National wireless networks in vogue. Race heats up to build seamless 'virtual' infrastructure [see the bottom in particular] cbs.marketwatch.com
By Jeffry Bartash, CBS MarketWatch Last Update: 5:26 PM ET Feb 19, 1999
WASHINGTON (CBS.MW) -- The field of aspiring national wireless phone carriers is getting crowded these days.
In the race to erect coast-to-coast networks, AT&T, Sprint and Nextel have vaulted to a quick lead, but two other carriers appear poised to jump in: Bell Atlantic and SBC Communications.
Like its rivals, the two Bells believe the ability to offer wireless will play a key role in the pursuit of market share for other telecom services as well. The buzz in the industry these days is that the winners of the 21st Century will be those that can offer homes and businesses a complete package of services -- local, long-distance, wireless, data and Internet -- in one bill.
This idea also has an accompanying, if inelegant, buzzword -- bundling.
To that end, AT&T (T) and Sprint (FON) are making a big push to seize market share. Last year, each initiated popular one-rate payment plans under which customers can call anywhere in the country, paying a set fee for a fixed number of minutes. Nextel (NXTL), a lesser known operator, followed suit.
Wireless had already been facing explosive demand amid falling prices and higher quality. The birth of one-rate plans, which ostensibly eliminate costly and unpopular "roaming" charges attached to out-of-region calls, sharply accelerated it.
Quite naturally SBC and Bell Atlantic, which have national if not global aspirations, don't want to miss out on a slice of that rapidly rising pie. The two Bells, however, have chosen different approaches.
Real network
Bell Atlantic, for its part, tried to snap up No.2 U.S. cellular provider AirTouch Communications two months ago, but lost out to a higher bid by Vodafone PLC of Britain. The purchase of AirTouch (ATI), along with its pending acquisition of GTE Corp. (GTE), would have given Bell Atlantic (BEL) the skeletal outline of a national network.
Some analysts hold out hope Bell Atlantic might be able to strike a deal with Vodafone under which the U.S. carrier could peel off AirTouch's extensive domestic operations from the valuable foreign properties that drew the British concern to make an offer in the first place.
"There is still a possibility that Vodafone and Bell Atlantic could reach an agreement of some sort. It would make eminent sense," said wireless analyst Herschel Shosteck, who runs his own consulting firm in Wheaton, Md. Bell Atlantic declined to comment.
Failing that, Bell Atlantic could still maintain its PrimeCo joint venture with AirTouch even after Vodafone (VOD) completes its acquisition. PrimeCo is the second largest U.S. operator of digital PCS, or personal communications services, based on a standard known in the industry as CDMA.
Bell Atlantic isn't taking any chances. The carrier has sued AirTouch to ensure that a non-compete clause signed before the Vodafone buyout offer doesn't prevent the Bell from going after markets in which both companies operate or plan to operate. PrimeCo operates mostly in the South and Midwest.
Still, its failure to beat out Vodafone for AirTouch leaves Bell Atlantic with some big gaps in its network, particularly on the West Coast, where AirTouch was especially strong.
The acquisition of GTE, which also owns wireless operations in the West, will remedy part of the problem. "It would give us coast-to-coast coverage," asserts spokesman Jim Gerace.
Not quite. The company still has to do a lot more work, analysts say, before they it can really make that claim. And that almost certainly will include more acquisitions of smaller carriers. "We don't rule out anything," Gerace replied.
Virtual network
Like Bell Atlantic, SBC (SBC) asserts that a pending acquisition, of Midwestern Baby Bell Ameritech (AIT), will give it the framework of a coast-to-coast network.
"I think you can argue that SBC is close to having a national presence after the Ameritech closure," Stan Sigman, chief executive of SBC Wireless, told CBS.MarketWatch.com in an interview. See full story.
Nevertheless, the carrier's network would only cover about half the U.S. population. And that means it would need to either acquire more carriers or strike roaming agreement with other wireless operators.
Though SBC agreed last month to pay $1.7 billion for the Northeastern cellular business of cable TV operator Comcast (CMCSK), the Bell seems less eager to expand it budding wireless empire through further large acquisitions.
Instead, the carrier aims to create what Sigman calls a "virtual national network." He said the company will use its size to extract beneficial roaming deals from other carriers to ensure that its wireless customers can call anywhere in the country.
Some industry observers think that's a losing proposition. "A strategy like that over the long term is a failed strategy," said Bob Egan, research director for wireless communications at Gartner Group.
"How do you lower the cost of your services?" he asks. "You own the facilities." Without them, companies will pay higher fees to third parties to connect calls, forcing SBC to either raise prices or accept sub-standard profits, he said. Technical complications also could arise.
Other analysts, such as Eliott Hamilton of Washington, DC-based consultant The Strategis Group, believe reselling has proven itself to be a viable approach in the long-distance sector and will prove it as well in wireless.
While a reseller may not wring out as much profit, Hamilton said, it could still earn enough to make wireless operations worthwhile. More important, he said, not owning one's own wireless network won't prevent carriers from bundling services.
"The next national carrier will be a reseller," he states.
Patchwork coverage
Despite all the buzz, a truly seamless national network doesn't exist -- one in which a wireless caller can reach any other wireless caller, no ifs, ands or buts.
In large part, that's because the industry is divided by signal-transmission standards, with an alphabet soup of contestants -- CDMA, TDMA, GSM -- vying to become the worldwide leader. Then there's the rift between analog and digital, which everyone agrees will eventually be resolved in favor of the latter.
Innovate new wireless phones that can receive signals from a combination of any of those sources are likely to render the problem of incompatible networks moot, but that won't change the second major problem.
Wireless networks are still mighty expensive to build and take years to cobble together. The cellular business has been at it for more than a decade, Sigman points out, and there still isn't a truly national carrier. Digital networks are even more expensive and laborious to construct.
Jeffry Bartash is a reporter for CBS MarketWatch.
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