Dayton Daily News

What does merger of T-Mobile-Sprint mean for you?

- By Mae Anderson and Tali Arbel

U.S. antitrust NEW YORK — regulators have cleared T-Mobile’s $26.5 billion takeover of rival Sprint, leaving just three major cellphone companies, while creating a smaller competitor in satellite-TV company Dish.

While there are still a few hurdles to be cleared for the deal to close, here’s what a combined T-Mobile-Sprint company could mean for you and your cellphone bill:

For most T-Mobile and Sprint customers

Sprint customers will be eventually transferre­d to the new T-Mobile, but that transition will take a few years. If you are a T-Mobile customer, you might not see many changes. However, because the goal of the takeover is to roll out a next-generation “5G” network, subscriber­s of both could ultimately see faster service.

What about prepaid customers?

As part of the deal, Dish will get Sprint’s prepaid business, including Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile. Even if its network isn’t ready, customers aren’t supposed to see service quality drop, as Dish is going to use T-Mobile’s network until it can run its own.

How strong is dish?

That’s an open question. Public-interest groups point out that Sprint is an existing company with more than 50 million subscriber­s. Dish would start from scratch building a network that will cost tens of billions. It gets only 9 million customers from the deal and will have to fight to win more.

As for the network, Dish already owns spectrum, or airwave rights, but hasn’t been using it. Friday’s deal would give Dish additional airwaves that travel far and work well in rural areas. Dish is supposed to put those to use in its own network, but it has to rely on T-Mobile’s network in the meantime. Moffett Nathanson analyst Craig Moffett says the set-up suggests Dish won’t have an incentive to set “aggressive­ly” low prices.

Dish says it will offer service to 70% of the U.S. population by 2023. But while it’s billed as 5G, Dish is promising speeds that are only slightly higher than what’s typical today.

And for Verizon and AT&T customers?

T-Mobile was instrument­al in pushing the more establishe­d players to be more consumer friendly, doing away with two-year phone contracts and offering unlimited data plans. T-Mobile has offered goodies for its customers like free or discounted Netflix and free internatio­nal data. With just three major providers, the worry is that there would be less incentive to add services that consumers like or to compete on price.

T-Mobile has promised not to raise prices for three years, but after that, it’s fair game. But T-Mobile CEO John Legere said Friday that the company will continue to be the “Un-carrier” and keep Verizon, AT&T and others on their toes.

So will prices go up or down?

Opinion is divided. Generally, fewer competitor­s mean higher prices, which is part of the reason the Department of Justice required the companies to sell part of its business to Dish to keep the number of major wireless providers at four.

“Americans across the country will likely pay higher prices for worse service in a wireless market dominated by AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile,” said Barry Lynn, executive director of the Open Markets Institute, a research group that promotes competitio­n. “The problem is especially bad for poor and rural customers.”

But others, including T-Mobile of course, say prices won’t rise and the deal is good for consumers.

Will this deal actually happen?

A federal judge still must sign off on the approval, as it includes conditions for the new company. And 14 attorneys general are suing to stop the deal.

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