AT&T / T-Mobile Merger Bites the Dust
December 19, 2011
For Immediate Release
Contact: Tracy Rosenberg (510) 684-6853
AT&T / T-Mobile Merger Bites the Dust
AT&T Formally Withdraws Attempt to Purchase
T-Mobile USA
Washington DC - Signaling the tail end of a regulatory process that
hasn't been going AT&T's way for some time, the telecom giant made formal
the abandonment of plans to acquire T-Mobile USA from Deutsche Telecom. The
announcement comes on the heels of a CA Public Utilities Commission
investigation in July and August of 2011, a Department of Justice announcement
of opposition to the merger on anti-competitive grounds and the Federal
Communications Commision's refusal to approve the merger without an
investigation.
AT&T, per the terms of
its agreement with T-Mobile, will pay out approximately 6 billion dollars in
cash and spectrum assets due to the deal's failure to proceed, greatly
strengthening the financial stability of T-Mobile.
Media Alliance executive
director Tracy Rosenberg said "the American public should be celebrating.
It's pretty rare when a major corporate merger is stopped because the results
would be higher costs and less choices for consumers. This is one of those rare
times."
Regulators, in addition to
expressing skepticism about the likely benefits for cell phone users in a 70%
plus chokehold by Verizon and the AT&T/TMob combo, also expressed concern
about the impact on T-Mobile's existing lower-income customer base, broadband
buildouts in rural and other hard-to-serve areas, and whether innovation in the
cell phone industry would have been negatively impacted by the huge increase in
market concentration. A number of public interest groups also pointed to
probable job losses as a result of the proposed merger.
Rosenberg added
"Regulators regulated. There is no better Christmas present. Hopefully,
this is only one of many public interest victories to come".
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