Satellite, Cable Battle Wireless In FCC Auction

http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=191901292&subSection=Breaking+News

The sale, which opened Wednesday, includes 1,122 licenses for advanced 
wireless services. Bidding will resume on Thursday and continue for 
perhaps several weeks, until there are no new bids or other activity in 
the sale.

By Reuters
InformationWeek

Aug 10, 2006 08:31 AM

WASHINGTON - U.S. wireless carriers battled with satellite and cable 
operators Wednesday for valuable licenses for advanced wireless services 
-- like high-speed Internet access -- on the first day of an auction 
that so far has raised $933.5 million.

A partnership of the top two satellite television providers, EchoStar 
Communications Corp. and DirecTV Group Inc., led the Federal 
Communications Commission sale with top bids for 13 licenses totaling 
$282.5 million.

After the day's second round of bidding, the group knocked No. 4 U.S. 
wireless carrier T-Mobile USA out of the first place spot it had after 
the initial round. T-Mobile has the highest bids for 23 licenses, 
totaling $121.7 million.

T-Mobile, a unit of Germany's Deutsche Telekom AG , does not have as 
many wireless airwaves as the bigger U.S. carriers and analysts have 
expected the company to bid aggressively.

Analysts have predicted the Federal Communications Commission sale could 
raise as much as $15 billion and would last several weeks. The sale 
includes 1,122 licenses and the bidding will resume on Thursday and 
continue until there are no new bids or other activity in the sale.

Telephone, cable and satellite companies are competing to offer 
consumers a bundle of voice, Internet, wireless and television services 
and some see acquiring the airwaves in the FCC auction as aiding their 
efforts.

The cable and satellite companies have not said publicly what they would 
do with the wireless licenses if they won them. However, analysts have 
suggested satellite firms would use the airwaves for high-speed Internet 
access while cable operators could use them for voice communications.

A consortium of big cable operators was in third place, with the top 
bids for four licenses with offers of $106.9 million. They have joined 
forces with No. 3 wireless carrier Sprint Nextel Corp. in bidding during 
the auction.

That group includes the biggest cable operators, Comcast Corp., Time 
Warner Inc., and Cox Communications.

Two smaller licenses covering the New York City and Newark, New Jersey, 
area received high individual bids from Dolan Family Holdings LLC, which 
has ties to Cablevision Systems Corp. Chairman Charles Dolan.

Dolan bid almost $25 million for one and $19.4 million for the other, 
according to FCC data.

Among larger regional licenses being offered, the one receiving the 
highest bid covered a swath of territory that stretches across the 
northern United States, including Chicago, Detroit, Minneapolis and 
Cleveland. The satellite television group bid $69.1 million for this 
license.



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