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To: Bill Harmond who wrote (85887)12/1/1999 5:58:00 PM
From: Brian Moore  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Back up now.



To: Bill Harmond who wrote (85887)12/1/1999 7:47:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Charter, AT&T unit to swap certain cable systems
ST. LOUIS, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Cable systems operator Charter
Communications Inc. <CHTR.O> said Wednesday it agreed to swap
certain cable systems with a unit of AT&T Corp. <T.N> as part
of a plan to build regional cable "clusters" that are cheaper
to operate.
Charter, the fourth-largest cable company and brainchild of
Microsoft Corp. <MSFT.O> co-founder Paul Allen, said the
agreement with AT&T Broadband & Internet Services would create
more efficient cable operations and speed the delivery of
broadband services such as digital cable and high-speed
Internet access to more customers.
Financial terms were not disclosed.
Charter plans to take over AT&T cable systems serving about
704,000 customers in the St. Louis area and additional
communities in Missouri, Illinois, Alabama and Georgia.
AT&T's broadband unit would take over certain Charter cable
systems serving about 632,000 customers, and receive an
undisclosed amount of cash.
"Charter's strategy for growth from the beginning has been
to geographically cluster our cable systems to gain operating
efficiencies and economies of scale," Jerald Kent, president
and chief executive officer of Charter, said in a statement.
"Operating regional clusters -- like the 800,000-customer
cluster we will serve in Missouri and Illinois, which includes
some 500,000 customers in metro St. Louis -- helps us
accelerate technology at even greater speeds," he said.
"We are upgrading our cable infrastructure to offer
customers digital cable television, high speed Internet and to
build in the capacity for full broadband portal services."
The proposed swap is subject to completion of definitive
documentation and must receive regulatory approvals, which is
expected to take several months. Until then, all properties
included in the swap will continue operating under their
current management, Charter said.
Ahead of the news, shares in Charter Communications, which
was priced at $19 when it went public in November, closed up
1-11/16 at 24-7/8. AT&T's shares ended down 1-1/8 at 54-3/4.