América Móvil
Sociedad Anónima Bursátil de Capital Variable | |
Traded as |
BMV: AMX NYSE: AMX NASDAQ: AMOV BMAD: AMXL |
Industry | Telecommunications |
Founded | 2000 |
Headquarters | Plaza Carso, Mexico City, Mexico |
Area served | South America, North America, Europe |
Key people |
Carlos Slim Helú, (Chairman) Daniel Hajj Aboumrad, (CEO) Iran Campbell Jr, (General Manager) |
Products | Fixed-line and mobile telephony, broadband and fixed-line internet services, digital television, IT and network services |
Revenue | US$ 59.3 billion (2012)[1] |
US$ 12.4 billion (2012)[1] | |
US$ 7.1 billion (2012)[1] | |
Number of employees | 158,694 |
Subsidiaries | Claro, Telmex, NET, Embratel, Telcel, TracFone Wireless, Page Plus Cellular. |
Website |
www |
América Móvil is a Mexican telecommunications corporation headquartered in Mexico City, Mexico. It is the fourth largest mobile network operator in terms of equity subscribers and one of the largest corporations in the world. América Móvil is a Forbes Global 2000 company. A venture of Carlos Slim, América Móvil provides services to 289.4 million wireless subscribers, 34.3 million landlines, 22.6 million broadband accesses and 21.5 million PayTV units as of the end of 2014.[2]
Company information
The company's world headquarters are located in Mexico City, Mexico. Its Mexican subsidiary Telcel is the largest mobile operator in that country, commanding a market share in excess of 70%. The company operates under its Claro subsidiaries in many countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, these include Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Peru, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Paraguay, Puerto Rico, Colombia and Ecuador. In Brazil it also operates Claro and other subsidiary Embratel. It owns 30% of KPN Telecom in the Netherlands and has done a bid on 100% of the shares. The group has also fully consolidated the Telekom Austria Group into its financial reporting, owning 59.7% of its shares and using the Austrian operator to expand América Móvil's European network.[3]
América Móvil acquired 100% of Jamaican mobile operator Oceanic Digital, under the brand name MiPhone in August 2007.[4] On November 15, 2005, the company signed an international pact with Bridge Alliance to jointly deliver various international services.
In the United States, it operates through its subsidiary TracFone Wireless, Inc. under the brands TracFone, NET10 Wireless, Straight Talk, SIMPLE Mobile, Telcel América, Page Plus Cellular and Total Wireless. It is one of the leading national pre-paid wireless service provider in the U.S.
As of December 2010, the company was one of the top four telecommunications companies in the world and boasted 290,000 kilometres of fiber optic cable, making it the largest in infrastructure.[5]
With annual sales of over $47 billion (As of April 2012), the company is currently the largest company in Mexico by revenue, more than the next five largest companies combined.
With annual profits of over $5 billion (As of April 2012), the company is currently the most profitable company in Mexico, more than the next three most profitable companies combined.
With assets of over $67 billion (As of April 2012), the company is currently the largest company in Mexico by assets with Banorte very closely behind them with assets of over $59 billion (As of April 2012) It is highly likely that the company will buy a group of companies with at least $29 billion in assets in 2013 in the pension, insurance, payroll, currency exchange and mutual funds industries to secure their position as the most asset rich company in Mexico.
With a market value of over $93 billion (As of April 2012), the company is currently the most valuable company in Mexico, more than the next three most valuable companies combined.
Alleged Cost
Lack of competition in telecommunications in Mexico is estimated to cost the economy of Mexico $25 billion a year,[6][7] although this finding has been disputed by economists and academics such as Hausman & Ros, where the authors conclude the opposite: there was in fact a consumer surplus of $4 – $5 billion USD with respect to comparable countries.[8]
Telmex acquisition
In January 2010, it made an offer to buy Carso Telecom and Telmex International in order to better compete against Spain's Telefonica and Malaysia's Telekom Malaysia. The acquisition was approved by the CFC (Comisión Federal de Competencia) Antitrust Office in Mexico on February 11, 2010.
América Móvil had once been Telmex' mobile division, but since its spinoff in 2001 it had grown far larger than its former parent.[9]
América Móvil global wireless customers
As of Dec 2014:[10]
- North America
- United States - TracFone Wireless (TracFone, NET10 Wireless, Straight Talk, SafeLink Wireless, SIMPLE Mobile, Total Wireless and Telcel América) 26.006 million
- Mexico - Telcel 71.463 million
- Central America and The Caribbean
- Costa Rica Dominican Republic El Salvador Guatemala Honduras Nicaragua Panama Puerto Rico - Claro 19.065 million
- South America
- Colombia - Claro 29.776 million
- Perú - Claro 12.498 million
- Brazil - Claro 71.107 million
- Argentina Paraguay Uruguay - Claro 22.000 million
- Ecuador - Claro 11.772 million
- Chile - Claro 5.754 million
- Europe
- Austria - A1 Bulgaria - MTel Belarus - Velcom Croatia - Vipnet Slovenia - Si.mobil Serbia - Vip mobile Macedonia - Vip operator Liechtenstein - Telecom Liechtenstein 20.008 million
Global wireless customers 289.449 million
América Móvil in the world
América Móvil wireless technology by country
South America
- CDMA (800/1900MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850/1900MHZ) first UMTS live by América Móvil
- TDMA (800MHZ, discontinued in 2009[11]), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850/2100MHZ), LTE (2600MHZ)
- TDMA (800MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850MHZ soon 1900)
- TDMA (800MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850MHZ soon 1900), UMTS/HSDPA (850MHZ soon 1900)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850MHZ soon 1900)
- CDMA (1900MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850MHZ soon 1900)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (1900MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (1900MHZ)
Caribbean
- CDMA (800/1900MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850MHZ soon 1900)
- CDMA (800/1900MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850MHZ soon 1900)
- CDMA (800MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850MHZ)
Central America
- CDMA (1900MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1900MHZ), UMTS/HSPA (1900MHZ) first HSPA (High-Speed Packet Access) live by América Móvil
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (1900MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (1900MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850MHZ)
North America
- CDMA (800/1900MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/1900MHZ) (MVNO)
- TDMA (800MHZ), GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/1900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (850/1900MHZ), LTE (1700MHZ)
Europe
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (900/2100MHZ), LTE (800/1800/2600MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (2100MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (2100MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (2100MHZ), LTE (800/1800MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (900/2100MHZ), LTE (800/1800/2600MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (2100MHZ), LTE (1800MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (2100MHZ), LTE (800/1800/2600MHZ)
- GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800MHZ), UMTS/HSDPA (2100MHZ), LTE (800MHZ)
KPN acquisition attempt
In early August 2013, América Móvil offered to take over the remaining 70% stake of the Dutch telecommunications company KPN for 7.2 billion Euros ($9.49 billion). América Móvil currently owns close to 30% of KPN. The Dutch government has warned against this acquisition quoting it as a threat to national security. The Dutch government’s intervention comes after the council representing employees of KPN urged authorities to halt América Móvil’s planned bid.[12]
Complete Report on AMERICA MOVIL
- Key Highlights
- THE AMERICA MOVIL GROUP
- Worldwide operations
- Company ownership (Q1 2015);
- World’s largest pay-TV operators, by group (Q3 2014)
- América Móvil’s global pay-TV operations
- AMX’s PAY-TV OPERATIONS IN LATIN AMERICA / BUSINESS STRATEGY
- Revenue growth and ARPU (USD; 2009-Q3 2014)
- AMX pay-TV revenue by country (%; Jan-Sep 2014)
- Triple-play service offering
- AMX vs. DirecTV in Latam (pay-TV subs; ARPU)
- HD adoption rate (key markets, 2009-Q3 2014)
- Content strategy (TV rights, own content, HD lineup, OTT)
See also
- Movistar Mexico (Telefonica)
- Iusacell
- Unefón
- Nextel Mexico - (NII Holdings)
References
- 1 2 3 "Financial Tables". Yahoo Investor Relations. Yahoo! Inc. Retrieved July 5, 2010.
- ↑ "América Móvil 4th quarter results 2014". Retrieved 22 Feb 2015.
- ↑ "Telekom Austria Aktionärsstruktur". Retrieved 23 Jun 2015.
- ↑ Business News Americas staff reporter. "AMX buys Jamaican operator Oceanic Digital". BNamericas.
- ↑ "Buzz in the air as AMX comes of age". Financial Times.
- ↑ "Telecoms reform would boost competition and growth in Mexico, says OECD". OECD. January 30, 2012. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
The “OECD Review of Telecommunication Policy and Regulation in Mexico” says that the lack of competition has led to extremely high prices for consumers and businesses and slowed the take-up of new services.
- ↑ Stryszowska, Marta, (2012), "Estimation of Loss in Consumer Surplus Resulting from Excessive Pricing of Telecommunication Services in Mexico", OECD Digital Economy Papers, No. 191, Éditions OCDE. Accessed 16 May 2014.
- ↑ http://www.americamovil.com/amx/es/cm/news/2012/Hausman-RosOECDRebuttalFinal.pdf
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ http://www.claro.com.br/sites/files/regulamentos/arquivos/regulamento_comunicado.pdf
- ↑ Dolia Estevez (13 September 2013). "Dutch Government Issues Warning On Takeover Of Telecom Firm KPN By Mexican Billionaire Carlos Slim". Forbes.
External links
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