China Mobile, the world's biggest phone
company, has said profits rose more than expected in the first half of 2013
from last year .
Profits
rose 1.5% to 63.1bn yuan ($10.3bn, £6.6bn) in the six months to June, with the
results buoyed by a strong rise in wireless data revenue.
But
it said competition from its fellow state-owned rivals remained stiff amid
slower economic growth.
Operating
revenue rose 10% to 303.1bn yuan.
The
company said its subscriber base rose by around 30 million to 740 million users
at the end of 2012.
China
Mobile and its two state-owned competitors, China Unicom and China Telecom, are
investing heavily in fourth-generation networks to keep up with a growing
demand for data, fuelled by the increased use of smartphones and tablets.
China
Mobile chairman Xi Guohua said the firm "faced a number of
challenges", including slower economic growth and increased competition
from the wider information and communications industry.
But
he said the company was making good progress in the commercialisation of its 4G
network technology, called TD-LTE.
It
rolled out a trial 4G network in 15 cities in 2012 and plans to expand that to
100 cities this year.
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