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To: Bearded One who wrote (57568)5/21/1999 8:00:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
MCI WorldCom CEO says he'll take his time on wireless
CLINTON, Miss., May 20 (Reuters) - MCI WorldCom Inc.'s
<WCOM.O> chief executive told shareholders Thursday the No. 2
U.S. long distance phone company is planning to get into the
wireless phone business, even though it is not taking immediate
steps in that direction.
"I guess we do not feel that we need to be in wireless at
this point in time strongly enough that we need to go out and
do something that affects dilution," CEO Bernie Ebbers told 350
shareholders at the annual meeting. But he added, "That does
not mean we intend to stay out of wireless."
Hosting the meeting at the company's new headquarters
building Mississippi, Ebbers pointed out that the company
recently bought some spectrum in the MMDS (multichannel
multipoint distribution service) arena and is looking at other
acquisitions. "I think WorldCom will definitely be in the
wireless business at some point in time. But it's a judgement
call on when you need to make that jump and this is not the
right time," Ebbers said.
MCI WorldCom ended talks to acquire wireless phone company
Nextel Communications Inc. <NXTL.O> and earlier this year
backed away from bidding for AirTouch Communications Inc.
<ATI.N>.
MCI WorldCom lacks a wireless phone business at a time when
more calls are being made on wireless phones, and wireless
customers in the United States surged 25 percent to 69.2
million last year, according to the Cellular Telecommunications
Industry Association. MCI WorldCom's main rivals, AT&T Corp.
<T.N> and Sprint Corp. <FON.N> have aggressively built their
wireless operations.
In an interview before the annual meeting, Ebbers said that
MCI WorldCom has looked at some wireless companies with
national networks. He said that piecing together a network with
regional wireless companies would take a "tremendous amount of
time," and likely be prohibitively expensive.
Though it is still cool to wireless phone service, MCI
WorldCom has been competing with Sprint to buy wireless cable
companies with MMDS spectrum. The spectrum would allow the long
distance companies to transmit voice and data services directly
to customers' homes and businesses and allow them to bypass the
Baby Bells' networks.
MCI WorldCom recently agreed to acquire MMDS companies CAI
Wireless Corp. <CWSS.OB> and Prime Cable. The company may
pursue other similar acquisitions to expand its reach to about
70 percent of the United States, Ebbers said.
"Our goal initially was to get to 70 percent (coverage of
the U.S.) and right now we're a little bit above 50," Ebbers
said. Competition for the properties has sent the prices of the
companies soaring, Ebbers said.
MCI WorldCom will use the spectrum to connect directly to
small and medium-sized businesses. The spectrum has limited
data transmission capability so it would not be used to serve
large companies, Ebbers said.
"We build it out and we'll use it as an access vehicle to
small and mid-sized businesses...in areas where we don't have
our local facilites reaching out as far as we'd like," Ebbers
said.
Ebbers said the company's consumer Internet operations were
growing "slowly." Tim Price, president of MCI WorldCom
Communications, said the operations were profitable and
customer retention has been very strong.
Ebbers does not see the company going into cable
television, even though rival AT&T has made aggressive cable
acquisitions and is set to become the nation's largest phone
and cable company.
MCI WorldCom recently considered helping some allies in
bidding for MediaOne Group Inc. <UMG.N>, which AT&T agreed to
buy for $58 billion. Ebbers joked, "We did try to indicate an
interest in MediaOne just to see if we could get AT&T to pay
more."
Even though MCI WorldCom has no interest in entering the
cable television business, he said he backed efforts by America
Online Inc. <AOL.N> and other Internet companies to make cable
companies' networks open to com...