The Commercial Appeal

Explaining the proposed $26.5B Sprint, T-Mobile deal

- Mae Anderson ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK – Sprint and T-Mobile are talking up their $26.5 billion merger as great for high-speed wireless investment­s, rural service and U.S. competitiv­eness. But there are reasons to doubt the deal would do much on any of those fronts — and that it could also result in higher wireless costs for consumers.

The deal announced Sunday would combine the nation’s third- and fourth-largest wireless companies and bulk them up to a similar size as Verizon and AT&T.

Here’s a look at how the deal might affect your phone bill and prospects for better service.

From four to three

T-Mobile and, to a lesser extent, Sprint have been leaders in shaking up the cellphone industry. The “Big Four” wireless carriers now offer lower prices and more choices, including the restoratio­n of unlimited data plans. Two-year service contracts are gone. That’s been a boon to consumers.

The worry is that with just three major carriers, there would be less incentive to keep innovating on prices and service. T-Mobile and Sprint might even raise prices now that they don’t have to try to poach customers off each other.

The industry is evolving. The wireless carriers aren’t just competing with each other, but also with Comcast and others as the wireless, broadband and video industries converge. The industry is also moving toward faster, 5G service; T-Mobile and Sprint believe they can build a better 5G network as one company.

Having a strong 5G challenger to Verizon and AT&T might be better than “two weak companies in lanes three and four,” said Berin Szoka, president of the nonprofit think tank TechFreedo­m.

What’s this 5G all about?

The next-generation mobile networks, called 5G, are what wireless companies are banking on to replace current 4G services. Sprint CEO Marcelo Claure likens the switch to going from black-and-white to color TVs. While 5G aims for faster wireless service for your phones, analysts say the real key to 5G will be enabling its use in connected cars, homes and other infrastruc­ture.

Jason Leigh, an analyst at research firm IDC, said that by joining forces, the combined network might be “deeper and broader” than what either could have done individual­ly.

T-Mobile and Sprint each have rights to different portions of the airwaves and say that a better network can grow out of combining those slices.

But there are still a lot of unknowns related to 5G. It isn’t set to roll out nationally until at least 2020. And some of the more innovative uses, such as cars and homes, won’t come until after that.

As for the existing 4G network, service might improve marginally, but the companies already have roaming agreements to offer service where they don’t have their own cell towers. And there’s the mess of Sprint and T-Mobile each using different cellular technologi­es and frequencie­s. Leigh says that while about 20 million Sprint customers have phones that are compatible with T-Mobile’s network, about 30 million Sprint customers would need to upgrade their handsets.

Shifting all customers to 5G in coming years will “soften the blow somewhat,” he said.

Rural service

Another selling point used by Sprint and T-Mobile is that it will open hundreds of new stores in rural areas, creating more jobs and service offerings. The companies didn’t go into much detail about those rural plans, but promised to boost broadband competitio­n by offering mobile connection­s that rival wired services such as cable.

But rural areas are not typically big money makers for telecom companies. That’s one reason cable and other broadband offerings are poor in rural areas. It’s also a reason wireless connection­s tend to be slower there, if there’s service at all.

Some analysts believe the rural promises might be more an attempt to please regulators than a major part of the deal.

“I don’t think it will necessaril­y drive a whole lot of revenue but it makes it look good from the perspectiv­e of Congress,” Leigh said.

Government approval

Any changes will likely take months, if not years. The deal isn’t expected to finalize until the first half of 2019. Before that happens, the companies need the approval of the Department of Justice, which will look at antitrust concerns, and the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, which examines whether deals are in the public interest.

MoffettNat­hanson analyst Craig Moffett said the companies’ emphasis on 5G rather than lower prices is “exactly what one would have expected” to make the case for regulatory approval. He said the deal has “50/ 50” odds of passing regulatory muster.

The U.S. is in a race with China and other countries to be on top as this technology is developed and implemente­d.

The U.S. recently blocked Singapore-based Broadcom’s takeover bid for Qualcomm because of concerns about giving China an edge on 5G technology. T-Mobile and Sprint say the deal is important for the U.S. to keep its lead in telecom, as it would allow the companies to build 5G much more quickly.

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