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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (34201)5/3/1999 12:21:00 PM
From: peter michaelson  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 122087
 
OMGA. Your original call to short was at $8 7/8, I believe. No longer under water!!

#reply-7890735

Congrats.

Peter



To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (34201)5/3/1999 12:22:00 PM
From: KaiserSosze  Respond to of 122087
 
<LWIN> Some more positive news!!

New Pay Plan Seen Fueling Mexico Cellphone Growth

Updated 12:42 AM ET May 2, 1999

By Fiona Ortiz

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Beginning Saturday, Mexican mobile telephone users will
no longer have to
pay for calls they receive, a change that analysts and industry leaders say will throw fuel
on an already
explosive market.

"This will definitely detonate the mobile telephone business," said Roberta Lopez,
spokeswoman for
tiny northern Mexico mobile phone company Pegaso. "People can control their costs
now and more
people will get cellular phones."

Mexico's three largest mobile telephone providers -- Telcel, a subsidiary of phone
group Telmex ;
Iusacell and a group of four northern Mexico cellular firms -- all saw 90 percent growth
in 1998.

Growth this year of 50 percent to 90 percent or even more is possible with the "calling
party pays"
system, industry leaders say.

Pegaso, for one, hopes the new system will be one factor helping to increase clients
from some 2,000
people to as many as 100,000 this year in the border city of Tijuana.

Mexico is one of the last Latin American countries to abandon a system under which
phone clients had
to pay for every call they receive. The new system was approved on April 16 by the
Federal
Telecommunications Commission (Cofetel).

All cellphones will be switched to the new system automatically. Local calls to mobile
phones -- long
distance dialing and charges will not change -- will take a new 044 prefix and will cost
2.50 pesos (about
$0.27) per minute, a rate close to the Latin American average.

Analysts said the new scheme would boost cellular subscriber growth because it will be
cheaper to
own a cellular phone and because providers would be able to market mobile phones to
lower-income
groups without running the risk that people would receive a lot of calls they could not
pay for.

"It changes the credit risk profile for cellular companies, improves it substantially," said
Patrick
Grenham, an analyst with Salomon Smith Barney in New York.

Telmex, which has almost all the land lines in the country and about 65 percent of the
cellular market,
fought the new pay scheme with a court injunction, arguing that the traffic of calls to
cellphones would
diminish.

But analysts do not see telephone traffic going down.

"Local traffic is generally inelastic. People will absorb a higher cost," said Brad
Radulovacki, an analyst
with Flemings Research. Traffic will go up because the new rates, "encourage people to
keep their
cellphones on all the time."

Grenham said that, when people do not have to pay for incoming calls they start to see
their cellphones
differently and give out their number to more people, generating more traffic.

Radulovacki said calling party pays has generated subscriber growth in Chile, just in the
two months
since it was introduced.

But analysts said benefits for phone companies would not be seen for several months
here because
Mexicans are confused about the new system.

"It's not clear," cellphone user and businessman Melvyn Trejo said.

Like many other cellphone clients here, Trejo thought that the option to stay with the old
system meant
that callers to cellular phones could use or not use the new 044 prefix depending on
whether they
wanted to pay for the call.

He did not know that he would have to ask his provider for a new phone number if he
wanted to stay
with the old system. Few will make that choice, analysts and industry leaders said.

Enrique Chavero, marketing director for a group of four cellphone providers in
Northern Mexico, said
only about three to five percent of users will opt to retain the old system.

"Nobody is going to stay with the old system. Why decide to keep your bill higher?"
said Grenham