sprint | Stash Learn Mon, 17 Jul 2023 20:42:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://stashlearn.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/android-chrome-192x192-1.png sprint | Stash Learn 32 32 What $15 Plans Have to do with T-Mobile’s Sprint Merger https://www.stash.com/learn/cheap-tmobile-plans/ Thu, 13 Feb 2020 15:34:00 +0000 https://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=13868 Cheaper plans could make the merger look less like a monopoly.

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Update: On February 11, 2020, a federal judge ruled in favor of the merger between T-Mobile and Sprint in a lawsuit brought by 13 state attorneys general. The states could still appeal the decision, according to reports. While the merger is no longer on hold, it also still needs to be approved by California’s Public Utilities Commission.

Telecom carrier T-Mobile announced last week that it will offer consumers a $15-dollar monthly data plan if its $27 billion merger  with Sprint is approved.

The reduced-rate plan is reportedly being offered to ease the concerns of regulators and other industry watchdogs who fear that the merger could drive up plan prices for all wireless customers.

If and when the merger is finalized, T-Mobile executives have reportedly said the newly combined company would offer a plan that provides users with unlimited talk, text, and 2GB of data, at approximately half the cost of its cheapest plan currently. Additionally, T-Mobile said in a press release it will give emergency workers and first responders 10 years of free 5G service, and that it will provide 10 million homes in the U.S. and Puerto Rico with free wireless service and subsidized devices.

These initiatives could be designed to convince consumers and states attorneys general that a merger between T-Mobile and Sprint won’t mean that the company will only seek out the most lucrative customers who can afford the most expensive plans, according to reports.

While the merger was approved by the Federal Communications Commission in October 2019 and by the Department of Justice in July 2019 the deal still faces antitrust lawsuits from 12 states including New York and California. These suits, which object to the merger on the grounds that it could create a monopoly that will increase consumer prices, are set to begin in early December.

T-Mobile enters the price wars

By offering a $15 plan, T-Mobile has also entered a competitive market, with other providers offering cheap plans. AT&T’s Cricket offers a prepaid 2GB plan costs $30 per month, for example, and Sprint’s Boost costs  $35 per month for 3GB of data. (AT&T merged with cable and entertainment company Time Warner earlier in 2019.)

Details about the merger

  • T-Mobile and Sprint have been in talks to merge since April 2018. The companies are the nation’s third and fourth-largest mobile providers, respectively. And together they’d create a new telecom giant with a reported 126 million subscribers. Verizon would still be larger than the combined company, with 150 million subscribers, according to reports.
  • Big mergers like the one proposed between T-Mobile and Sprint have sparked monopoly concerns in the past.
  • Sprint and T-Mobile had floated a merger in 2014. Those plans, however, were thwarted by regulators who feared the combined company could create a monopoly. Similarly, in 2011, AT&T similarly attempted to merge with T-Mobile, a move that was also blocked by regulators.
  • A merger between T-Mobile and Sprint, if approved by regulators, would leave the U.S. telecom market with just three big players, sparking fears of a monopoly. A monopoly, generally speaking, is when one company has a lockdown on a market and can control pricing for its products and services without fear of competition.

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T-Mobile and Sprint May Merge: What That Could Mean For You https://www.stash.com/learn/t-mobile-and-sprint-may-merge-what-that-could-mean-for-you/ Mon, 30 Apr 2018 21:20:32 +0000 https://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=9514 This $27 billion move could reshape the telecom industry (and how much you pay for service).

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Two of the largest mobile carriers in the U.S. are planning to team up in a merger worth $27 billion, in a move that could reshape the telecom industry.

T-Mobile and Sprint, the nation’s third and fourth-largest mobile providers respectively, hope to create a new telecom giant, with a reported 100 million subscribers and plans to build a state-of-the art network for consumers, according to a T-Mobile press release.

The newly combined company would instantly become the second-largest mobile carrier, after Verizon, which has a reported 116 million customers. AT&T has 93 million customers, according to reports.

The details

The merged company, which will be called T-Mobile according to a company press release, is likely to be a strong competitor as the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) gets ready to auction off airwaves for an upgraded 5G network in the fall, experts say. Such networks are expected to be up to 100 times faster for consumers.

Sprint is owned by the Japanese conglomerate SoftBank. T-Mobile is owned by German telecom company Deutsche Telekom.

Would it be a monopoly?

Big mergers like this have sparked monopoly concerns in the past.

The newly combined company would instantly become the second-largest mobile carrier, after Verizon

Sprint and T-Mobile had floated a merger in 2014. Those plans, however, were thwarted by regulators who feared the combined company could create a monopoly. Similarly, in 2011, AT&T similarly attempted to merge with T-Mobile, a move that was also blocked by regulators.

A merger between T-Mobile and Sprint, if approved by regulators, would leave the the U.S. telecom market with just three big players, sparking fears of a monopoly. A monopoly, generally speaking, is when one company has a lockdown on a market and can control pricing for its products and services without fear of competition.

The merger between Sprint and T-Mobile must be approved by the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice.

Read more about monopolies.

Why are so many companies merging these days?

Mergers and acquisitions–when one company purchases another for a market advantage–are happening in numerous industries.

Companies acquire or merge with other companies to make themselves stronger market competitors. They will often merge with companies that have something they need–such as a product or service, or even customers.

Big drug-makers, for example, have been acquiring biotech companies that have developed promising treatments for cancer and other diseases. Similarly, healthcare companies and prominent retailers and drug store chains, have announced plans to merge in recent months.

Could this merger affect my cell phone bill?

Possibly. One of the chief fears about the merger, experts say, is that the combined companies may jettison their previous commitment to being a lower cost provider for cost-conscious consumers, according to reports.

“The biggest problem with this merger is that these two companies are each other’s biggest competitors for serving middle-income, budget-constrained wireless customers,” Gene Kimmelman, a former senior antitrust official at the DOJ told the New York Times.

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