12.27.12
Posted in DISH, Financials, LightSquared, Operators, Regulatory, Spectrum, Sprint at 3:20 am by timfarrar
Now that DISH’s attempts to bid for MetroPCS and do a deal with Clearwire appear to have been stymied by T-Mobile and Sprint respectively, the obvious question is what is Charlie Ergen’s Plan C? After all, last week DISH raised another $1.5B in a debt offering, “to be used for general corporate purposes, which may include spectrum-related strategic transactions”.
I’ve wondered if DISH has many options left other than to sell to AT&T, but it now appears that Ergen may have other plans, which are likely to be revealed within the next three weeks. After all, DISH asked the FCC to extend the comment period on the Sprint-Softbank deal until January 21, and DISH has 30 days from the publication of the AWS-4 Order on December 17 to decide whether to protest the proposed license modification.
While it is possible that Ergen could use the $1.5B that DISH has raised to mount a counterbid to either Sprint’s takeover of Clearwire, or T-Mobile’s takeover of MetroPCS, others think he is contemplating use of the money for a potential H-block bid, in order to persuade Sprint to enter into a more attractive hosting agreement. However, there is a far more intriguing possibility, which could explain why Sound Point started buying up more LightSquared debt at precisely the time when Clearwire decided to go with Sprint instead of DISH’s offer. That is an attempt to buy up all of LightSquared’s first lien debt, followed by a battle to oust Falcone when LightSquared current exclusivity (to propose a plan for emergence from bankruptcy) expires at the end of January.
Then DISH could propose in mid January that the AWS-4 uplink spectrum is instead converted to downlink spectrum (in line with a suggestion made by the FCC back in March), and LightSquared’s uplink spectrum would be used to provide an alternative uplink.
That would be logical, because it will be years before LightSquared is able to use its L-band downlinks, and the 1675-80MHz band is unlikely to be given away to LightSquared for nothing (as opposed to being auctioned). It would also make the full 20MHz of AWS-4 uplink spectrum usable for downlinks, and make an H-block counterbid by DISH far more plausible, because the H-block downlink (1995-2000MHz) could be combined with the AWS-4 spectrum between 2000-2020MHz, putting Sprint under further pressure. The FCC might also like to see the risk of litigation with LightSquared being taken off the table, as well as the prospect of higher bids for the H-block, even if the end result was a further delay in deployment of the AWS-4 spectrum.
Why would Ergen choose this risky path, with its inherent delays in buildout, rather than a simple sale of spectrum to AT&T at this point in time? Presumably AT&T has not yet made a knockout bid to buy the AWS-4 spectrum, while if DISH gained additional downlink spectrum adjacent to the G and H blocks, it would be far better positioned to strike a deal with Softbank to provide auxiliary downlinks for Sprint’s LTE network if AT&T doesn’t come to the table.
In addition, because Sprint is tied up with Softbank (and Clearwire) and T-Mobile with MetroPCS, there are few good partnership options available that would enable DISH to pursue a network buildout at the moment. The FCC has given Ergen 4 years for the initial AWS-4 deployment and even if that deadline is missed, the full buildout (to 70% of the population) can be undertaken in 6 years.
As a result, DISH has little to lose by taking some time to explore alternatives, seek to build up even more valuable spectrum assets, and hope that an attractive deal emerges for either a sale or network buildout in a year’s time. If DISH does go down this path, then LightSquared’s bankruptcy case, which has largely fallen off the radar screen in recent months, could be about to get very interesting.
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12.15.12
Posted in Clearwire, DISH, Financials, Operators, Spectrum, Sprint at 5:04 pm by timfarrar

My sources appear convinced that DISH made an informal offer to Clearwire management sometime ago, and that Sprint has been playing catch-up in its recent actions, after assuming for several years that it faced little pressure to buy Clearwire, because no-one else wanted that spectrum. It seems that Sprint reached out to Softbank in the summer, after realizing that it was facing a challenge from DISH, seeking funds to boost its position in the market (and to help acquire spectrum). At that point Sprint also moved to vigorously oppose DISH’s AWS-4 proposal, trying to delay DISH, while it sought an agreement with Softbank.
However, opinions appear to differ about whether Sprint actually wants to buy Clearwire, or is simply trying to spoil DISH’s plans. My guess is that Sprint’s preferred outcome would be for DISH to sell its AWS-4 spectrum to AT&T, allowing Sprint to pick up PCS spectrum that AT&T would have to sell, and Sprint would only later pick up some of Clearwire’s spectrum at an even lower price than is currently being offered. If DISH does achieve a deal with Clearwire then Sprint’s plans would be spoiled on two fronts: it wouldn’t be able to pick up more PCS spectrum (except the H block) in the near term, and Clearwire might not run out of money and fall into Sprint’s arms in the next few years as Sprint apparently hopes. As a result, Clearwire is now playing a central role in an intricate game of three dimensional chess between Ergen and Hesse.
Although we know what Sprint’s current offer to Clearwire consists of (namely up to $2.97 in cash for the remaining equity, assumption of Clearwire’s debt, plus a bridge loan of $800M to accelerate Clearwire’s LTE buildout), it is harder to determine what an offer from Ergen might entail. Nevertheless, considering the objectives of both DISH and Clearwire (in the absence of a compelling take-out bid for the spectrum of either company) may help to narrow down what Ergen’s alternative offer could be.
From Clearwire’s point of view, the near term objectives are to extend the cash runway, find a way to cut down on the costs of the WiMAX network (decommissioning at least half of the existing sites that will never be built out for LTE) and build out the LTE hotspot network at the lowest possible cost. The hope is that by doing all of these things, Clearwire will be able to hold onto (the vast majority of) its spectrum assets, which will become more valuable over the next 3-5 years as an international 2.6GHz band LTE ecosystem emerges.
From DISH’s point of view, the near term objectives are to deploy an AWS-4 network at minimum cost to meet the FCC’s buildout criteria, get into the wireless business sooner rather than later, come up with a residential broadband solution for its satellite TV customers, and perhaps above all persuade AT&T that DISH is serious about moving forward with a buildout (so AT&T will have to purchase DISH or at least pay up for the AWS-4 and 700MHz E block spectrum).
Clearwire and DISH therefore have a clear alignment of interests with regard to Clearwire’s existing WiMAX network: a sale of these assets to DISH would reduce Clearwire’s expenses, raise a significant amount of cash (that wouldn’t have to be used to pay down the first lien debt), provide a network sharing agreement for the LTE buildout, get DISH into the wireless business more quickly and at lower cost, and provide a fixed broadband solution for satellite TV customers (via Clearwire’s original fixed wireless service, perhaps integrated with a satellite TV antenna to extend the range compared to an indoor modem).
My guess is that DISH would likely pay around $1.5B for Clearwire’s WiMAX network (which cost roughly $4B to build), which might therefore fall below the 20% of asset value cutoff point at which a sale would require approval by Clearwire’s board. DISH would likely also acquire Clearwire’s retail WiMAX customer base and presumably also provide service to the wholesale WiMAX customer base (adding another point of leverage over Sprint) – perhaps DISH would pay up to an additional $500M for these customers.
What is more uncertain is what would happen about the spectrum required for DISH to run the network. Clearwire has a strong interest in establishing a high valuation benchmark for its spectrum, likely $0.30 per MHzPOP or above, and DISH would also want to ensure that perceived spectrum prices are high, if it still hopes for a knockout bid from AT&T. DISH likely needs 20-30MHz of spectrum, covering perhaps 200M people, implying that DISH might have to spend at least $1.8B to $2.7B if it was to buy this amount of spectrum from Clearwire. On the other hand, DISH might opt for primarily leased spectrum, reducing the price somewhat, or simply agree say a 5 year lease with Clearwire, perhaps with a fairly significant prepayment.
Overall, I could envisage DISH paying Clearwire anything from $2.5B in the near term (based on a spectrum lease), up to perhaps $4B+ (assuming a reasonably significant spectrum purchase). Part of this payment would presumably be made by contributing the substantial amount of Clearwire debt already owned by DISH (which cost $750M), and going forward Clearwire would then presumably have a network sharing deal with DISH, so that Clearwire could rollout its LTE hotspots in urban areas and DISH could roll out wide area coverage in the AWS-4 band.
I assume the remaining Clearwire debt would be refinanced, allowing the equity holders to pursue their bet that Clearwire’s spectrum will increase in value. Of course that may not be an expectation that Intel, Comcast and Bright House necessarily share, so Sprint obviously hopes it can persuade these strategic investors to block a deal with DISH. If not, then the question remains, will the DISH deal go through, or will it be derailed by a knockout bid from another party: either Sprint paying the $5+ that shareholders are demanding for Clearwire or AT&T buying DISH for $80 per share?
[UPDATE 12/17] So Sprint has convinced the Clearwire board to accept its offer of $2.97, and it looks like Hesse may have come out on top in this round of the chess game. The determining factor appears to have been the lack of confidence from Clearwire’s management and board that there would ever be a second major wholesale customer for its TD-LTE rollout, as Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile weren’t interested in buying capacity from Clearwire. In the presentation discussing the deal, Clearwire confirmed that there had been another “credible, but preliminary, proposal” in the “past several weeks” presumably from DISH, but all potential options for spectrum sales had “values well below those recently speculated”. Clearwire also noted that the “existing governance arrangements” left the company “unable to secure new partnerships”. Of course, the deal locks up Clearwire pretty well, because the $80M per month of financing that is being advanced by Sprint is convertible to equity at only $1.50 per share, and Sprint is not obligated to go through with the purchase of Intel, Comcast and Bright House’s stakes if the acquisition is rejected in the independent shareholder vote (but might then come back with a lower bid).
So now Ergen appears to have struck out twice in his attempts to enter the wireless market, being rejected by both MetroPCS and Clearwire. Will he follow the FCC’s signal and sell his spectrum to AT&T? If so, the price may not be as attractive as many hope: if there are few other options then my earlier estimate of $0.30 to $0.40 per MHzPOP sounds closer to the mark than the inflated $1 per MHzPOP speculation we saw last week. Those expecting a higher bid for Clearwire were banking on a spectrum crisis forcing other operators to make use of Clearwire’s capacity in the next few years, which Clearwire management clearly didn’t believe would happen. Now the question appears to be whether Ergen still believe his spectrum will become more valuable over time, or if instead he will just take the money as Clearwire did.
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12.13.12
Posted in DISH, Financials, Operators, Regulatory, Spectrum at 1:31 pm by timfarrar

Today Sprint made an SEC filing stating that it had offered to buy the remaining shares in Clearwire for $2.90 per share, far below the $5+ that some think Sprint will have to pay to buy out the hedge funds that have invested in Clearwire with an expectation that the company’s spectrum is hugely valuable. Of course, as many have noted, Clearwire’s spectrum is seen as very desirable by Softbank, and could enable Sprint to rollout a much higher capacity urban LTE network, given the huge amounts of spectrum that Clearwire holds.
However, the underlying story here is far more complicated: why has Sprint made such a low offer, and why now? After all, even if the remaining strategic investors (Comcast, Intel and Bright House) are willing to take the $2.90 and run, they wouldn’t be able to command the majority of non-Sprint-affiliated holders of Clearwire’s equity needed to approve the deal. It appears that one (possibly the key) motivation is that if the strategic investors do accept Sprint’s offer then this would potentially block any alternative deals by Clearwire for several months (until the Softbank deal closes), as according to Sprint’s filing:
“Under the terms of the Sprint Proposal, each of Comcast, the BHN Entities and the Intel Entities would enter into a voting and support agreement with Clearwire with respect to the Proposed Transaction, which will provide that such Equityholders will vote (i) all voting shares of Clearwire owned by such Equityholders in favor of adopting the definitive merger agreement and approving the transactions contemplated thereby and (ii) against other acquisition proposals. These voting obligations would apply whether or not the Proposed Transaction is recommended by the Board of Directors of Clearwire. The voting and support agreement would also provide that such Equityholders would provide any waivers and consents needed to effectuate the Proposed Transaction.”
It’s surely not a coincidence that this offer came on the same day that Charlie Ergen received approval from the FCC for terrestrial use of his AWS-4 spectrum, with DISH stating that it “will consider its strategic options and the optimal approach to put this spectrum to use for the benefit of consumers”. After all DISH appears to have had a potential deal with Clearwire on the table for several months, held up only by delays in the FCC’s approval (which were largely caused by Sprint’s intervention via efforts to gain access to the H-block), and has bought $750M of Clearwire’s debt. The existence of other offers also seems to be confirmed, at least obliquely, by Clearwire’s indication that the Special Committee of the Clearwire Board of Directors, was “previously formed to review potential indications or proposals, including from Sprint”. However, DISH’s offer to buy some of Clearwire’s network and spectrum assets may not provide much if any near term value for the equity investors, perhaps making the strategic investors think that Sprint’s “bird in the hand” will be a better bet.
So what is Ergen up to? Rumors have persisted that Carlos Slim is allied with Ergen and that he has also been looking closely at Clearwire in recent weeks, while I’m told that today Sound Point has suddenly started moving aggressively to buy up more of LightSquared’s debt. Could Ergen and Slim be trying to acquire spectrum across multiple bands, by purchasing assets from Clearwire and positioning themselves to use some of LightSquared’s spectrum after a resolution (in the distant future) off GPS interference issues?
I’ve wondered recently whether Ergen has little choice other than to sell DISH’s spectrum to AT&T because there are few alternative partners available. However, it seems that Ergen may not yet have given up on a deal with Clearwire, making Sprint ever more desperate to block it. If Sprint is now able to tie up Clearwire for several months, then that would probably delay any deal beyond Ergen’s window for making a decision about how to proceed. Sprint has also been spreading rumors of its own potential deal with Ergen as a way to pressure Clearwire’s strategic investors to accept the offer from Sprint: the story was reported by Bloomberg last Friday, but first emerged somewhat earlier, just when Sprint delayed its proxy filing so as to negotiate with Clearwire.
UPDATE (12/14): Reuters is now reporting that Clearwire “is also in talks about other strategic alternatives besides the Sprint offer”, apparently confirming that an alternative deal is on the table. Its hard to see what that could be other than an offer from DISH. Reuters also notes that Softbank is capping Sprint’s offer at $2.97 per share, the same as paid for Eagle River’s stake, which indicates that Softbank is certainly not willing to pay whatever it takes to buy Clearwire at this point in time.
Some have asked me what is Sprint and Softbank’s alternative to buying Clearwire. My view is that Sprint will save its money for buying PCS spectrum, where its need is far more urgent. In particular, Sprint is going to have to pay $1B+ to buy the 10MHz H block in the auction next year, and if DISH is left with no alternative other than to sell out to AT&T, Sprint would expect to pick up another 10-20MHz of PCS spectrum that AT&T would need to sell in order to get a DISH deal approved by the FCC. What is key to understanding this strategy is that Sprint wins simply by blocking DISH, regardless of what happens to Clearwire, because if DISH has no alternative other than to sell the AWS-4 block to AT&T, Sprint will be able to buy PCS spectrum from AT&T.
If Clearwire’s strategic investors don’t take Sprint’s bait then would DISH be able to pull off a deal with Clearwire? Even then would Ergen follow through and build a wireless network? My guess is that the answer very much depends on how much AT&T is prepared to pay for the AWS-4 spectrum, but its certainly not yet time to take it for granted that Sprint will end up acquiring Clearwire in the next few months.
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12.06.12
Posted in DISH, LightSquared, Operators, Regulatory, Spectrum at 12:34 pm by timfarrar

No not his assertions that “I still believe that we had a great, and we still do have a great vision” and that “a bankruptcy would not necessarily wipe out the equity holders of LightSquared because the spectrum it owns retains value”, which look like they are moving even further away from being realized as time goes on.
LightSquared’s latest plan is to relinquish terrestrial rights in part of its L-band spectrum in exchange for the right to use additional government spectrum used by NOAA. However, I’m told that although NOAA may be prepared to allow terrestrial use of the 1675-80MHz spectrum band (subject to payment of relocation costs to move their radiosondes to the 401-406MHz band), LightSquared’s plan may now be derailed by the apparent intention of Congress to mandate an auction of “at least 15MHz” of spectrum in the 1675-1710MHz band, thereby requiring LightSquared to buy this additional spectrum at auction rather than being given (what they are portraying as) a “swap”.
After all, most Democrats appear to have concluded that “What happened to LightSquared is disappointing…But unfortunately that ship has sailed”. NOAA would presumably also like to maximize the auction proceeds to fund the relocation of its other systems in the 1695-1710MHz band which will also be auctioned as (lower value) uplink spectrum. As a first step, NOAA’s position may become clearer next week once the initial comments are filed in response to LightSquared’s petitions for rulemaking.
What I’m actually referring to in the title of this post is Phil’s comment on my blog post back in August 2011 that “Everyone knows Ergen is not going to build out a network. No one trusts him, including the FCC. They are not going to put their eggs in that basket because they know he will make them look foolish.”
That does appear to be a pretty good summary of the underlying rationale behind the FCC’s draft AWS-4 Order, circulated just before Thanksgiving, because the Order does not impose any anti-windfall conditions that would stop DISH from selling the spectrum to another operator, but instead attempts to mitigate this windfall (a concern the FCC is acutely sensitive to) by ensuring that the proceeds of an H-block auction can be maximized. If sold to existing operators, then the 50MHz of spectrum in AWS-4 and H-block combined would help to preserve the current four player wireless market in the US and would also mean that (as the FCC Chairman’s former advisor put it this week) “we’re not in the rush we originally thought” to address the purported spectrum crunch.
Despite this encouragement to cash in, DISH objected to the draft order, with Ergen appealing in person to each of the five Commissioners to make changes. However, the FCC fired back at DISH and has now scheduled the order for a public vote at the meeting on December 12, sending a signal of unanimity to DISH, and perhaps also discouraging any Commissioners who might be wavering from taking a position that would increase DISH’s potential windfall at the expense of H-block auction proceeds for the Treasury. Sprint has maintained its opposition to the latest changes proposed by DISH, and appears to have been successful in fending off any modification to the original draft (if Sprint was losing ground then I would have expected to see more vocal objections, as opposed to the current strategy of providing behind the scenes briefings and a rather non-specific ex parte filing).
Thus I’m left wondering whether DISH will now be persuaded that its best interests lie in selling out (especially given the diminishing number of available partners), or if instead DISH will continue to fight with the FCC (and challenge the legality of the Order as outlined in last week’s ex parte filing), potentially holding up the deployment of both AWS-4 and the H-block?
Could Sprint have designs on the AWS-4 spectrum as well (after all, Ergen is known for fighting vigorously right up to the time he does a deal with an opponent), or will it simply want to take advantage of disposals that AT&T would be forced to make after buying DISH’s spectrum? We should know more about Ergen’s intentions very soon, and Sprint’s proxy filing, now delayed until December 21, should make even more interesting reading than that of MetroPCS, because it will have to reveal if discussions have been going on with DISH behind the scenes over any potential deals.
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11.17.12
Posted in DISH, Financials, ICO/DBSD, Operators, Regulatory, Spectrum, TerreStar at 11:52 am by timfarrar

Over the last 36 hours there has been a constant stream of stories about DISH Network’s negotiations with various players to launch its proposed wireless network, in what appears to be a last ditch attempt to deflect the FCC from its declared intention to impose strict interference conditions on DISH’s spectrum in order to make the H block auctionable.
First we saw reports of DISH’s “exploratory stage” talks with Google, which unsurprisingly led to massive speculation about Google’s desire to get into the wireless business, largely omitting any mention of Google’s previous (financially disastrous) investment in Clearwire, which was motivated solely by a desire to create more competition and cheaper wireless service and had nothing whatsoever to do with enabling Google to become a wireless operator.
Now we’ve seen reports about DISH’s unsuccessful bid over the summer for MetroPCS, as revealed in MetroPCS’s preliminary proxy statement filed last night. We also saw DISH highlighting that 3GPP standardization work has been completed, with the implication that DISH could move forward very quickly if the FCC approved the network without new interference conditions.
However, it seems clear that the FCC is having none of it, with officials briefing that they are close to a decision, which is expected to confirm that the H block will be auctioned for high power use and therefore the lower part of DISH’s uplink band will face significant powwer restrictions. In other words, the FCC is placing a higher priority on ensuring Sprint has sufficient LTE spectrum (i.e. can extend its 5x5MHz G block LTE network to a 10x10MHz network) and moving forward with an auction of the H block to raise $1B+ than they are on trusting DISH to become a new entrant in the wireless market.
In light of the Sprint-Softbank and TMobile-MetroPCS deals, the FCC has achieved its goal of having four viable players in the US wireless market, and so presumably does not see as much need to encourage a new entrant. Indeed I would expect the FCC would be relatively content to see the DISH spectrum go to AT&T, if it could then “encourage” AT&T to sell some of its PCS spectrum to Sprint (along the lines of Verizon’s AWS spectrum deal with TMobile). We might even see a similar “swap” in the PCS band between TMobile and Sprint (with Sprint getting more of the spectrum and paying some cash to TMobile) as an alternative to a potential rival Sprint bid for MetroPCS. After all, TMobile has far more spectrum per subscriber than any of the other three major players (if Clearwire’s holdings are excluded).
Does DISH have many other options left to build out a new network of its own, as opposed to selling the spectrum to AT&T and pursuing a merger with DirecTV? There still appears to be uncertainty about the status of a potential deal with Clearwire, though DISH’s 10-Q confirmed (as I suggested previously) that it has raised its stake in Clearwire’s debt by $400M during the third quarter to a total investment of $745M (note that Clearwire is not named in the 10-Q, but the amount invested is too large for the investment to be in LightSquared, given other declared holdings).
DISH has undoubtedly talked to almost everyone in the wireless industry, but apparently these talks are currently only at the exploratory stage, which is quite surprising given how much time has elapsed. Of course what the MetroPCS proxy statement reveals is that everyone else has been talking as well, and as set out below, the proxy provides some very interesting nuggets about what’s happened over the last 18 months, once you decode the references to Companies A through H.
Company A: DBSD. MetroPCS determined that DBSD’s spectrum was more attractive than TerreStar’s spectrum and MetroPCS made a binding offer for the spectrum in March 2011, but lost out to DISH.
Company B: TerreStar. MetroPCS ultimately decided not to pursue TerreStar, leaving Harbinger out in the cold in June 2011, but then negotiated unsuccessfully with DISH during the summer of 2011 over a potential sale of spectrum, joint venture or contribution of the spectrum in exchange for equity in MetroPCS.
Company C: DISH subsequential expressed interest in buying MetroPCS, starting in March 2012 when it became clear DISH would not receive its hoped-for ATC waiver, and ultimately made a bid of $11 per share in August 2012, which was rejected by MetroPCS because it was less than the value offered by TMobile. DISH then indicated that it was unwilling to pay a higher price.
Company D: Clearwire. MetroPCS offered to buy spectrum from Clearwire in late 2011 (and earlier had even considered buying the whole company), but was unable to agree on terms. These discussions were revived in June 2012 when Clearwire again suggested a sale of spectrum and a “substantial investor” (Sprint or perhaps DISH???) proposed splitting the company between themselves and MetroPCS. Those “occasional” discussions continued up until the TMobile deal was announced.
Company E: Leap. Leap offered to sell “excess” spectrum to MetroPCS in the first half of 2011, but as early as June 2011 had decided to sell the spectrum to another wireless company (Verizon). This implies both that Verizon sat on the Leap deal until it had completed its negotiations with SpectrumCo in December 2011, and that the transfer of the Chicago 700MHz A block spectrum to Leap was presumably only included so the deal could be portrayed to the FCC as a “swap”. (Of course Leap’s presumed follow-up deal of a sale to US Cellular has now been derailed by US Cellular’s exit from the Chicago market and sale of its spectrum to Sprint). In May 2012, Leap asked MetroPCS to consider a combination of the two companies, but MetroPCS decided such discussions would not be productive. Then in July 2012, Deutsche Telekom also raised the prospect of combining Leap with TMobile and MetroPCS, as part of a single transaction, but MetroPCS declined, presumably because of the added complications it would entail.
Company F: AT&T. As was widely reported at the time, MetroPCS was in discusssions with AT&T in 2011 about potential asset sales as a condition of the TMobile acquisition. However, this did not come to fruition because the acquisition was blocked by the DoJ and FCC. Later, in August 2012, MetroPCS discussed approaching AT&T, but the consensus opinion was that AT&T would not be interested in buying MetroPCS.
Company G: Sprint approached MetroPCS about a potential acquisition in September 2011, and this led to the abortive bid in February 2012, which was vetoed by the Sprint board. Even after this time discussions continued with Sprint, and Sprint indicated in August and September 2012 that it was still interested in an acquisition of MetroPCS.
Company H: Verizon. MetroPCS held discussions with Verizon in the spring of 2012 about potentially buying some of the AWS and 700MHz spectrum that Verizon would need to divest to get approval of the SpectrumCo transaction. However, Verizon was not particularly interested in selling the AWS spectrum to MetroPCS (and entered into a deal with TMobile instead).
What all this appears to show is that DISH has looked at a number of transactions which involve further investment in the sector, but the main reason these have not come to fruition is that DISH is trying to pay as little as possible for any acquired assets. Alternatively, if DISH was to be a seller, then it was looking for too rich a price (at least for MetroPCS). In this context, it is likely that only Clearwire would be prepared to do a deal to sell assets to DISH on such terms, as I’ve speculated previously. It also seems pretty clear that the potential network sharing deal mentioned in the WSJ article about the discussions with Google would most likely be with Clearwire rather than Sprint, because the benchmark terms set by Sprint’s deal with LightSquared would be unattractive to DISH. As a result, it seems we are back to where we started – could DISH still pull off a deal with Clearwire (and does it want to in the current circumstances?), or will DISH end up selling its spectrum to AT&T and pursuing a merger with DirecTV instead?
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10.24.12
Posted in DISH, Financials, Operators, Regulatory, Spectrum at 11:41 am by timfarrar

Is Charlie Ergen giving up on his wireless plans? An interview with Bloomberg published this morning seemed to signal a change of stance, particularly the explicit suggestion that Ergen would be open to simply selling his spectrum to AT&T, when his (coded) message for the last year has been that AT&T would need to buy the whole of DISH (at a huge premium).
Not only has the Softbank deal enabled Sprint to escape from the box DISH had been trying to put it in, but by buying McCaw’s stake in Clearwire, and indicating to other strategic investors on the board that further equity purchases are up for negotiation, Sprint looks to have headed off Ergen’s planned deal to purchase assets from Clearwire.
Despite this, perhaps Ergen could still do a deal with other partners like Carlos Slim or DirecTV, but it is harder to see the rationale for investing in building a fifth competitive operator than it was a month ago, when Sprint (and perhaps even T-Mobile) were perceived to be in a much weaker competitive (and financial) position. In addition, we may be seeing AT&T attempt to warn off Carlos Slim from a deal with Ergen, in the form of mutterings about foreign ownership of other wireless operators.
So it looks like Ergen may now turn his attention towards a potential merger deal with DirecTV. In the short term that means putting pressure on DirecTV to come to the table, most obviously by competing with them in Brazil. Indeed, Echostar told the FCC at the end of September that it planned to move the Quetzsat satellite to the 61.5W slot, freeing up AMC-15 to be relocated to 45W in order to provide service into Brazil “as soon as January 2013“.
Wireless and broadband could also be a key part of this deal, via an alignment of both satellite TV operators with AT&T, similar to the Verizon-cable TV partnership, and that would be cemented by the sale of DISH’s spectrum to AT&T. Nevertheless, I would expect the sale to come ahead of an agreement with DirecTV, simply because being left out of a DISH-AT&T alliance would put even more pressure on DirecTV. As I noted last December, this alignment would cement AT&T and Verizon’s market leadership. However, given that the FCC backed off mandating wholesale access as a condition of approving the Verizon/SpectrumCo deal, the only plausible way to promote competition to these two players may then be to allow Sprint and T-Mobile to merge.
Of course putting a price on DISH’s spectrum is hard, but I suspect that the most appropriate comparison for the AWS-4 spectrum is the WCS band which AT&T purchased recently, because neither band is usable immediately (unlike AWS). AT&T paid NextWave more than expected for WCS, but this was offset by the fact that AT&T already owned a substantial part of the band, for which it had paid very little. I would therefore expect an AWS-4 sale to be at a fairly similar price to that AT&T paid NextWave for the usable parts of the WCS spectrum: somewhere in the range of ~$0.30-$0.40/MHzPOP (depending on how much value is attributed to the C/D blocks and AWS holdings), i.e. of order $3.75B-$5.0B plus perhaps another $1B for DISH’s 700MHz E block spectrum.
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10.16.12
Posted in DISH, Financials, LightSquared, Operators, Regulatory, Spectrum at 8:44 am by timfarrar

Despite considerable efforts by Charlie Ergen, it looks like the Softbank deal may now have enabled Sprint to escape from the box of constrained capital, limited spectrum and a second rate network that Sprint could have been confined to, if it had failed to gain access to either usable H block spectrum or Clearwire’s network on economically advantageous terms. Many thought that Sprint would move to purchase Clearwire immediately after the Softbank investment, but today sources are denying that is the intention, stating that Sprint has no intention of taking part in mergers or acquisitions until the Softbank deal is finalized in mid-2013. This timeline also implies that Sprint will not move to disrupt the T-Mobile/MetroPCS merger, which is expected to close in 2013Q2.
So the obvious question is why did Sprint need to issue a $3B convertible bond to Softbank right now? I think that can only be intended to warn off others from doing a deal with Clearwire in the interim, by offering John Stanton the carrot of improved economics and/or further investment from Sprint. Of course there are not many options for Clearwire to sell spectrum, now that T-Mobile and MetroPCS, the two operators most frequently rumored to have designs on Clearwire’s spectrum, are getting together.
As a result, I think Sprint’s actions appear to confirm that Clearwire was about to pull the trigger on a deal with Ergen, as I suggested last month, involving an asset sale and/or WiMAX customer transfer, in exchange for a combination of cash and debt. Notably, receipts from a sale of network assets (as opposed to a spectrum sale) would not have to be used to repurchase Clearwire’s first lien debt, suggesting that this could be a preferred way for Clearwire to raise funds. In addition, I’m told Ergen now holds in excess of $900M of Clearwire’s debt (not all first lien), and some of that could potentially have been traded for Clearwire spectrum.
Reports on the Sprint/Softbank deal have also suggested that both Carlos Slim and SK Telecom have considered investments in Sprint, and it is worth noting that SK Telecom invested $60M in LightSquared back in 2010, while Slim is rumored to be buying LightSquared debt. In fact I’m told that further significant purchases of LightSquared debt have taken place in recent weeks. If one or both of those two players therefore continue to maintain their interest in US telecom assets (which has obviously included MSS-ATC spectrum similar to that held by DISH), then Ergen may be the last, best potential partner available.
So has Sprint now prevented Ergen from achieving a deal with Clearwire? I’m told that (at least with the current ownership situation) Sprint would have no ability to veto such a transaction, so presumably Stanton will now be trying to extract vastly improved economics from the existing capacity agreement with Sprint in order to forego a DISH deal. What concessions will Sprint be prepared to make, and if it does give ground, where does that leave DISH? After all, it doesn’t seem that AT&T is prepared to pay Ergen’s asking price (perhaps as high as $80-$90 per share?) to purchase the whole of DISH anytime soon. Ergen must certainly be fuming at how FCC delays have prevented him from moving forward, while potential partners seem to be rapidly exiting the dance floor. At least he appears to have made a profit on his investment in Clearwire, but that may be little consolation if it now proves more difficult to find a way to monetize DISH’s other, much larger, spectrum investments.
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