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Sabtu, 13 Juli 2013

AT&T to buy Leap Wireless for $1.2 billion

Consolidation continues in the wireless industry.



After failing to land T-Mobile US, AT&T said Friday it agreed to buy

prepaid wireless provider Leap Wireless International for $15 per

share in cash.



The nation's second largest carrier will pay about $1.2 billion for

all of Leap's stock and wireless properties, including licenses,

network assets, retail stores and about 5 million subscribers.



Shares of Leap, which is based in San Diego and sells its wireless

service through the Cricket brand, rose 2.5% to end Friday at $7.98

before the news was released.



In after-hours trading, Leap shares more than doubled to $17.31.



The deal allows AT&T to quickly build its presence in the increasingly

lucrative pre-paid market. AT&T plans to retain the Cricket brand name

and will open up its fastest data network -- 4G LTE -- to Cricket

customers. It also wants to expand Cricket's presence in more U.S.

cities.



Once the deal is completed, AT&T will tap Leap's unused spectrum –

which covers 41 million people – to expand its LTE network, it said.



"The combined company will have the financial resources, scale and

spectrum to better compete with other major national providers for

customers interested in low-cost pre-paid service," AT&T said in a

statement.



Leap's network covers customers in 35 U.S. states. As of the end of

the first quarter, it had 4,63 million customers, down from 5.17

million in the year-earlier period. Its first quarter revenue fell

4.3% to $789.9 million. As of April 15, Leap had $2.8 billion of net

debt.



The deal is subject to review by the Federal Communications Commission

and the Department of Justice. AT&T expects the transaction to close

in six to nine months.



Owners of about 29.8% of Leap's outstanding shares have agreed to vote

in favor of the transaction, AT&T said.



In 2011, AT&T agreed to buy T-Mobile for $39 billion. But citing

anti-trust concerns, federal regulators quashed the deal.



SoftBank, a Japanese wireless carrier, las month completed buying

Sprint Nextel for $21.6 billion. T-Mobile, the fourth largest carrier

in the U.S., also completed its acquisition of pre-paid carrier

MetroPCS earlier this year.

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