Judge approves T-Mobile/Sprint merger

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Judge approves $26 billion merger of T-Mobile and Sprint
Several state attorneys general had argued that combining the No. 3 and No. 4 carriers would limit competition and result in higher prices for consumers.
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Pedestrians walk past a Sprint store in Washington, D.C., in 2014.Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg via Getty Images file


Feb. 11, 2020, 8:34 AM EST / Source: CNBC.com
By Lauren Feiner, CNBC
Shares of Sprint soared Tuesday after a U.S. District judge ruled in favor of its deal to merge with T-Mobile.

The stock was up 64 percent in premarket trading. It had risen after hours Monday after The Wall Street Journal reported the judge was expected to rule in favor of the deal. Shares of T-Mobile were up more than 7 percent before markets opened.

The ruling clears one of the final hurdles for the deal, which still can’t close until the California Public Utilities Commission approves the transaction.

Attorneys general from New York, California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Oregon, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Washington, D.C., originally brought the lawsuit to block the deal following approval from the Justice Department of Federal Communications Commission.

The states had argued that combining the No. 3 and No. 4 U.S. carriers would limit competition and result in higher prices for consumers. The companies had argued their merger would help them compete against top players AT&T and Verizon and advance efforts to build a nationwide 5G network.



Sprint's stock soars more than 70% after judge approves T-Mobile merger
By Jordan Valinsky, CNN Business

Updated 9:40 AM ET, Tue February 11, 2020

New York (CNN Business)The $26 billion merger between T-Mobile and Sprint has been approved, ending a years-long attempt to combine the United States' third- and fourth-largest wireless carriers.

A federal judge ruled Tuesday in favor of the marriage allowing the two telecom giants to combine. US District Court Judge Victor Marrero said in his ruling that he didn't envision the companies "would pursue anticompetitive behavior" and rejected the lawsuit brought on by a dozen US states.

The judge said that Sprint on its own couldn't "continue operating as a strong nationwide competitor." Sprint is currently in fourth place, but the company claimed its path to deploying a nationwide 5G network without T-Mobile was uncertain.
https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/23/tech/sprint-history-tmobile-merger/index.html
States' attorneys general argued that approving the merger would make wireless service and prices worse for Americans. But Judge Marrero said he was ultimately unpersuaded by the states' economic theories and analytical modeling, writing that the two sides' claims ultimately came down to competing crystal balls. He said he was relying substantially on his own "skills and frontline experience" to reach a decision.

"How the future manifests itself and brings to pass what it holds is a multifaceted phenomenon that is not necessarily guided by theoretical forces or mathematical models," he wrote.

Sprint's stock shot up a stunning 70% at the open. T-Mobile shares also spiked 12% early trading Tuesday.
T-Mobile CEO John Legere called the ruling a "huge victory" and said in a statement that the new company, which will retain the T-Mobile name, is "great for consumers and great for competition."

The companies touted the merger's benefits, claiming lower prices, expanded 5G and new jobs. They said the combination will ultimately employ 11,000 more full-time people than the standalone companies would have over the next four years. They said an additional 12,000 jobs will be created to staff 600 new stores and five new "customer experience centers."

The merger could be finalized in early April. A new website has been started to promote the combined companies at NewTMobile.com.

To alleviate antitrust concerns, Sprint and T-Mobile have proposed a deal with Dish Network (DISH), which would buy some wireless assets from the companies to create a new nationwide carrier. The companies hoped that would remedy the merger's effects on the market. They also promised that prices wouldn't rise and accelerate the rollout of new, ultra-fast 5G mobile network.

Two key attorneys general weren't pleased with the ruling.

Letitia James, the AG from New York, said in statement the reduced competition is "bad for consumers, bad for workers, and bad for innovation." She added the state will will examine a possible appeal.

California's AG Xavier Becerra said he is "prepared to fight as long as necessary to protect innovation and competitive costs."

The combination forms a third national wireless behemoth about the size of Verizon (VZ) and AT&T (T). (AT&T owns CNN's parent company, WarnerMedia.)

The merger saga between T-Mobile and Sprint has been ongoing since April 2018 when the current deal was proposed. Federal regulators, including the US Department of Justice and the Federal Communications Commission, already approved the merger last year. The states were the final hurdle, and Sprint (S) and T-Mobile (TMUS) battled for the merger's approval in a Manhattan federal court in December.

FCC chairman Ajit Pai said he was "pleased" with the decision. citing the companies' promise to expand 5G.

"This transaction represents a unique opportunity to speed up the deployment of 5G throughout the United States, put critical mid-band spectrum to more productive use, and bring much faster mobile broadband to rural American," Pai said in a statement. "This is a big win for American consumers."
 
It is what it is.....we will see what happens in the next five years. Telecom industry is changing very rapidly now I wish I was near retirement age but I am not
 
It only needs to happen if you are going to make money from it. For the rest of us it will mean higher prices and lower service levels. Verizon and ATT are too large as well. Our major corporations abhor competition. They will do anything to maintain growth, except do it organically by attracting new customers and retaining them by providing a good value proposition for their products and services. Same old isht, merge and cut, merge and cut, merge and cut, etc.... Its all about financial leverage and that's all. The CEO's dream is to be too large to fail and ask uncle sam to save them after they siphoned all the money out the back door.

This needed to happen.
Sprint nor T-Mobile can compete with Verizon or ATT alone.
This merger also makes sense from a technological standpoint.

TMO needs Sprints spectrum for the rest of their 5G network while S needs new leadership and cash.
 
I miss T Mobile. I've had AT&T, Sprint and now I have Verizon. T-Mobile is solid in my state. Sprint is ASSSSSS!!!! Verizon is expensive and they try to offer shit like Apple Music and a free year of Disney+(both of which I take advantage of) BUT it's still expensive comparatively and the coverage isn't as head and shoulders above the comp like it used to be when I first had it as a youngster. Can't brag about that coverage anymore.
 
It depends on where you live, but CDMA on Sprint has failed me much less than my fam on Tmobile.

Technologically, it actually does not make short term sense for this merger. Long term, let's see
which tech moves forward with the 5G. When Sprint bought Nextel, the Push to Talk folks swear
they lost out until that LTE came around and offered way way better service.
 
I've had T-MO and Sprint. T-Mobile wasn't

bad except for coverage. It was excellent

in the city areas but sucked major away

from the city. Sprint just sucked ass all

together! Their service and especially their

customer service! Ive been backwith

Verizon for a few years now and I have a

multi line plan that kicks ass and costs each

line 54 dollars and that includes unlimited

everything and 15 GB of hotspot, full

insurance for each phone and taxes

already included. I got in on that plan when

they rolled it out and a few months later they

stopped offering it. When I go tho the

Verizon store to add someone to my

account, they always say that they're going

to beat my plan and when they look at my

account, their eyes get big and they look at

me and say "Never quit this plan you have!"

They say they no longer offer it and I'm

grandfathered in! They look at me with

hate because they know I lucked up and

grabbed a super deal when they offered it

because the quickly realized they charged

way too little lol!
 
Had AT&Fee for years but dropped calls delayed sms and ever increasing fees dropped them moved to Sprint.

Sprint 03-18 had best call quality but shitty Data. Moved to Vzw

Verizon 18-20 was great. Just high as eagle pussy.

This year moved to Google Fi (TMOBILE) shitty call quality but great data and great price.

AT&Fee and Verizon never lower prices so when they say compete not sure what they mean. AT&Fee has horrible customer service.
 
It only needs to happen if you are going to make money from it. For the rest of us it will mean higher prices and lower service levels. Verizon and ATT are too large as well. Our major corporations abhor competition. They will do anything to maintain growth, except do it organically by attracting new customers and retaining them by providing a good value proposition for their products and services. Same old isht, merge and cut, merge and cut, merge and cut, etc.... Its all about financial leverage and that's all. The CEO's dream is to be too large to fail and ask uncle sam to save them after they siphoned all the money out the back door.
Without this merger Sprint wasn't going to make it so there would be 3 true wireless carriers either way.

It depends on where you live, but CDMA on Sprint has failed me much less than my fam on Tmobile.

Technologically, it actually does not make short term sense for this merger. Long term, let's see
which tech moves forward with the 5G. When Sprint bought Nextel, the Push to Talk folks swear
they lost out until that LTE came around and offered way way better service.
With LTE devices these networks are basically the same.

The CDMA/GSM issue was more of a 3G issue, not with LTE which is why you can take almost any device made within the past four years and pop a simcard into it from another carrier as long as it is unlocked.

Sprint has also been gearing their network upgrades towards singularity for the merger.
 
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