Toronto-based national carrier Rogers reported 114,000 postpaid wireless net subscriber additions in Q4 2020, and now has a total of 9,683,000 postpaid wireless subscribers.
This is a slight decrease from the 131,000 postpaid wireless net additions the carrier reported in Q4 2019, according to Rogers’ Q4 2020 quarterly earnings report released on January 28th.
“Rogers continued to see sequential improvement in Q4, finishing the year with solid efficiency gains across all of our businesses, a strong balance sheet, solid Wireless postpaid net subscribers, and continued momentum in cash flow growth in our cable business,” said Rogers CEO Joe Natale in the report.
The carrier also reported 40,000 prepaid net losses. Rogers now has a total of 1,260,000 prepaid subscribers. Total wireless subscribers at Rogers and its sub-brands is now a combined 10,943,000.
Rogers also reported a postpaid churn rate of 1.19 percent, which is a decrease from the 1.26 percent reported in the same period a year ago. Churn rate is the percentage of subscribers who discontinue their subscriptions in a month.
“The decrease in postpaid gross additions, the lower postpaid net additions, and the lower postpaid churn this quarter were all a result of the impacts of COVID-19, with overall lower market activity by Canadians,” the report states.
The carrier’s blended ABPU (average billing per unit) for Q4 2020 was $62.82, representing a decrease from the $66.17 reported in Q4 2019.
“The five percent decrease in blended ABPU this quarter was primarily a result of the declines in roaming and overage revenue, partially offset by an ongoing shift as subscribers finance new, higher-value device purchases,” Rogers notes.
Rogers’ blended ARPU for the quarter (average revenue per unit) was $50.02, compared to the $55.26 reported in Q4 2019.
Further, the carrier’s total revenue for the quarter decreased by seven percent, which it says was largely driven by an eight percent decrease in wireless service revenue.
Rogers states that the nine percent decrease in blended ARPU and eight percent decrease in wireless service revenue was the result of lower roaming revenue and a decrease in overage revenue due to strong customer adoption of its Rogers Infinite unlimited data plans along with lower wireless data usage as customers spent more time at home on Wi-Fi.