By Scott Moritz - Dec 21, 2011 4:09 AM GMT+0700
The collapse of AT&T Inc. (T)’s $39 billion bid for T-Mobile USA leaves the second-largest U.S. mobile carrier with few attractive strategic options as it seeks to challenge market leader Verizon Wireless.
To accommodate data-usage growth, AT&T argued it needed the airwaves the T-Mobile USA purchase would have brought. With that option now unavailable, AT&T can either seek to buy spectrum from another company, wait for the government to auction more frequencies or try to squeeze more capacity out of its current airwaves. Each option is time-consuming, expensive and risky, said Colby Synesael, a Cowen & Co. analyst in New York.
“Without this deal, it is going to be difficult for AT&T,” Synesael said. “There’s no clear solution.”
Already criticized for dropped calls and network coverage, AT&T will face more constrained capacity than Verizon Wireless, Synesael said. That may hurt customer growth at a time when carriers are seeking to sign up lucrative smartphone and tablet subscribers who will generate revenue for years to come. Earlier this year, AT&T lost U.S. exclusivity to the Apple Inc. iPhone.
While AT&T focused on winning regulatory approval for the takeover, rivals negotiated their own airwave deals. That means several spectrum assets that would have still been available for AT&T to purchase earlier this year are now off the market.
AT&T abandoned the T-Mobile deal yesterday after a nine- month campaign that underestimated opposition from regulators. The Justice Department sued to block the deal in August, saying it would reduce competition. The purchase of T-Mobile from parent Deutsche Telekom AG (DTE) would have vaulted Dallas-based AT&T past Verizon Wireless as the biggest U.S. mobile carrier.
Wireless Airwaves
Spectrum is a term used for airwaves, licensed by the government, that carry wireless voice and data signals. Governments often sell unused or repurposed frequencies to the highest bidder, and companies also trade them.
Still, AT&T can’t rely on the U.S. government auctioning new wireless spectrum soon. While lawmakers are working on legislation that would allow carriers to bid on airwaves currently held by television broadcasters, no timing for such a sale has been set.
That leaves AT&T seeking spectrum holders willing to sell. However, any such attempts became more difficult in the past few weeks because purchases by rivals reduced the amount available.
Rivals’ Moves
On Dec. 1, wholesale wireless-service provider and spectrum-owner Clearwire Corp. (CLWR) secured its ties with partner Sprint Nextel Corp. (S) through a financing and network-sharing agreement. Sprint, the No. 3 carrier, reserved rights to bid Clearwire’s spectrum if other offers were made.
That move was followed by Verizon Wireless’s $3.6 billion deal to acquire airwaves held mostly by Comcast Corp. (CMCSA) and Time Warner Cable Inc. (TWC), something Synesael called “a real coup.” Verizon Wireless, co-owned by Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) and Vodafone Group Plc, and the cable companies will also market and sell each other’s services under the agreement.
The deal, combined with one struck with Cox Communications Inc., means Verizon Wireless will have “the highest-quality and deepest 4G spectrum position among the major U.S. carriers,” John Hodulik, a UBS AG analyst, said in a research note. It will have 56 percent more 4G spectrum than AT&T in the top 10 markets and 46 percent more in the top 100, giving it a “meaningful competitive advantage,” Hodulik said. AT&T has 100.7 million subscribers, trailing Verizon Wireless’s 107.7 million.
AT&T may now seek to buy Dish Network Corp. (DISH), a satellite-TV provider that owns spectrum, Stifel Nicolaus & Co. said today. Dish said this month it isn’t interested in selling its airwaves and that it may partner with T-Mobile if AT&T’s bid fails.
Spending Through It
AT&T, down 32 percent since a 2007 high, added 1.3 percent to $29.12 at the close in New York. It has lost almost 1 percent this year, while Verizon Communications has risen 9.6 percent.
Among AT&T’s other “very limited options” is an attempt to squeeze more performance out of its network, said Jennifer Fritzsche, an analyst at Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC) in Chicago. That investment would require building more cell-phone towers and adding more network equipment on the existing airwaves. That increases the number of antennas so more people are served through the same spectrum.
“With the lack of more spectrum, they can split cell sites and spend their way through it,” Fritzsche said.
That would require AT&T to boost spending at a time when it also has to compensate Deutsche Telekom for the deal’s demise. Deutsche Telekom has said it values the breakup package at as much as $7 billion, including lower charges for its customers to terminate calls on AT&T’s network. AT&T said yesterday it took a $4 billion pretax charge for the deal’s failure.
The solution of adding network gear would also be a shorter-term solution and not solve the longer-term spectrum crunch, Fritzsche said.
Risk to Investors
Citing the potential for increased spending, Fitch Ratings issued a report last week pointing to the possible risks to investors.
“AT&T’s need to enhance its capacity could lead to a rise in capital spending and/or the acquisition of spectrum through other transactions,” the credit-rating company said.
AT&T had more than $70 billion of debt at the end of the third quarter and capital expenditures rose to $14.7 billion in the first nine months of the year, from $13.7 billion in the same period a year earlier.
While the T-Mobile acquisition would have also represented a large investment, the deal would have included benefits such as additional customers and revenue, a network and possible cost savings from combined operations and job cuts.
Kevin Smithen, a Macquarie Capital USA Inc. analyst who downgraded AT&T to “sell” from “hold” last week on concern that the company has lost ground, said Verizon Wireless now has a spectrum advantage as customers move to faster networks.
“AT&T is running out of options,” Smithen said in a note.
To contact the reporter on this story: Scott Moritz in New York at smoritz6@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Elstrom at pelstrom@bloomberg.net
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