Los Angeles Times

Obscure AT&T fee rises

A boost in wireless administra­tive charge will raise an estimated $970 million a year.

- By Brian Fung Fung writes for the Washington Post.

AT&T Inc.’s wireless customers are expected to pay almost $1 billion more every year to the company after AT&T increased a monthly “administra­tive fee” this spring in a move that went largely unnoticed, according to an industry analyst.

The analyst, Walt Piecyk of BTIG, initially estimated that AT&T could pocket about $800 million more a year from the higher fee before revising that figure upward to $970 million once he learned that the fee increase also will affect tablets and smartwatch­es on AT&T’s network, not just cellphones.

“Some people might not get hit till next cycle,” Piecyk said.

The higher fee reflects a 58% increase over its previous level of $1.26 a line. The fee is now more than three times what it was when AT&T introduced it in 2013. It does not apply to prepaid customers but affects the vast majority of AT&T’s approximat­ely 65 million postpaid subscriber­s, Piecyk said.

“Presumably the administra­tive fee is another way to help AT&T fund its network build and Time Warner acquisitio­n,” Piecyk wrote in his note airing the discovery.

AT&T declined to say whether the fee would be allocated toward defraying its merger costs. The company said in a statement that the fee is a standard practice across the industry, and that it “helps cover costs we incur for items like cell site maintenanc­e and interconne­ction between carriers.”

A page on AT&T’s website also says that the fee is “not limited” to covering cell site maintenanc­e and interconne­ction.

Like the country’s other wireless carriers, AT&T is moving aggressive­ly to build out a nationwide successor to its 4G LTE data network, an endeavor that is likely to cost billions of dollars. It is also spending $40 billion — and could receive more than $30 billion from the federal government — to construct a new wireless network for first responders.

AT&T is changing rapidly in other ways too. This month, it closed its landmark $85-billion merger with Time Warner, becoming an entertainm­ent and media giant overnight. It is moving quickly to capitalize on the acquisitio­n, renaming Time Warner as WarnerMedi­a and launching a new streaming video service, WatchTV, that contains some of the programmin­g it now owns. It also acquired AppNexus, a digital advertisin­g firm that could help AT&T monetize WarnerMedi­a’s video content.

It is unclear whether price increases could be coming to other AT&T services. Arguing for the deal against the Justice Department in court this year, AT&T attorneys said that prices for AT&T’s pay-TV service, DirecTV, were likely to go down. But critics of the deal said that it was likely to indirectly increase prices for TV viewers nationwide.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? AT&T has raised a monthly “administra­tive fee” for wireless customers with cellphones, tablets and smartwatch­es. The fee covers the cost of items such as cell site maintenanc­e and interconne­ction between carriers.
Richard Drew Associated Press AT&T has raised a monthly “administra­tive fee” for wireless customers with cellphones, tablets and smartwatch­es. The fee covers the cost of items such as cell site maintenanc­e and interconne­ction between carriers.

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