NEW DELHI - Shares in India's Reliance Communications fell nearly 8 percent on Tuesday after the No. 2 mobile operator's quarterly earnings halved and a crunching call tariff war threatened more pain ahead.
"There is already tremendous pressure on operating margins because of the price war and tariff erosion and today's fall is a knee-jerk reaction to the results," said K.K. Mital, head of portfolio management services at Globe Capital.
Reliance Communications on Saturday reported its quarterly profit for the September quarter fell about 52 percent, on foreign exchange losses, network expansion costs and growing low-paying users.
In October, the company cut all call charges to a flat 50 paise (1 U.S. cent) a minute, reacting to competition from smaller rival Tata Teleservices that outpaced market leaders with its attractive but low-profit per-second bill plan.
Market leader Bharti Airtel last week launched a per-second bill plan and Reliance Communications said on Monday it had also evaluated the plan internally and was keeping its options open.
Four new operators, including ventures of international firms Telenor and Etisalat, are set to start services this year intensifying competition in a crowded market.
"I think a consolidation phase will continue for next three to six months after which you could see a reversal in the outlook," Mital said.
At 0643 GMT, shares in Reliance Communications, valued at more than $7 billion, were trading 4.8 percent down at 167.50 rupees after hitting their lowest since March 25.