San Diego Union-Tribune

BIDDING FOR 5G AIRWAVES BLOWS PAST $76 BILLION

FCC auction fueled by carriers’ frenzied demand for capacity

- BLOOMBERG NEWS

Bidding in a 5G airwaves auction in the U.S. surged past $76.5 billion, fueled by frenzied demand for capacity that could send carriers such as Verizon Communicat­ions and AT&T to the debt market to finance the tab.

The auction run by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission started last month with a field of 57 potential bidders, including the third major wireless carrier, T-Mobile US Inc., and pay-TV providers such as Dish Network Corp., Comcast Corp. and Charter

Communicat­ions Inc. Within days, the tally exceeded analysts’ estimates of $47 billion.

“It blows all auctions away,” said Sasha Javid, chief operating officer of wireless data company BitPath.

The previous top FCC airwaves auction attracted almost $45 billion in bids in 2015. The current sale of frequencie­s in the so-called Cband could approach $80 billion as bidding extends for another week or more, Javid said.

The go-for-broke bidding underscore­s how crucial these midband frequencie­s are to companies trying to seize global leadership in emerging 5G technology. The airwaves are expected to drive a yearslong surge of profits when deployed for next-generation mobile devices, autonomous vehicles, healthcare equipment and manufactur­ing facilities.

“It’s great spectrum, there’s a lot of it, and it’s coming right as carriers are gearing up to get ready for 5G,” said Doug Brake, director of broadband and spectrum policy at the Informatio­n Technology & Innovation Foundation, a nonprofit think tank.

Although Verizon was expected to be the biggest bidder in the auction, the carrier may have run into a formidable counterbid­der in T-Mobile, thanks to the financial backing of its controllin­g stockholde­r, Deutsche Telekom.

“If you’re Verizon and you don’t get this spectrum, you’ve basically lost the race to 5G,” Javid said.

With about $10 billion in additional cash from Deutsche Telekom, New Street Research says TMobile could be using the auction to build on an al

ready-large holding of midband 2.5-gigahertz airwaves gained with the takeover of Sprint Corp. in April.

T-Mobile already has “a powerful network advantage today, and they may extend it,” New Street Research analyst Jonathan Chaplin wrote in a note Monday.

Collective­ly, the largest bidders had about $70 billion in cash available when the auction began. But with bids already topping that, Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Dish, Comcast and others “may have to tap the bond market in early 2021,” Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Stephen Flynn wrote in a note Monday.

In addition to the airwaves licenses, winning bidders also will pay an estimated $13 billion or more to current users of the airwaves, including satellite providers Intelsat and SES. The satellite companies will change their use of frequencie­s to make room for the 5G providers.

 ?? ANDREW BURTON GETTY IMAGES ?? Verizon Communicat­ions was expected to be the biggest bidder in the auction.
ANDREW BURTON GETTY IMAGES Verizon Communicat­ions was expected to be the biggest bidder in the auction.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States