T-Mobile's Value Shaky Without AT&T Sale
With AT&T's bid challenged by the U.S. Department of Justice, T-Mobile continues to lose value. As the fourth-largest wireless carrier, T-Mobile faces increased competition from AT&T, Verizon and Sprint Nextel, all of whom continue to add 4G capacity. As one commentator put it, since the AT&T $39 billion bid in March "T-Mobile has largely sat on its hands, watching its profit, sales and market share sink as it goes without any major handset or network upgrades."
T-Mobile's German parent, Deutsche Telekom, had concluded some time ago that its U.S. subsidiary was adding nothing to its portfolio ("a white elephant" said one telecom-watcher), and made the decision to cut its losses. With the AT&T sale threatened, Deutsche Telekom has few other promising options, as it watches T-Mobile continue to lose value.
Although a number of cable and Internet giants have been considered possible buyers of T-Mobile, none of them have a experience, capacity or cash that AT&T does. The other potential buyer, Sprint Nextel — aside from being an anti-worker employer — already runs three separate networks, and will possibly add a fourth. Adding T-Mobile would create a carrier of stunning complexity.
So, yes, it appears that without AT&T, T-Mobile is likely to continue life as a sad, white elephant, possibly to be broken up into components.
Without AT&T, T-Mobile is a wireless white elephant (CNN Money)
TCGplayer workers rally for livable wages and launch a report on poverty-level wages at the eBay subsidiary
Apple retail workers in Oklahoma City win first collective contract with CWA
Labor and public interest groups defend FCC's broadcast ownership rules promoting competition, diversity, and localism on air