Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Canada’s mobile price wars to continue past Black Friday on ‘promotional aggressiveness’

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Quebecor has been adding subscribers through its Freedom and Fizz brands, but this has come at the expense of its average revenue per user, a key metric watched by analysts. (Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images) · Noam Galai via Getty Images

Intense price wars among Canada’s mobile phone providers are likely to intensify for Black Friday and continue afterwards, industry experts say, limiting the major telecom companies’ potential for wireless revenue growth.

The stiff competition is likely to be driven by Quebecor’s (QBR.B-TO) ongoing aggressive promotional efforts around its Freedom Mobile brand, and prolonged by an expected decline in Canada’s population growth that will reduce the stream of new subscribers to a relative trickle.

“It’s going to be one of the best Black Fridays the consumer is going to get in terms of pricing, because now Freedom has its own two feet to stand on, in a way,” said Samer Bishay, an industry veteran and president and CEO of Iristel and Ice Wireless. “Things are going to get a lot uglier before they get prettier. Consumers are going to benefit at the end of the day.”

Quebecor’s acquisition of Freedom Mobile, as a condition for the merger of Rogers Communications (RCI-B.TO) with Shaw Communications, gave Quebecor access to markets in Ontario and Western Canada. Since then, the company has been chasing subscribers with substantial discounts, as some analysts had predicted.

Quebecor has been adding subscribers through its Freedom and Fizz brands, but this has come at the expense of its average revenue per user (ARPU), a key metric watched by analysts. The company’s most recent quarterly earnings revealed a six per cent year-over-year drop in ARPU, versus more modest declines at Rogers, Telus and BCE (BCE.TO). But Quebecor, whose gains in market share have come at the other telecoms’ expense, has shown little sign of changing its tactics.

“Despite ARPU pressure stemming from low industry prices, QBR intends to stay the course with their current pricing strategy while improving their network and customer experience as they think this will continuously lead to market share gains,” wrote Scotiabank analyst Maher Yaghi in a note to investors. With Black Friday and the holiday season approaching, “there’s too much uncertainty around the level of promotional aggressiveness among incumbents to call a bottom here,” he wrote.

The federal government’s intention to severely limit population growth is likely to spur more competition in the short term and keep the pressure up in the years ahead, says Hanish Bhatia, a telecom industry analyst at Counterpoint Research. A drop in population growth would mean a more limited pool of new subscribers in 2025 and 2026, so the mobile providers “would want to onboard more and more people on two-year, more premium plans,” he said. “So that means the competition in this quarter, particularly, would be very intense” as providers vie for longer-term commitments.

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