Ooredoo, Qatar’s biggest listed telecom company, is eyeing as much as 30% of the market share in Indonesia after completing a merger involving its unit in the country.
CK Hutchison Holdings Ltd and Ooredoo started talks last year to combine their Indonesian wireless phone businesses to fend off competition in Southeast Asia’s biggest market by subscribers. Ooredoo has a 65% stake in PT Indosat, which surged as much as 16% in Jakarta yesterday, taking gains this year to more than 30%.
Negotiations are ongoing and the companies are awaiting regulatory approvals, Aziz Aluthman Fakhroo, Ooredoo’s managing director, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “Hopefully we will get there by the end of this year.”
In 2020, “Indosat managed to be the number two player in Indonesia, with market share around 17%,” Fakhroo said. “The combination with Hutch will put us as a clear number two, taking us to 27%-30% revenue market share in Indonesia.”
Indosat is also nearing completion of the sale of 4,000 towers, which analysts expect to happen before the end of the exclusive negotiations for the merger. Fakhroo said that while he can’t comment on those sales, the company has close to 20,000 towers across its operations and can extract “quite significant value” from them.
Ooredoo is also considering expanding its digital payments and sales segments, which Fakhroo said are “big areas of focus,” as peers in the Gulf move on with plans to invest more in fintechs.
In Saudi Arabia, Saudi Telecom Co is in the process of submitting an application for the initial public offering of shares in its internet services unit. STC has also been developing digital payments firm stcPay as it continues to invest in startups through its $500mn venture capital arm, STV.
Ooredoo is looking at consolidating in markets it is already present rather than expanding into new ones, Fakhroo said.
Ooredoo is watching the situation in Myanmar closely, “an extremely challenging situation right now,” with priority being the safety and well-being of employees, he said.
Ooredoo has an agreement with Ericsson to deploy 5G and Huawei remains a “strong partner,” with the strategy being to keep “a diversified pool of vendors to mitigate any risk,” he said.
 
 
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