Did you ever wonder why T-Mobile was willing to spend $26 billion to buy Sprint? You didn’t think it was because T-Mobile badly wanted its rivals’ stores, customer list, and operations, did you? Did you? T-Mobile wanted the hoard of 2.5GHz mid-band spectrum that Sprint owned and it wanted it for a specific reason. Unlike Verizon and AT&T, both of which started their 5G build-out by working with their mmWave spectrum first, T-Mobile had a better plan.
T-Mobile’s purchase of Sprint was a shrewd move and the reason why it is arguably number one in 5G
What T-Mobile realized was that the short distances that mmWave signals travel would increase the time it would take Verizon and AT&T to build its 5G platform. Instead, the nation’s second-largest carrier started building its nationwide 5G first using the low-band airwaves it paid $7.9 billion for during the FCC’s 2017 auction. The problem with low-band is that while it covers great distances and penetrates structures with ease, it cannot deliver blinding fast 5G service.
T-Mobile built its 5G network around a triple-layer cake
The soft demand, surprising as it is, has forced the FCC to institute some changes to the bidding process. The bidding rounds will now consist of four one-hour periods instead of two two-hour rounds. This change will take place starting today. The results were called “abysmal” by New Street Research, a Wall Street firm that focuses its analysis on telecom and technology.
The auction should be a “win-win” for T-Mobile
New Street sharply axed its estimates for Auction 108 from estimated proceeds of $3.4 billion to a revised forecast of $750 million. The research firm added that this is a conservative forecast and that the actual receipts may be in the neighborhood of $200 million. New Street sees T-Mobile scoring a major win-win.
Not only does it appear that T-Mobile will win most of the licenses up for bid, it will also do so by spending a lot less money than the company anticipated. When this writer started writing for PhoneArena back in 2009, he was a much younger man T-Mobile was dead last among the four majors. It was the last to offer 3G and the last to deliver 4G. Now it is considered the most innovative of the major US wireless providers and is arguably the 5G leader in the states.
The auction is expected to end in the middle of next month, but could be cut short due to the weak demand.