Vancouver Sun

Bell-MTS deal presents ‘unique challenge’

- EMILY JACKSON

Crown corporatio­n SaskTel says its business may get riskier if BCE Inc. gets permission to acquire Manitoba Telecom Services.

The regional telecommun­ications carrier said Bell’s planned $3.9 billion takeover of neighbouri­ng provider MTS represents a “new unique challenge,” according to a report released Monday, prepared at the premier’s request in response to a June independen­t risk assessment that found the proposed takeover may hurt SaskTel’s bottom line.

While most of the risks related to the Bell-MTS deal already existed, “in several cases the magnitude of risk has increased,” the report states.

Of the risks outlined in the original assessment by telecom consultant Mark Goldberg, SaskTel concluded the most fundamenta­l risk lies in potential regulatory actions the federal government might take should they approve the deal. It is particular­ly concerned Ottawa would favour new market entrants in upcoming wireless spectrum auctions in a bid to encourage more competitio­n in a shrunken market.

“This could have impacts on SaskTel’s ability to acquire wireless spectrum at fair prices, as experience­d in the past, along with increasing competitiv­e threats within and beyond Saskatchew­an,” the report states.

SaskTel is the incumbent provider in the province, and as such the federal government has treated it the same as the Big Three national players Bell, Rogers and Telus over the past eight years. But the report argues SaskTel should instead be treated as a smaller player, especially if the deal goes through and it winds up as the only major regional carrier in Western Canada.

“We should therefore not be discrimina­ted against and put at a disadvanta­ge vis-à-vis the larger national carriers,” the report states, adding it intends to lobby Ottawa to treat it as a competitor.

SaskTel believes the Big Three already use their market power to implement “aggressive” regional pricing.

 ?? DON HEALY ?? The SaskTel building is seen in downtown Regina. The Crown corporatio­n fears the fallout from a proposed BCEMTS merger.
DON HEALY The SaskTel building is seen in downtown Regina. The Crown corporatio­n fears the fallout from a proposed BCEMTS merger.

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