I think irrespective of who is at the helm, the general market outlook for telco's is not too rosy....here is why:
1 - The regulation requiring the registration of all SIMS will cause a dip in subscriber numbers (and on the upside, operators will know who owes them allegiance out of the multiple SIM subscribers). Case in point, after similar legislation in RSA, between MTN and Voddacom, they lost abt 2 million subscribers (the positive effect is in a slightly increased ARPU - i.e. instead of djinn spending 1000 on Zain and 1000 on Yu - I spend 2000 on one network).
On this point, and looking at Safaricom's claim to 15 million SIMS, this will show real subscriber numbers - the use of 0700 prefix should indicate they have now 21 million subscribers (0720-0729 = 10 mill approx, 0710-0719 10 mill apporx) but really they have issued 21 million SIM cards (including half a dozen which I do not use from handset promotions over the last 6 years). So even with the 15 million, I do not think so - more like 12 million ACTIVE subscribers.
2 - There is very harsh competition in the data market (not just here but elsewhere). Right now the marketing of data is aimed at driving usage through bundles which is causing lower quality of service (both voice and data). Prices keep coming down, bundles grow bigger and bigger. Voice, SMS and Data bundles. So while the market base grows, the revenues will grow only very slightly - if the market base grows 20%, revenues may only be one third that. Pressures will continue to intensify as consumers demand more for less (as was the promise of fibre optics). To stay ahead more COSTLY investment is needed to migrate from GSM to UMTS, esp for data. On the upside, unified licences mean that mobile operators carry a big chunk of the consumer market (edging out AK and other such players).
3 - Mobile number portability - if this goes through as intended by CCK, it will give liberty to those subscribers who want to keep their number without enduring mediocre quality of service, non-existent customer service. I'd say some 10-15% will vote with their feet if this comes through.
My two bits.