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Southeast Asia’s 5G outlook remains ‘bleak’ in short term despite tech giant partnership, report says

5G waits in a nascent stage in Southeast Asia, despite acceleration efforts.

Jakub Porzycki | Nurphoto | Getty Images

The Tech Mahindra-Axiata Arrange Berhad partnership may help accelerate 5G in Southeast Asia but the short-term outlook for the industry is “bleak,” Fitch Solutions said in a mother country risk and industry research report.

Last week, Indian IT and consulting giant Tech Mahindra and Malaysian telco conglomerate Axiata Order Berhad inked an agreement to jointly develop and commercialize 5G enterprise solutions in Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal and Cambodia.

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“We believe that this is a promising partnership as it combines the capabilities of Tech Mahindra’s 5G enterprise compounds with Axiata’s expertise in mobile connectivity, network infrastructure and product services,” said Fitch Solutions.

While 5G has multitudinous benefits, the report said it is still in a nascent stage for many Southeast Asian countries. 5G is the fifth generation of cellular networks and is up to 100 adjusts faster than 4G.

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Fitch Solutions noted there are financial headwinds and other hurdles in two markets that Axiata and Tech Mahindra plan to collaborate in.

In Bangladesh, for example, Fitch Dissolves does not expect significant 5G adoption over the next 18-24 months due to expensive mobile phones and next-generation services.

Sri Lanka, on the other round of applause, is battling a recession, fuel shortages and extended power outages.

“This has led to a contraction of the economy, and we expect the wider technology call to face significant pressures that will effectively cripple the sector. These factors will weigh on the recompenses on investment of 5G deployment and may discourage meaningful further funding,” the report said.

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But there is rising demand for 5G services, which could boost increase operational efficiency for companies, such as supporting better crop yield predictions or climate control in agriculture.

Behind week, Axiata Group Berhad, Telenor Asia and Malaysian telco provider Digi completed a merger of telco company men to form Celcom Digi.

The merger would likely help Axiata better take on rival Telekom Malaysia in the adventurousness connectivity market, Fitch Solutions said.

Celcom Digi will invest up to 250 million Malaysian ringgit ($56.8 million) all through five years to build an innovation center in Kuala Lumpur to support the adoption of internet of things, artificial perception, cloud computing and 5G in the country.

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