AT&T to buy T-Mobile USA for 39 Billion

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NEW YORK (AFP) – AT&T said Sunday it had agreed to buy T-Mobile USA from Germany's Deutsche Telekom in a $39-billion blockbuster deal enabling it to overtake Verizon as the biggest US wireless provider.

The cash-and-stock deal, which needs regulatory approval, will give AT&T 34 million new customers and lift its annual wireless revenues to around $80 billion from $58.5 billion in 2010.

It will add to AT&T earnings in the third year after the deal closes, the company said, and help it compete with market leader Verizon.


"This transaction represents a major commitment to strengthen and expand critical infrastructure for our nation's future," said Randall Stephenson, AT&T chairman and chief executive.

"It will improve network quality, and it will bring advanced... capabilities to more than 294 million people.

"Mobile broadband networks drive economic opportunity everywhere, and they enable the expanding high-tech ecosystem that includes device makers, cloud and content providers, app developers, customers, and more."

According to data from comScore, AT&T held a 26.6% market share of US mobile subscribers in December 2010, while T-Mobile accounted for 12.2% of the market.
Verizon, meanwhile, accounted for 31.3%.

The deal will give AT&T a big boost in its rivalry with Verizon, which recently started selling the Apple iPhone with an end to the AT&T monopoly.
Analysts said the deal also helps AT&T in the so-called 4G sector offering more advanced wireless services.

"AT&T has been under attack for not being able to match the network capacity of larger rival Verizon," said MG Siegler of the technology blog TechCrunch.
"And when they won the majority of the bids for the open spectrum in 2008, Verizon also had a clear path to the future. Now AT&T is taking another path: buying T-Mobile."

Deutsche Telekom's flamboyant former boss Ron Sommer bought Voicestream more than a decade ago at the height of the dotcom boom, re-branding it T-Mobile, but leaving the German firm struggling under a mountain of debt.

For years it was Deutsche Telekom's main growth-driver but in recent years a string of poor results gave rise to speculation that it wanted to put an end to its US adventure.
"This is a very very valuable deal for Deutsche Telekom. This is a good day," chief executive Rene Obermann said. "The proceeds will give us the financial firepower to finance our expansion plans in Europe."

Deutsche Telekom will get $25 billion in cash and $14 billion worth of shares, making the German firm AT&T's biggest minority shareholder with an eight-percent stake and a seat on the board, based on the current share price.

AT&T has the right to increase the portion of the purchase price paid in cash by up to $4.2 billion with a corresponding reduction in the stock component, Deutsche Telekom said.
The cash portion of the purchase price will be financed with new debt and cash on AT&T's balance sheet. AT&T has an 18-month commitment of $20 billion underwritten by JP Morgan.


Forrester Research analyst Charles Golvin said that the deal will mean that high-speed mobile broadband will improve in quality and coverage, including, in the long run, in rural communities.

"The bad news: the cost of that service won't come down nearly as fast as customers would like, since AT&T and Verizon Wireless combined would own nearly three out of every four wireless subscriptions in the US," he said. "While clearly troublesome for Sprint and other smaller mobile competitors, it's also bad news for cable operators, whose incipient mobility products will suffer in comparison to what AT&T and Verizon can offer."
 
I hate ATT their service sucks.

It all depends on the area you are, personally I have had them for years, and service has been great! I ha been driving from NY to VA streaming the baseball game without it dropping the connection once for an entire game... My 3G connection is very fast too...

But funny how verizon fan boys got all exited about getting the iPhone... and now this...
 
Well, that's one way to build up ATT's network infrastructure....

I have no complaints with AT&T's service really, though we did just recently run into problems in one area of the state. We don't get over that way often though so it's not a huge bother.
 
ive had then all . and verizon and sprint are the only ones that work great. i have verizon now and there not cheap but the best
 
Sprint all day baby all thought I got ATT internet at home.

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All this means is your bills are going to go up . I love my Sprint . I used to sella program mobile phones long before the avereage person even could afford one. AT&T and Verizon are evil all they want to do is nickle and dime you for every feature and function. So keep an eye on your bills. Keep us posted !!!!!!
 
This is a horrible deal! I worked for T-Mobile for a year and a half! ATT was always getting complaints and people were switching big time! This means that over 4000 people will loose their jobs at TMO because it is proven in the wireless industry that ATT outsources EVERYTHING as far as call centers...
 
AT&T BLOWS. So does T Mobile though, so maybe its a match made in Heaven
 
After eight years with Verizon I switched to T-Mobile about six months ago. If AT&T screws this up, which will take at least a year, then it's back to Verizon for me.

For the small time user like me that does not access the internet and only wants a phone T-Mobile has the best plan. We'll see how long that lasts with the new owner at the reins.
 
They buying, selling, merging of large companies means more jobs will be eliminated, the employment lines will be longer, and more corporate executives, aka gold-diggers, will exit with millions more in their pockets. :mad: :rant:
 
I had AT&T and now have T-Mobile< well I light T-Mobile better, so lets see how this plays out.

same here, but i had cingular (terrible service and reception is why i left them)before it became at&t and now have t-mobile. i've been off contract and paying month to month for a over a year and refuse to sign a new contract with t-mobile as they only offer them in a two year agreement. my next option will be verizon (hopefull their rates go down, but i don't see it happening anytime soon), their reception seems to be better and they have better phones as well...
 
same here, but i had cingular (terrible service and reception is why i left them)before it became at&t and now have t-mobile. i've been off contract and paying month to month for a over a year and refuse to sign a new contract with t-mobile as they only offer them in a two year agreement. my next option will be verizon (hopefull their rates go down, but i don't see it happening anytime soon), their reception seems to be better and they have better phones as well...
My first wireless company was Bellsouth mobility, then cingular bought them out, then they bought AT&T, then AT&T bought Cingular. LOL
 
NEW YORK (AP) -- AT&T Inc. has agreed to buy T-Mobile USA for $39 billion, but the deal isn't set to close until a year from now, and it will likely face tough regulatory scrutiny. Here's what a completed deal could mean for customers:

-- Bigger choice of phones for T-Mobile subscribers. T-Mobile, as a much smaller carrier than AT&T, doesn't get as many exclusives on top-line phones, and it doesn't have the iPhone. This won't be a big benefit to T-Mobile subscribers who don't have contracts -- if they want the iPhone today, they can sign up with AT&T or Verizon Wireless. But subscribers under contract would find it easier to upgrade to an iPhone.

-- Fewer pricing plans to choose from. T-Mobile and AT&T have different offerings, some of which might disappear from the market.

-- No more unlimited data plans. AT&T has stopped offering unlimited data plans in favor of plans with monthly data usage caps and overage fees. T-Mobile USA still offers "unlimited" data for smartphones for $30 per month, but slows down downloads after 5 gigabytes of traffic in a month. If the deal closes, current "unlimited" subscribers would likely be grandfathered in, but AT&T would probably stop offering the plan to new subscribers.

-- Better network coverage. Combining the two networks will improve performance is some areas, because there will be more towers available. However, today's AT&T phones can't use T-Mobile's 3G wireless data network, and vice versa, because they run on different frequencies.

-- Wider rural broadband coverage. AT&T is pledging to increase spending on the construction of a new ultrafast broadband network by $8 billion, to cover rural areas.

-- The big question is whether the combination would let AT&T, Verizon and Sprint raise prices on wireless service once competition from T-Mobile disappears. AT&T points out that prices have fallen through a decade of mergers in the industry, but public-interest groups are raising concerns.
 
Until a year from now? What the Hell? :) Here's my big concern I own T-Mobile around $500, is there's a possibility I may get lucky if I don't pay them and then there's no T-Mobile. What can happen?

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my friend at work said t-mobile owned sprint & nextel? is this true ? i don't think it is?
 
Until a year from now? What the Hell? :) Here's my big concern I own T-Mobile around $500, is there's a possibility I may get lucky if I don't pay them and then there's no T-Mobile. What can happen?

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Don't be a deadbeat.... pay your bill. :bash:

Besides, any receivables T-Mobile has would most likely be transferred to AT&T upon a merger, meaning you'd still owe the money to AT&T.
 
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