News

T-Mobile and Verizon reach spectrum licensing agreement pending regulatory approval

11

T-Mobile will be the last of the four major US carriers to roll out an LTE network, but the company hopes to do so with a little help from Verizon. The two parties have reached an agreement in principal that will license existing Verizon AWS spectrum for use in expanding T-Mobile’s network in 218 markets. The deal is pending regulatory approval by the FCC and Department of Justice, two bodies T-Mobile is all too familiar with after they struck down a deal proposed last year that would have seen AT&T acquire the carrier from parent company Deutsche Telekom.

The spectrum being provided by Verizon would cover 60 million people and include 15 of T-Mobile’s top 25 markets. The list includes cities such as Philadelphia and Washington D.C. as well as Seattle and Detroit. T-Mobile has plans to launch their LTE network next year.

T-Mobile Signs Spectrum Agreement With Verizon Wireless

T-Mobile to Improve Portfolio of Nationwide Broadband Spectrum Following Regulatory Approval
Net Gain of Spectrum Will Assist Rollout of LTE in 2013

Bellevue, Wash. — June 25, 2012 — Today, T-Mobile USA, Inc. announced an agreement with Verizon Wireless for the purchase and exchange of certain Advanced Wireless Services (AWS) spectrum licenses in 218 markets across the U.S. The transaction will improve T-Mobile’s spectrum position in 15 of the top 25 markets in the U.S. by providing an opportunity for T-Mobile both to acquire additional AWS spectrum and to realign its existing spectrum holdings. Following regulatory approval, this spectrum can be promptly deployed to enhance the company’s 4G mobile broadband service, including the rollout of LTE service next year. Some of the spectrum T-Mobile is acquiring in this transaction include licenses that Verizon is purchasing from SpectrumCo, Cox and Leap, and the agreement is contingent on the closing of those transactions and is subject to regulatory approval by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the Department of Justice.

“This agreement will provide T-Mobile with critical AWS spectrum, enhancing both network capacity and performance and allowing us to meet the growing consumer demand for 4G mobile broadband,” T-Mobile CEO and President Philipp Humm said. “This is good for T-Mobile and good for consumers because it will enable T-Mobile to compete even more vigorously with other wireless carriers. We anticipate FCC approval later this summer, in time for us to incorporate this new spectrum into our network modernization and the rollout of LTE services next year.”

T-Mobile will gain spectrum covering 60 million people — notably in Philadelphia; Washington, D.C.; Detroit; Minneapolis; Seattle; Cleveland; Columbus, Ohio; Milwaukee; Charlotte, N.C.; Raleigh-Durham, N.C.; Greensboro, N.C.; Memphis, Tenn.; and Rochester, N.Y. — in exchange for spectrum covering 22 million people and certain cash consideration. The agreement also includes exchanges in a number of markets in which the companies will swap licenses to create more contiguous blocks of spectrum and re-align spectrum in adjacent markets. These intra-market swaps will enhance T‑Mobile’s network performance and data throughput in key locations. This agreement is in addition to T-Mobile’s previously announced $4 billion 4G network evolution plan, which includes modernization of 37,000 cell sites, launching 4G HSPA+ services in the 1900 MHz band and deployment of LTE in 2013.

Kevin Krause
Pretty soon you'll know a lot about Kevin because his biography will actually be filled in!

Samsung envisions over 10 million Galaxy S III handsets sold by July

Previous article

Verizon Equipment Guide confirms July 5 launch date for Droid Incredible 4G LTE

Next article

You may also like

11 Comments

  1. YES! i thought T-Mobile was gonna land a deal with Sprint instead, seeing Verizon as an impossible, but this is great! Hopefully it will help T-Mobile stop being the underdog. :)

  2. T-Mobile is launching LTE release 10 which will perform much better than LTE that’s out right now. That’s LTE-Advanced which T-Mobile will have.

    Also, what T-Mobile has now with HSPA+ 42 performs on par with Verizon LTE anyhow. So it’s not quite a negative that T-Mobile is the last to deploy LTE as Kevin is saying… for the most part they don’t really need it.

    1. only trouble is t-mo sucks outside of urban areas and att dumped their data roaming agreements.

      so after 10 years with them, i recently switched to VZW.

      UMA calling rocks but, VZW has more signal in more places.

      1. It all depends on your individual usage.

        I live in a pocket where Verizon is horrible yet T-Mobile works great. I know a few families where Verizon doesn’t get signal in their house yet T-Mobile does.

        No doubt, the reverse can be true as well.

        Nobody has the edge T-Mobile does with WiFi Calling however. No carrier has perfect service everywhere. WiFi Calling is a great back up in case of outages or the rare instances I venture to the boonies. Google should implement full support for this in the Android OS. I mean, even RIM did.

  3. Hey, anybody who want WiFi Calling support on Windows Phone go here:
    http://windowsphone.uservoice.com/forums/101801-feature-suggestions type in ‘T-Mobile WiFi Calling Support’ then ‘like’ all the appropriate threads to get Microsoft’s attention. Sorry for being of off topic but it’s T-Mobile related.

    1. Easy. Get an Android phone with working Wifi calling.

  4. i smell VODAFONE getting ready to get its checkbook out and buying t-mo USA.

    why else would they need simcard LTE on verizon?

    1. maybe because LTE requires SIM cards to authenticate the device?

    2. probably because LTE requires SIM cards to authenticate the device?

  5. How will this impact VZW customers in the affected areas (like Cleveland, where I am (although outside 4G))?

  6. Your link is spam.

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More in News