reported core service revenue of Bt34,080mn, increasing 2.9% YoY and 0.5% QoQ from a quality growth of fixed broadband business and a rebound in non-mobile enterprise business. FBB business continued a
economic activities and increasing international roaming. However, ARPU declined inflation impacted mobile package selection towards lower from intense competition and rising price plans. • Fixed broadband
facilitated by government subsidizations. This was further supported by a continuous increase in foreign arrivals despite some structural headwinds and rising geopolitical conflicts. In summary, AIS reported
up. As a result, core service revenue in 3Q18, which excluded IC and equipment rental, was Bt33,134mn, increasing 2. 1% YoY but decreasing 0. 9% QoQ. EBITDA remained growth YoY but softened QoQ Cost
current assets were Bt34,841mn rising 9.2% YoY from account receivables, following a larger base of postpaid customers, and handset inventories. Total non- current assets were Bt249,226mn increasing 2.2
of 85% YoY and 6% QoQ while subscribers rose to 571,800 or a net addition of 50,600. Put more focus on convergence and EBITDA generation Given the growing fixed broadband and increasing popularity of
reported a core service revenue of Bt138,569mn, increasing 4.2% YoY, attributed to the performance of all core services dedicated to delivering high-quality products, as well as additional revenue
and IC revenue. • Network OPEX & NT partnership cost was at Bt5,281mn, increasing 9.7% YoY due to the increased utility cost following the rising energy price. It remained flat QoQ due to network cost
underpinned by growing postpaid segment. Voice revenue was Bt10,351mn, decreasing 17% YoY and 6.6% QoQ from voice-data cannibalization. Non-voice revenue was Bt19,570mn, increasing 21% YoY and 4.6% QoQ
areas nationwide. In the end of 2Q17, the usage amount from mobile top-up and money transfer are still growing. In addition, other online top-up and payments are growing up such as E-wallet top-up and