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Technology Stocks : Nextwave Telecom Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Caxton Rhodes who wrote (207)12/5/1999 12:53:00 PM
From: gdichaz  Respond to of 1088
 
Caxton: No not a Nextwave stockholder.

I became interested in Nextwave through the old Q thread.

Then I became amazed that the FCC was seemingly holding back a major wireless data initiative against what seems to be the public interest in order to get that grubby stuff money - i.e. throwing legal monkeywrenches into the works because of its own apparent ineptness. This seems perverse in the extreme.

But maybe I just don't understand. Not a lawyer. Just an observer.

Chaz



To: Caxton Rhodes who wrote (207)12/5/1999 1:30:00 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1088
 
My understanding is - since NextWave never did have their IPO, the only shareholders would be entities like venture capital firms or big companies that "bankrolled" NextWave in its early days.

Also, someone (Maurice ?) said Qualcomm happens to be one of those backers of NextWave, and owns something like 2% or 4% of NextWave.

Jon.



To: Caxton Rhodes who wrote (207)12/13/1999 6:52:00 AM
From: Michael Allard  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1088
 
axton:

I made an investment through a VC fund in 1996 that was set up solely to invest in Nextwave. I wrote my investment off last year, but still see a glimmer of hope for future returns.

Just a reminder to this board, that the legal issue on the table stems from the fact that the FCC never issued UCC's protecting their spectrum as a secured asset when they initially handed out the license. This is why the Bankruptcy court does not believe it owes the FCC any more than any other creditor in this process.

The FCC also caused much of the current "C" block issue delaying the issuance of the licenses to C Block players. Nextwave could not file an IPO until it had possession of the license, and the FCC took over 9 months to issue it. By the time it was issued, the market had turned sour on spectrum owners.

Nextwave was ready to roll day one (as my intro to this thread detailed), but the FCC messed it up for them. As
a US citizen, I am glad our government would step in to protect us from this clerical error. HOWEVER, Nextwave's filling of Chapter 11 was done in the wake of the Pocket Tellecom's Chapter 11 , in which the court Ruled and re-sold the spectrum at 10 cents to the dollar, and gave the FCC nothing! (nothing beyond what all Creditors received). This being the president, Nextwave had no choice but to follow suit. Now, the Government is attempting to change the rules, and as a current and future investor in emerging technologies, I don't like that Message too much.

Good luck to all!