The previous fiscal proved to be the golden year for the telecom cable
industry, which was waiting for the much-desired respite. The industry, which
was experiencing steep declines over the past few years, recorded colossal
growth in FY 2004–05. It recorded an all-time high revenue of Rs 990 crore-nearly
115 percent growth over FY 2003–04.
In the past when wireless telephony had created a lull in the market, it was
broadband and copper wires that got the market going once again. Telcos'
aggressive expansion plans ofreaching out further into the B and C class cities
gave the growth impetus. Of the total 990 crore market, jelly-filled telephone
cables (JFTC) was approximately valued at Rs 675 crore and optic fibre cables (OFC)
at Rs 315 crore.
The Trends
The bulk growth in the market came from purchases of OFCs and copper cables.
In India, BSNL created the bulk of the demand through its bulk orders. The
copper cables segment had been especially flat in terms of activity for some
time. There was high demand for cables for access technologies by Bharti and
BSNL. Starting in 2004–05 the broadband roll out plans are continuing to add
the big bucks. All telcos in the country be it a BSNL/MTNL, Reliance, Tata, or
Bharti are all very aggressively rolling out broadband for converged services.
The focus is not only on services but also on access and value-added services.
With
BSNL shifting its focus back to expansion, the copper cables sales has shot up.
Broadband is the most sought-after industry for large deals and bulk
purchases as it is expected to grow by an overall 45 percent and give good
business to the cable providers.
There have been repeat orders for last-mile connectivity, and sales have been
growing. Another important aspect is the stabilization of the till-now
plummeting prices of cables. Until recently, it was difficult to even
participate in tenders as the prices were too unrealistic. But with
consolidation of the market and raw material prices too stabilizing, the market
is seeing some competitive pricing.
Applications and content are clearly driving the bandwidth market. Though
wireless had been posing threat to the industry, it has been recognized that
there is a need for both. As converged content would need high bandwidth
capacity the cables also need to be closer to the subscriber. This has resulted
in the last-mile connectivity beyond metros.
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| V&D
estimates |
CyberMedia
Research
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The solid JFTC is the most common cable presently used in the subscriber
access landline telecom network (telephone lines connection to exchanges and
users) in India. The industry is fraught with surplus capacity, relative to
demand, and mounting competition emanating from alternative CDMA-based WLL
technology.
The deployment of OFC has more recently made inroads into subscriber access
with fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) networks, as well as cable TV and other
applications. This has happened due to the broadband initiatives undertaken by
public and private sector operators. Apart from the incumbents BSNL and MTNL,
the new service and infrastructure providers in private sector, including
Reliance, Bharti, Tata Teleservices, Railtel, Gailtel, Shyam, and Power Grid
continued to account for bulk of OFC deployment in India.
Market Realities
The consumption of JFTC was expected to decline due to the increasing
telephone density and growing shift in preference to wireless technology in
access networks, in India. But FY 2004–05 registered sizeable sales for the
JFTC. As against opting for OFCs for broadband rollout plans, the BSNL's
strategy of endorsing ADSL modems as a means to its broadband connectivity may
impact demand of OFC in access network and home applications. On the positive
side, the possibility is that there will be good demand for both the access
technologies.
Relaxation in the policy framework by the government for merger and
acquisition or allowing mutual sharing of infrastructure by the service
providers could ultimately create a tight demand and heated competition for
telecom cables. The communication cables business is expected to grow to
satisfactory levels in the coming years, though it is under constraint today.
The high-end communication cables like LAN cables, co-axial cables do the job of
a specialist within the defined periphery and parameters.
| The
Cable Kingdom |
| The
gigantic leap in revenue over the FY 2003–04 |
| Rank |
Company |
FY
2004–05 Revenue (Rs crore) |
FY
2003–04 Revenue (Rs crore) |
Growth
(%age) |
| 1 |
Sterlite
Optical Technologies |
402 |
148 |
171.6 |
| 2 |
Finolex
Cables |
150 |
90 |
66.7 |
| 3 |
Vindhya
Telelinks |
102 |
51 |
100 |
| 4 |
Birla
Ericsson |
70 |
22 |
218 |
| 5 |
Aksh
Optifibre |
39 |
25.5 |
52.9 |
| 6 |
RPG
Cables |
23 |
25 |
-8 |
| |
Others |
204 |
100 |
104 |
| |
TOTAL |
990 |
461.5 |
114.5 |
| V&D
estimates |
CyberMedia
Research
|
|
|
State of Affairs
Sterlite Optical had nearly 200 crore of revenue from copper cables alone, out
of its overall revenue of Rs 402 crore. Its OFC business grew by 6 percent and
business, both domestic and overseas, saw a significant growth. The company had
made a foray into the structured cabling market since March 2005 to be an
end-to-end service provider for the cable requirements. This has addressed the
missing link in its otherwise complete portfolio for telecom needs.
Finolex's main product offerings are JFTC, OFC, LAN cables and components,
switchboard cables, co-axial cables and V-SAT cables. Now it is focusing on
developing new generation high-end communication cables without losing the
strength of being a low-cost traditional telecommunication cables manufacturer.
However, the company is aware of the opportunities for sales of both these
varieties of communication cables in the under-developed and developed parts of
the world and is accordingly making conscious efforts to broaden export markets
for communication cables.
Finolex witnessed a slight dip in its communication cables segment in the
previous year. BSNL was its major customer of the JFTCs; it won nearly 10
percent of the overall tender. And it has been regularly receiving export orders
for supply of foam skin JFTCs. It is also aggressively tapping new markets
overseas. Similarly, its OFC segment would also grow. With the entertainment
industry making a stride, the demand of co-axial cables is expected to be
strong. It expects the sales of LAN cables and switchboard cables to grow above
industry rates in the current year. The communications cable business
constituted 17 percent and grew 22 percent in 2005, to 150 crore.
Vindhya Telelinks and Birla Ericsson too saw significant growth of over 50
percent in their revenues compared to FY 2004–05. Birla Ericsson portfolio
covers OFCs and polyethylene-insulated JFTC.
Minu Sirsalewale
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