T-Mobile, Sprint to form 'new company': CEO

US wireless operators Sprint and T-Mobile will form a new company and push development of a super-fast 5G network, the heads of both firms said Sunday.

T-Mobile and Sprint stores, Tuesday, April 27, 2010, in New York.

Source: AAP

The announcement came months after the two companies called off merger talks when they failed to clinch mutually agreeable terms.

"I'm excited to announce that @TMobile & @Sprint have reached an agreement to come together to form a new company - a larger, stronger competitor that will be a force for positive change for all US consumers and businesses!" T-Mobile CEO John Legere announced as part of a series of tweets about the combined firm.
T-Mobile, a division of Germany's Deutsche Telekom, and Sprint - a subsidiary of Japan's SoftBank - are at present the third and fourth largest US wireless operators, respectively. 

Together they have about 131 million subscribers, virtually matching second-ranked AT&T and posing stiff competition to market leader Verizon Communications.

Sprint chief executive Marcelo Claure also used Twitter to announce "some incredibly exciting news - @Sprint and @TMobile are joining forces."

He said that they will "combine to create the most disruptive U.S. carrier!"

T-Mobile's Legere said on Twitter that "the New @TMobile will be the ONLY company able to bring a broad & deep nationwide 5G network - something no US wireless company could achieve alone in the critical early years of 5G." 

Legere said that in its first three years, the new firm will be able to invest around $40 billion, "nearly 50 percent more than both of us invested in the last three years."

'30X more capacity'

"Together, we will build the highest-capacity mobile network in US history!! I'm talking 30X more capacity than T-Mobile today!!"

T-Mobile is one of the biggest earners for its German parent.

In 2017, it added 5.7 million net new customers compared with 8.2 million the previous year, but the hoped-for merger with Sprint fell through in November.

The two firms had also held talks in 2014 on a merger but ended discussions in the face of opposition from US regulators.

5G or fifth-generation wireless communication networks would enable services such as smart cities, remote surgery and driverless cars, and would allow customers to experience video and virtual reality with greater ease.

The first commercial 5G roll-outs begin this year and next in the United States, Korea and Japan, but industry players have cautioned development of 5G still has a long way to go.

In February China's Huawei unveiled what it said is the world's first commercial chipset to meet the standards of 5G wireless networks. 

An unusual move by US President Donald Trump earlier this year to block a proposed takeover of Qualcomm by a chip rival then based in Singapore highlighted growing concerns about the rise of Chinese competitors.
Trump's order made no mention of China, but an earlier letter from the US Treasury Department warned that a Broadcom takeover might hurt US leadership in 5G.

5G will account for 14 percent of global wireless connections by 2025, according to GSMA, the global mobile operators association.

Deutsche Telekom CEO Timotheus Hoettges has estimated the cost of providing 5G networks in Europe alone will be €300-500 billion ($363-606 billion).

The telecoms industry will invest $275 billion in the United States to develop 5G networks there, Claure said at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February.


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3 min read
Published 30 April 2018 4:28am
Updated 30 April 2018 4:30am
Source: AFP, SBS


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