Business World

Sprint Corp. in new talks to merge with T-Mobile US, Inc.

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LOS ANGELES — Sprint Corp. has restarted talks to merge with T-Mobile US, Inc., people familiar with the matter said on Tuesday, the latest effort to bring together the fourth and third-largest US wireless carriers.

The combined company would have more than 127 million customers and could create more formidable competitio­n for the no. 1 and no. 2 wireless players, Verizon Communicat­ions, Inc. and AT&T, Inc. amid a race to expand offerings in 5G, the next generation of wireless technology.

T-Mobile’s and Sprint’s previous round of negotiatio­ns ended in November over valuation disagreeme­nts. Since then, Sprint’s shares have lost more than a fifth of their value amid questions about how the company can compete effectivel­y under the weight of its longterm debt of more than $32 billion.

Sprint’s majority owner, SoftBank Group Corp. has been looking to trim its debt, which reached ¥15.8 trillion ($147 billion) as of the end of December. It has said it is planning to raise cash by taking its Japanese mobile phone unit public this year.

Sprint and T-Mobile decided to restart talks partly because they want to share the financial burden of investing in their networks, the sources said. The negotiatio­ns are at an early stage, the sources added.

A key considerat­ion in the talks is Germany’s Deutsche Telekom AG’s ability to consolidat­e T-Mobile’s earnings, one of the sources said. Deutsche Telekom owns 63% of T- Mobile, which has emerged as one of its more prized assets. Deutsche Telekom would likely have to put in new money toward a merger for its stake to remain above 50%.

The sources asked not to be identified because the matter is confidenti­al. Sprint declined to comment, while T-Mobile did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Shares of Sprint closed off their intraday high but still up more than 17% at $6.02, giving the company a market capitaliza­tion of $25 billion, after the Wall Street Journal first reported on the new talks.

Shares of T-Mobile gained 5.67% to $63.13, giving it a market capitaliza­tion of $54 billion.

Failure to clinch an agreement last November left SoftBank Chief Executive Officer Masayoshi Son, a dealmaker who raised close to $100 billion for his Vision Fund to invest in technology companies, in search of other options for Sprint.

“SoftBank has to change the way they approach this,” Recon Analytics analyst Roger Entner said. “Unless they have changed their minds, (and admitted) that they are indeed the junior partner, nothing has changed.”

Even though Sprint’s customer base has expanded under CEO Marcelo Claure, growth has been driven by heavy discountin­g. Analysts have said that, without T-Mobile, Sprint lacks the scale needed to invest in its network and to compete in a saturated market.

“It is impossible for Sprint to sustain on its own, and the same problems still exists with SoftBank and Sprint not comfortabl­e with a minority stake,” MoffettNat­hanson LLC analyst Craig Moffett said. “But ultimately you have to believe that these two companies will end up together even if the path to get there is torturous.”

T- Mobile has fared better than Sprint, even if it remains a distant third to Verizon and AT&T. It has managed to score sustained market share gains, as innovative offerings, improving network performanc­e and good customer service attract new customers, according to Moody’s Investors Service, Inc.

T-Mobile became the first major US carrier to eliminate two-year contracts, a shift quickly embraced by consumers and copied by competitor­s. The company has also badgered rivals with its unlimited data plans.

REGULATORY CONCERNS

Another roadblock to the deal could be regulatory hurdles. Sprint’s and T-Mobile’s first round of merger talks ended in 2014 after the Obama administra­tion expressed antitrust concerns about the deal. The big four wireless providers have been heavily discountin­g their cellphone plans in a battle for consumers, and consumer advocates fret that a merger of TMobile and Sprint could reverse that trend.

It was not immediatel­y clear how the Trump administra­tion would view the combinatio­n. AT&T agreed to acquire US media company Time Warner, Inc. in October 2016 for $ 85 billion. The US Department of Justice has sued to block the deal over concerns about the companies’ pricing power in the media market. AT&T and Time Warner are currently defending their deal in court.—

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