telecommunication Commission to step in and stop for them the pygmy interloper.
The NTC did the right thing in not granting their crybaby plea and instead scheduling a hearing next week. There is no urgency, no emergency, to justify an instant order for Sun to desist.
This is one case where the subscribing public should play jury to the hilt and pressure government to maintain a liberal pro-consumer attitude.
Let the people, the consumers, themselves resolve the issues.
If Sun's rates and services are acceptable to the public, let them be. If they are unacceptable or are injurious to public interest, subscribers themselves will dump Sun without NTC having to step in.
If Sun is guilty of any violation, Smart and Globe or any aggrieved party should just sue it without having to cry all over the place.
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PREDATORY?: The No. 1 issue raised against Sun is that its 24/7 unlimited service smacks of "predatory pricing" since other telecom firms, they claim, would be priced out of the market. The 24/7 promo is allegedly a bait to lure Smart and Globe subscribers.
If dissatisfied subscribers of Smart and Globe find the terms of Sun more favorable to them, who are we to stop them? Why should we think for them?
It is ridiculous to accuse a small-time operator like Sun of predatory pricing.
The term refers to "an anti-competitive measure employed by a DOMINANT company to get/protect market share from new or existing competitors." It involves temporarily pricing a product low enough to end a competitive threat.
From this definition, Sun cannot be accused of predatory pricing for the very obvious reason that it is not a dominant carrier. In fact, it is the smallest player in the market now with less than 5 percent share.
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BULGING BILLIONS: Of some 33 million cellphone subscribers nationwide, Smart has cornered more than 19 million (59 percent), leaving 12.5 million (36 percent) to Globe and a measly 1.5 million (5 percent) to newcomer Sun.
As for their NET income, Smart earned P16 billion in 2003 and P11.6 billion in the first six months of its fiscal 2004. Globe netted P10 billion in 2003 and P12 billion in 2004.
While the two giants were busy counting billions in net profits the past two years, Sun has been reporting losses.
These eye-popping figures were among the reasons why the cash-strapped administration initially wanted to slap the telecom giants a kind of windfall tax as part of President Arroyo's eight-point crash revenue program.
Timely lobbying with Malacanang nipped the budding revenue measure, sending the rest of us mortals a reminder of the power of money and monopoly.
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SLOPPY SERVICE?: Another accusation hurled at Sun is that it covers a smaller area and has a high frequency of dropped calls and that sending text messages through its system is difficult.
Its detractors say that for every 100 Sun subscribers who try to make a phone call, only 38 are able to make a connection. To make matters worse, the calls of Sun subscribers are reportedly cut off after 15 minutes.
I have no technical study in my hands to confirm or debunk that, but my hunch is that it could be true to some extent.
Sun has been operating for less than two years only compared to Globe and Smart that have been in the business for more than 10 years now. This could explain the disparity in their coverage and capacity.
Sun has more than 1,300 cell sites versus Globe's more than 3,000 and Smart's more than 4,000 nationwide. To close the gap, Sun says it is spending $200 million to expand its capacity to accommodate six million subscribers.
Whatever it is, if subscribers are not happy with Sun, they will leave it without prodding from anyone.