Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Feds approve T-Mobile’s $26.5 billion Sprint deal

- By Tali Arbel and Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON — U.S. regulators have approved T-Mobile’s $26.5 billion takeover of rival Sprint, despite fears of higher prices and job cuts, in a deal that would leave just three major cellphone companies in the country.

Friday’s approval from the Justice Department and five state attorneys general comes after Sprint and T-Mobile agreed to conditions that would set up satellite-TV provider Dish as a smaller rival to Verizon, AT&T and the combined T-Mobile-Sprint company. The Justice Department’s antitrust chief, Makan Delrahim, said the conditions set up Dish “as a disruptive force in wireless.”

But attorneys general from other states and public-interest advocates say that Dish is hardly a replacemen­t for Sprint as a standalone company and that the conditions fail to address the competitiv­e harm the deal causes: higher prices, job losses and fewer choices for consumers.

“By signing off on this merger, the Justice Department has done nothing to remedy the short- and long-term harms the loss of an independen­t Sprint will create for U.S. wireless users,” Free Press Research Director S. Derek Turner said.

A federal judge still must sign off on the approval, as the two companies’ settlement with Justice includes conditions for them. The Federal Communicat­ions Commission is expected to also give the takeover its blessing.

Dish is paying $5 billion for Sprint’s prepaid cellphone brands including Boost and Virgin Mobile — about 9 million customers — and some spectrum, or airwaves for wireless service, from the two companies. Dish will also be able to rent T-Mobile’s network for seven years while it builds its own.

Dish on Friday promised the FCC that it would build a nationwide network using next-generation “5G” technology by June 2023. But Dish is promising speeds that are only slightly higher than what’s typical today, even though 5G promises the potential for blazing speeds.

The Trump administra­tion has not been consistent in its approach to media and telecom mergers. While the government went to court to block AT&T’s acquisitio­n of Time Warner and then lost, the Justice Department allowed Disney to buy much of 21st Century

Fox, a direct competitor, with only minor asset sales to get the deal done. Mergers between direct competitor­s have historical­ly had a higher bar to clear at the Justice Department.

Sprint and T-Mobile combined would now approach the size of Verizon and AT&T. The companies have argued that bulking up will mean a better nextgenera­tion “5G” wireless network than either could build on its own. Sprint and T-Mobile have argued for over a year that having one big company to challenge AT&T and Verizon, rather than two smaller companies, will be better for U.S. consumers.

The two companies tried to combine during the Obama administra­tion but regulators rebuffed them. They resumed talks on combining once President Donald Trump took office, hoping for more industryfr­iendly regulators. The companies appealed to Trump’s desire for the U.S. to “win” a global 5G race with China as this faster, more reliable wireless is rolled out and applicatio­ns are built for it.

Meanwhile, the FCC agreed in May to back the deal after T-Mobile promised to build out rural broadband and 5G to nearly all the country, sell its Boost prepaid brand and keep prices on hold for three years.

But critics say that’s not enough.

Attorneys general from 13 states and the District of Columbia have filed a lawsuit to block the deal. They say the promised benefits, such as better networks in rural areas and faster service overall, cannot be verified. They also worry that eliminatin­g a major wireless company will immediatel­y harm consumers by reducing competitio­n and driving up prices for cell service.

None of the states involved in the suit were part of Friday’s settlement. “We have serious concerns that cobbling together this new fourth mobile player, with the government picking winners and losers, will not address the merger’s harm to consumers, workers, and innovation,” New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement.

Dish is largely a company with a declining satellite-TV business. It has no wireless business, but over the past decade it has spent more than $21 billion accumulati­ng a large stock of spectrum for wireless service. The wireless industry has long been skeptical of Dish’s ambitions to actually build a wireless service, instead speculatin­g that the company wanted to make money by selling its holdings.

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