Last time Vodafone Group Plc (VOD) said no to subsidizing a new iPhone on Apple Inc. (AAPL)âs terms, consumers across Europe fled to operators that offered discounts and the handset became one of the most popular devices in history.
As Apple unveils a new version of the iPhone today, carriers want to avoid that mistake from five years ago. Vodafone and peers including Telefonica SA (TEF), having started moving away from subsidizing smartphones this year in markets such as Spain and the U.K., may be compelled back to compete on prices.
The handset will meet such pent-up demand that some carriers will be tempted to offer it at a reduced price to win market share. That threatens to force others out of their savings tactics, pushing the industry back into a margin- battering discount war. Subsidies cost European carriers 12 percent to 14 percent of their wireless revenue, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Industries.
âSubsidies are not just an old-fashioned practice, theyâre also a key lever for smartphone adoption,â said Vincent Brunet, director of mobile at Orange, a unit of France Telecom SA. (FTE) âYou can expect some increase in subsidies for a quarter or two.â
Since the iPhoneâs introduction in 2007, European wireless carriers spent billions of euros to put more smartphones into consumersâ hands, part of a bid to get them to browse the Web, send e-mail and watch videos on their handsets.
Customer Defections
Forgoing subsidies for the new iPhone, set to be unveiled at 10 a.m. local time at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Theater in downtown San Francisco, would mean missing out on most of the customers for grabs. The new iPhone may sell 10 million units this month alone, according to Gene Munster, an analyst at Piper Jaffray Cos.
One out of every five smartphones sold in Europe is an iPhone, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. The new model will be Appleâs first change to the deviceâs hardware design since 2010, raising anticipation among consumers who have been holding off on buying a new handset.
In Spain, Telefonica started asking new customers to pay a full price for handsets in March. Vodafone followed suit the next month. The companies had been giving the iPhone 4S away for free to lock in customers for fixed contracts. The smartphone fetches about 600 euros ($770) in Appleâs stores when bought without a carrier contract.
In June, Madrid-based Telefonica lost more than 200,000 mobile-phone lines in Spain, while Orange won about 30,260 lines, according to data from local telecommunications regulator CMT. Telefonica has a 38 percent market share, compared with Vodafoneâs 28 percent and Orangeâs 21 percent.
Contactless Payments
Orangeâs Brunet said the company will continue to push subsidies because thatâs necessary for attracting consumers to trying out new services such as contactless payments. âWhen there is a big phone release, whether the iPhone or the Galaxy or another, it boosts competition,â he said.
To win back customers, Telefonica will have to soften its stance on subsidies, said Andres Bolumburu, a Banco de Sabadell analyst in Madrid. If the carrier decides not to give the new iPhone away, it will have to come up with a promotional strategy to attract consumers such as Jose Vicente Curiel.
âIt would be great to get the new iPhone or even the Samsung Galaxy but I wonât pay for it,â said Curiel, a 21-year- old butcher and an Orange customer. âThatâs why I donât see myself migrating to Telefonica or Vodafone.â
Telefonica wonât give the new iPhone away for free in its home market, said a person with knowledge of the companyâs plans. The Madrid-based carrier is trying to keep high-quality customers who spend more, and hasnât stopped providing subsidies for such users, Jose Maria Alvarez-Pallete, head of Telefonica Europe, said in an interview.
Price âAdjustmentsâ
âWe are stepping up our efforts to retain existing customers and one way to achieve that is through handsets,â he said. âIf our customers want the iPhone 5, the Samsung Galaxy, a BlackBerry or another handset, when they wish to renew their handset, we will have them ready for them.â
Vodafone, based in Newbury, England, may make some âadjustmentsâ to its pricing strategy, including âspecific tactics in some marketsâ as the new iPhone starts selling, Francisco Roman, chairman of Vodafone Spain, said in an interview. Doing away with subsidies is still the companyâs aim, he added.
Telefonica gained 1.1 percent to 11.36 euros at 9:23 a.m. Madrid time. Vodafone fell 0.3 percent to 176.10 pence in London and France Telecom added 0.7 percent to 10.63 euros in Paris.
French Discounts
In France, new market entrant Iliad has gained some early success by offering inexpensive calling plans and not subsidizing handsets, selling them at full price. The carrier, which operates under the Free brand, gained 3.6 million mobile subscribers, or 5.4 percent of the market, in its first six months of business, thanks to plans starting at 2 euros a month.
That prompted France Telecom, Vivendi SA (VIV) unit SFR and Bouygues SA (EN) to start separate discount brands to rival Iliad.
Still, some of the countryâs phone executives, including France Telecom CEO Stephane Richard, have said that phone packages with subsidized handsets will continue to make up the bulk of the market. In a similar analysis, the CEO of Stockholm- based TeliaSonera AB (TLSN), Lars Nyberg, said in July that subsidies were here to stay.
In the long run, carriers faced with declining margins and regulatory pressure will look to reduce subsidy costs, Brunet said. That wonât stop them from boosting subsidies short-term.
Apple Wins
âIn these economically difficult times, operators that donât subsidize smartphones are poised to keep losing market share,â said Peter Braendle, who helps manage about $55 billion at Zurich-based Swisscanto Asset Management. The concern, he said, is that a subsidy war would hurt carriersâ profitability.
While carriersâ subsidy strategies differ, the party thatâs sure to benefit is the manufacturer of a hit phone. Apple, which has boosted iPhone sales with every edition of the device, became the most valuable U.S. company ever last month on expectation the next iPhone and new versions of its iPad will continue to appeal to consumers.
âApple is for sure the most likely winner whatever carriers do,â Swisscantoâs Braendle said. âItâs in a very strong position, no doubt.â
To contact the reporters on this story: Manuel Baigorri in Madrid at mbaigorri@bloomberg.net; Marie Mawad in Paris at mmawad1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Kenneth Wong at kwong11@bloomberg.net
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