T-Mobile, Sprint say $26 billion deal would give U.S.
tech lead over China
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[April 30, 2018]
By Greg Roumeliotis, Sheila Dang and Liana B. Baker
(Reuters) - T-Mobile US Inc <TMUS.O> and
Sprint Corp <S.N> said on Sunday they had agreed to a $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 U.S. 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 <VZ.N> and AT&T Inc <T.N>.
U.S. regulators, who have challenged in court AT&T's $85 billion deal to
buy U.S. media company Time Warner Inc <TWX.N>, are expected to grill
Sprint and T-Mobile on how they will price their combined wireless
offerings.
Verizon has 116 million U.S. 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-U.S. President Barack Obama expressed antitrust
concerns.
The new deal will create the highest-capacity U.S. network, lower
prices, create jobs and improve service in rural areas, said John Legere,
the chief executive of T-Mobile and the new head of the proposed
combined company.
The combined company, which will be called T-Mobile, will invest $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 U.S. 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 U.S.
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 U.S. 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 U.S. wireless
communications industry, ranks the United States behind China and South
Korea in 5G readiness. The Chinese government launched 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 <CMCSA.O>.
AT&T declined to comment. Comcast could not immediately be reached for
comment.
Verizon declined to comment on prices but said it remained committed to
building a 5G network.
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Smartphones with the logos of T-Mobile and Sprint are seen in this
illustration taken September 19, 2017. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
DEAL BREAKTHROUGH
The breakthrough in the companies' negotiations, first reported by Reuters on
Thursday, came after T-Mobile majority-owner Deutsche Telekom AG <DTEGn.DE> and
Japan's SoftBank Group Corp <9984.T>, which controls Sprint, agreed on a
structure that would allow Deutsche Telekom to continue to consolidate the
combined company, which will have a market value of over $80 billion, on its
books.
Deutsche Telekom will own 42 percent of the combined company, and will control
the board of the combined company, nominating nine of the 14 directors. Legere
will also serve as a director.
The implied equity valuation for Sprint is $6.62 per share based on T-Mobile's
closing share price on Friday. Sprint shares closed on Friday at $6.50.
The all-stock transaction is at a fixed exchange ratio of 0.10256 T-Mobile
shares for each Sprint share, or the equivalent of 9.75 Sprint shares for each
T-Mobile US share.
Tokyo-based SoftBank and Deutsche Telekom will sign a voting rights agreement
that will give Deutsche Telekom access to voting rights for a total of 69
percent of T-Mobile shares.
The second round of talks between Sprint and T-Mobile ended in November over
valuation disagreements.
Since then, Sprint's shares lost about a fifth of their value amid questions
about how the company can compete effectively under the weight of its long-term
debt of more than $32 billion.
T-Mobile's market capitalization is $54.7 billion, while Sprint is valued by the
deal at $26 billion.
INVESTING IN 5G TECHNOLOGY
Even though Sprint's customer base has expanded under CEO Marcelo Claure, growth
has been driven by discounting. Analysts say that without T-Mobile, Sprint lacks
the scale needed to invest in its network and to compete in a saturated market.
T-Mobile has fared better than Sprint, even if it remains a distant third to
Verizon and AT&T. It has managed to score sustained market-share gains, as
innovative offerings, improving network performance and good customer service
attract new customers, according to Moody’s Investors Service Inc.
T-Mobile became the first major U.S. carrier to eliminate two-year contracts, a
shift quickly embraced by consumers and copied by competitors. The company has
also badgered rivals with its unlimited data plans.
Both Sprint and T-Mobile are far behind Verizon and AT&T in upgrading their
network to accommodate next generation 5G wireless technology. Even after their
merger, the combined company's budget to invest in 5G will be smaller than that
of Verizon or AT&T.
Sprint and T-Mobile hope the deal will give them more firepower to participate
in auction for spectrum to develop 5G. They plan to participate in a spectrum
auction in late autumn and will request a waiver if the merger prevents the
companies from participating.
PJT Partners, Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and Evercore served as advisers for
T-Mobile. The Raine Group, J.P. Morgan and Centerview Partners LLC advised
Sprint.
(Reporting by Greg Roumeliotis, Sheila Dang and Liana B. Baker in New York;
Writing by Sheila Dang; Editing by Peter Henderson, Lisa Shumaker and Peter
Cooney)
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