Why A Big Deal Could Be A Bad Deal - For SBC
By Carol Wilson, with Kathleen Cholewka and Louis Trager Inter@ctive Week May 18, 1998
zdnet.com
Who wins when one giant local phone company buys another giant local phone company? Very possibly, no one. At least that's one outcome of last week's announced acquisition of Ameritech Corp. by SBC Communications Inc. As contradictory as it may sound, the deal that would give a single company control of one-third of U.S. phone lines could limit consumer choice, slow the use of new data technology in the phone network and thereby dampen sales of newer,faster computers. It could even make SBC more vulnerable to technologically agile competitors.
Of course, the merger still must pass muster with the Federal Communications Commission. Many consider federal approval unlikely since the prospect of recreating the Bell System is sounding alarms from the halls of Congress to the streets of Chicago, where the Rev. Jesse Jackson and his Rainbow Coalition called on the Clinton administration to move to stop megamergers among telephone companies.
The greatest concern is that allowing SBC to absorb Ameritech and its five Midwestern states will trigger a chain reaction of mergers that will leave the country with only a few very large local phone service providers.
If the deal goes through, a domino effect is likely. "Bell Atlantic [Corp.] and BellSouth [Corp.] probably will discuss a merger," figured Brian Adamik, senior vice president at The Yankee Group. "The considerations will now change radically for AT&T Corp. There's going to have to be a change in the way regulators look at a merger between AT&T and a Bell."
A combined Ameritech and SBC had 1997 revenue of $41 billion, compared with a combined MCI Communications Corp.-WorldCom Inc. revenue of $26 billion, Bell Atlantic with $30 billion or BellSouth with $20 billion. Only AT&T's revenue would exceed the new partners at $51 billion in 1997.
"This merger would give SBC dominion over one-third of the [phone lines] in the U.S.," said Dan Taylor of The Aberdeen Group Inc. "SBC would have 37 [million] to 40 million lines if the merger goes through."
Now The Bad News
That kind of concentration of power will give a new larger entity disproportionate control over how fast technology reaches the mass market, according to Victor Schnee, founder of Probe Research Inc. and the man who predicted SBC would take over Ameritech in an April report titled "Mega Strategies: Winning the Computer-Telecom War."
That prediction was made based not on insider information, but on 22 years of study of Bell company behavior that produced what Schnee called the "genetic code" of the Bells. Schnee and colleague Allan Tumilillo concluded that the big losers as the Bells get bigger are the computer companies that need faster communications networks if they are to continue driving up sales of bigger and faster PCs.
"Popping up on the radar screen of the Bell companies is the technology threat of the Internet," Schnee said. "The Bells are driven to a situation where in order to address the future, they need to get the industry into as small and tight a cartel as is possible. Once a company has mammoth power, it can manage the speed with which new technology - like faster access systems - can move into the network."
The need to "administer" new technologies and network change is fundamental behavior to a Bell company - part of its "genetic code," according to Schnee. A prime example of this behavior was the way the Bells offered Integrated Services Digital Network, a technology available 13 years ago, he said, but still not in widespread use.
That does not bode well for deploying new, higher-speed Digital Subscriber Line technology. Such digital lines can carry data at speeds 30 or more times as fast as today's fastest conventional modems. Computer makers are counting on such fast Net access to spur demand for more high-performance machines on corporate and personal desktops.
Which means companies such as Compaq Computer Corp. should be wary of phone company consolidation. But, Schnee added, the phone companies have convinced the computer industry, led by Microsoft Corp. and Compaq, that they can generate a lot of revenue selling their computer software and hardware into telephone networks. Their status as potentially large customers blunts any action the computer companies might mount against them.
Based on the FCC's rulings to date, the Bells know exactly what's required to get into long-distance, Schnee said. They will open up their local markets when they're ready - and probably immediately swallow up some long-distance companies to further enhance the cartel. He called the result the NeoBell System.
"These guys are not dumb," Schnee said. "SBC, in particular, has shown it is methodical about appraising investment opportunities, but once that's done, the company acts decisively."
Many industry analysts believe, however, that the Bell companies are dumb when it comes to understanding the Internet. To date, they have been slow to recognize how fast companies are moving to Internet Protocol (IP)-based networks, initially for data but ultimately for voice as well. Expanding the base of aging, if still profitable, circuit-switched voice networks makes less sense than aggressively migrating those networks toward the IP world.
The merger would absorb corporate energy and dilute marketing efforts at a critical time. Numerous smaller companies are attacking local phone companies in every major metropolitan area, and new emerging potential giants such as Level 3 Communications Inc. and Qwest Communications International Inc. are building new coast-to-coast networks that use only state-of-the-art technology and are designed from the ground up to support high-speed data services. Developing voice-over-IP technology will enable those networks also to capture voice services, particularly for businesses that like the idea of a single integrated network service provider. Qwest already offers a high-quality voice service using Internet technology, in nine cities.
By contrast, the phone company networks include several generations of technology, most of which were created to support voice services handled primarily by circuit switches, the huge, proprietary computers that direct calls and provide enhanced services. Where the telephone companies offer data services, such as frame relay, they usually use network overlays - adding network equipment that operates over the physical lines but isn't logically tied into the voice network.
"You're certainly tied down in recovering that [existing] network investment, and that hamstrings you," said Terence Barnich, a consultant at New Paradigm Resources Inc. and former chairman of the Illinois Commerce Commission.
Where SBC is likely to be hurt is in its revenue from small to midsized businesses, the target market for many of the competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs). While a huge SBC chases big business and butts heads with WorldCom and AT&T, smaller firms are likely to be disenchanted with impersonal service.
Opportunity For CLECs
"On a customer-by-customer basis, this is great news for us," said Bob Taylor, president of Focal Communications Corp., a CLEC operating in Chicago and New York. "How are customers in Chicago and Detroit going to be better served out of a company in San Antonio? We have been able to create a niche by providing better service. We can prove we provide better service than Ameritech - this just makes it even more appealing."
But Taylor said he believes his company's ability to get the connections it needs from the new SBC will also be damaged. "As these companies get bigger, they become less responsive and they become slower in the actions necessary to facilitate the CLECs," he said. SBC is particularly known for foot-dragging, according to Taylor and other CLEC officials.
Royce Holland, president and chief executive officer of Allegiance Telecom Inc., is also licking his chops at the prospects for his firm. The company now operates in Dallas, providing communications services to businesses, and plans to be in Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco by year's end.
"The only thing slower than one monopoly is two monopolies put together," he said.
But Holland said the combined SBC-Ameritech will be held to conditions at least as tough as those given Bell Atlantic when it acquired Nynex Corp. Those conditions already bore fruit, he said, when the New York Public Service Commission came up with stringent rules for Bell Atlantic to offer electronic interfaces into its operations systems before getting state approval to enter long-distance. This summer, an independent third party plans to test what Bell Atlantic has developed.
"By the time this deal has gone through the states and the antitrust people and reaches the FCC, we will have completed the course in New York and we'll be a lot smarter," Holland said. "We'll know exactly what to push for."
"The merger could be good news for the CLECs," agreed Greg Cline, principal analyst for Internet infrastructure research at Cahners Business Information's In-Stat. "To get federal approval, SBC is going to have to be very pro-competition. They'll have to open their markets even more."
SBC has pledged to go into other local markets around the country and generate competition for other Bells as part of this merger deal.
But business and residential customers are not likely to benefit much, if at all, from such a merger. Potential competition between SBC and Ameritech will be stopped, and the combined size of the company and the intransigence of SBC in allowing potential rivals to connect to its network will make it harder for innovation and price-cutting to emerge.
Immediately swept aside in the merger will be head-to-head battles once planned between Ameritech and SBC in Chicago and St. Louis.
Despite the burgeoning competition from new rivals, however, there is no one posing a real threat to any of the Bells in the local market, Schnee said.
"Every one of these companies wants to be the next MCI. That's the model they have in mind," he said. "But if you took all their business plans today and combined them, it wouldn't equal SBC or Bell Atlantic or BellSouth."
If SBC moves quickly to open key local markets and resell its local facilities, there will still be little incentive to upgrade those local facilities until there is overwhelming pent-up demand that can guarantee instant return on investment.
"What are they buying? Old network," said Bill White, a spokesman at Sprint Corp. "But they still have that control of the end user. The question is, what are they going to do to upgrade their network to the network of the future?"
"Many people think this is the dance of the dinosaurs," said Adamik of The Yankee Group. "That's the wild card in this whole thing. [But] owning the wire is the key thing today - whether it's antiquated local loop or fiber."
For that control to rest with SBC - not known for its customer focus - could be problematic.
SBC can be reached at www.sbc.com
The Yankee Group can be reached at www.yankeegroup.com
Ameritech can be reached at www.ameritech.com
AT&T can be reached at www.att.com
Probe Research can be reached at www.probe.com
Compaq can be reached at www.compaq.com
The FCC can be reached at www.fcc.gov
Qwest cwww.qwest.net
New Paradigm can be reached at www.alts.com
WorldCom can be reached at www.wcom.com
Bell Atlantic can be reached at www.bellatlantic.com
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