Last updated: February 4, 2009 - 9:19am
In the bidding for the roughly $3 billion in wireless assets Verizon Wireless must divest as part of its purchase of Alltel Corp., one strong but controversial contender is emerging: AT&T. The telecom giant is among the bidders, along with a joint bid from private-equity firms Carlyle Group and Kohlberg Kravis & Roberts & Co. and a separate bid from Providence Equity Partners. Verizon Wireless agreed to sell the assets to get government approval for the $28.1 billion Alltel purchase, which closed last month. Assets include 2.1 million wireless subscribers in 22 states, as well as wireless spectrum and other assets necessary to run the businesses in those markets. AT&T is in the strongest financial position of the interested companies and is in a good position to walk away with a large chunk of the assets. Critics, including consumer advocates and Verizon's smaller competitors, say such a deal -- allowing one giant telecom provider to transfer customers to another -- wouldn't be in the interest of consumers. AT&T and Verizon Wireless have a combined 160 million subscribers, nearly 60% of the entire U.S. market. Gigi Sohn, president of the public interest group Public Knowledge, said the government should encourage Verizon to sell the assets to smaller players to enhance competition. "This could be one of the first big tests for the Obama administration to see if their antitrust enforcement will have any teeth," Sohn said.
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- TPG, Goldman Arm Land Alltel
- Alltel Is Calling Potential Buyers
- Phone Company Deal Irks Would-Be Bidders
- Tribune Draws Gannett Interest, But Media Firms Face Hurdles
- Verizon, Alltel get antitrust approval to merge
- Carlyle's Bet on Telecom in Hawaii Ends Badly
- Televisa Enlists Equity Funds For Univision Bid
- Verizon Wireless seeks more time from FCC
- AT&T Buys Some Assets From Verizon Wireless
- Justice Department Requires Divestitures in AT&T's Acquisition of Centennial
- AT&T: T-Mobile deal would produce a bigger, better operator ultimately benefiting consumers
- Verizon in talks to buy Alltel for about $27 billion
- FCC Rules on Ownership Loom in Duel for Univision
- FCC approves $24.7 billion Alltel buyout
- Merger pressure rises after AT&T deal
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

