The Borneo Post (Sabah)

T-Mobile,Sprint deal will give US lead over China

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NEW YORK: T-Mobile US Inc and Sprint Corp said they had agreed to a US$26 billion all-stock deal and believed they could win over skeptical regulators because the merger would create thousands of jobs and help the United States beat China to creating the next generation mobile network.

The agreement capped four years of on-and-off talks between the third and fourth largest US wireless carriers, setting the stage for the creation of a company with 127 million customers that will be a more formidable competitor to the top two wireless players, Verizon Communicat­ions Inc and AT&T Inc.

US regulators, who have challenged in court AT&T’s US$85 billion deal to buy US media company Time Warner Inc, are expected to grill Sprint and TMobile on how they will price their combined wireless offerings.

Verizon has 116 million US wireless customers, according to a spokesman, while AT&T has 93 million branded customers, as of the first quarter.

Their first round of merger talks ended unsuccessf­ully in 2014 after the administra­tion of then-US President Barack Obama expressed antitrust concerns.

The new deal will create the highest-capacity US network, lower prices, create jobs and improve service in rural areas, said John Legere, the chief executive of TMobile and the new head of the proposed combined company.

The combined company, which will be called T-Mobile, will invest US$40 billion over the next three years to upgrade its networks to accommodat­e the next generation 5G wireless technology, which is expected to have the speeds necessary to power drones and self-driving cars, Legere said in a statement.

The companies said during a conference call with analysts that the recent US tax overhaul would have a positive impact, and the combined company would not be a significan­t taxpayer until 2025.

T-Mobile and Sprint said they expected to complete their deal no later than the first half of 2019, an ambitious goal given the intense US regulatory scrutiny it will be subjected to.

T-Mobile will not be liable to pay Sprint a breakup fee should regulators block the deal, according to sources who asked not to be identified because that detail in their contract had not yet been made public.

The companies said they expected US regulators would see the benefits of the deal.

“This isn’t a case of going from four to three wireless companies – there are now at least seven or eight big competitor­s in this converging market,” Legere said, referring to cable companies as wireless competitor­s. Other companies also would be forced to accelerate their investment­s in the face of a combined T-Mobile-Sprint, the companies added.

A spokeswoma­n for Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai declined to comment on Sunday on the proposed merger. The FCC will decide whether to grant the deal regulatory approval if it is in the “public interest,” the spokeswoma­n added.

CTIA, a trade organizati­on that represents the US wireless communicat­ions industry, ranks the United States behind China and South Korea in 5G readiness.

TheChinese­government­launched a plan targeting 5G deployment by 2020, with three carriers committed to the timeline.

Legere said the deal would likely lead to lower prices from AT&T and Verizon, as well as Comcast Corp. — Reuters

 ??  ?? This combinatio­n of file pictures shows the T-Mobile logo and a Sprint cell phone company logo. T-Mobile US Inc and Sprint Corp said they had agreed to a US$26 billion all-stock deal and believed they could win over skeptical regulators because the...
This combinatio­n of file pictures shows the T-Mobile logo and a Sprint cell phone company logo. T-Mobile US Inc and Sprint Corp said they had agreed to a US$26 billion all-stock deal and believed they could win over skeptical regulators because the...
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