Vodafone, Bell Atlantic May Form U.S. Wireless Company Worth US$80 Billion By Christine Harper and Kate Norton Bloomberg
Vodafone, Bell Atlantic May Form U.S. Wireless Co. (Update3) (Adds analyst comments from 4th paragraph.)
London, Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Vodafone Airtouch Plc, the world's largest wireless telephone company, and Bell Atlantic Corp. are close to an agreement to combine their U.S. wireless operations into a separate company with a market value of as much as $80 billion, the New York Times reported, citing people close to the talks.
Bell Atlantic, which will be the U.S.'s biggest wireless telephone company following its acquisition of GTE Corp., would own about 55 percent of the new company and Vodafone would own the rest, the newspaper said. Vodafone declined comment; Bell Atlantic couldn't be immediately reached for comment.
The agreement would give the companies, which acknowledged last week that they're in talks, a nationwide network capable of competing with coast-to-coast operators such as Sprint Corp. and AT&T Corp. It comes just weeks after the two agreed to split their existing wireless venture, PrimeCo Personal Communications LP, leaving both with gaps in their U.S. coverage. ``Vodafone Airtouch as an independent entity is hindered by not being able to compete on an equal footing' in the U.S., Morgan Stanley Dean Witter said in a report to investors last week. ``We believe that the most practical solution is for Vodafone Airtouch to strike an accord with Bell Atlantic.'
The companies have been working throughout the weekend to determine the new company's value, who would run it and which executives would be appointed to the board, the newspaper said; an announcement could come as early as this week.
PrimeCo Venture
Bell Atlantic decided in April to break up the PrimeCo venture after Vodafone beat it in a bidding war for AirTouch Communications Inc., Bell Atlantic's original partner in PrimeCo.
New York-based Bell Atlantic, which has more than 7 million wireless customers in the U.S., is in the process of buying GTE Corp., which has more than 5 million wireless subscribers.
Vodafone AirTouch, left without service in the Eastern U.S. following the PrimeCo breakup, confirmed on Sept. 6 it was in talks with Bell Atlantic about a possible union. Chief Executive Chris Gent told analysts at a Sept. 3 meeting that the talks with Bell Atlantic had a 25 to 30 percent chance of succeeding, Morgan Stanley said in the note to investors.
The companies originally formed PrimeCo, which has about 1.3 million customers, in 1994 and agreed to connect their networks to offer nationwide wireless service.
Under the breakup plan, Bell Atlantic gained PrimeCo's networks in New Orleans; Richmond, Virginia; and Miami, Jacksonville and Tampa, Florida. Vodafone AirTouch won Chicago, Milwaukee, Dallas, San Antonio and Houston.
If talks with Bell Atlantic fail, Vodafone is also considering bidding for Omnipoint Corp., which operates in big Eastern cities like New York, Boston and Philadelphia and agreed in June to be acquired by VoiceStream Wireless Corp., Morgan Stanley said in the note to investors.
Vodafone completed its $74.4 billion purchase of AirTouch in June, giving it cell networks on six continents, including a system that stretches from Sweden to Greece in Europe.
On Friday, Vodafone AirTouch shares fell 33 pence to 1,193p ($19.31). The company's American depositary receipts, each of which represents 10 ordinary shares, fell 5 1/8 to 194 13/16. Bell Atlantic fell 1/16 to 62 1/2. |