With LightSquared deal, Sprint finally gives in to LTE

Posted by:admin Posted on:Jul 28,2011

Sprint had been last carrier to not support the standard

Sprint’s decision to strike a deal with LightSquared Thursday was a tacit admission that its early adoption of WiMax has not worked out as well as intended.


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Sprint’s initial reasoning in earmarking $5 billion to build a WiMax network was that it would give the company a time-to-market advantage of at least two years over competitors Verizon and AT&T. But when Verizon began offering its LTE services in 28 major markets at the end of last year, Sprint’s advantage of having the fastest mobile data network in the country evaporated before the company could make any substantial inroads in attracting new subscribers. Adding to Sprint’s woes was the fact that its WiMax partners at Clearwire have run into financial problems, as well as the fact that LTE has quickly become the default standard of the American wireless data industry.

ANALYSIS: Can Sprint realistically support both LTE and WiMax?

In this light, it’s easy to see why Sprint struck a deal with wireless broadband and satellite network provider LightSquared to deploy and operate a nationwide LTE network that will use a 40MHz chunk of spectrum on the 1.6GHz band. LightSquared will pay Sprint $9 billion in cash for hosting the spectrum and running the network over an 11-year period, while also giving its customers access to Sprint’s 3G EV-DO Rev. A network through a roaming agreement.

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From Sprint’s perspective, this deal means the carrier will now use both WiMax and LTE to expand the reach of its mobile data services. Even though LightSquared will be wholesaling access to the LTE network, Sprint will still have the option to enhance its own 4G capacity by purchasing “up to 50% of LightSquared’s expected L-Band 4G capacity” to use for its own services. Since Sprint already has access to significant spectrum holdings through its partnership with Clearwire, the new partnership with LightSquared means that Sprint will have an abundance of spectrum to use and plenty of flexibility in deciding what to use it for.

LightSquared, meanwhile, estimates that it will save itself “more than $13 billion over the next eight years” by having Sprint build and operate the network rather than trying to build and operate a network on its own. In all, LightSquared estimates that the network will cover roughly 260 million Americans by the end of 2015. LightSquared, which used to call itself TerraSky, has been looking to get into the LTE business since last year, when investment firm Harbinger Capital told the FCC that it had bought the company to build out a hybrid network that combined satellite technology with terrestrial technology such as LTE.

LightSquared says that the FCC still has to sign off on resolving “certain interference issues involving terrestrial use” of the spectrum that will be used for the LTE network. Opening up satellite spectrum for mobile data use has been part of the FCC’s efforts to bring mobile broadband to rural areas. In its national broadband plan released last year, the FCC declared that it wanted to free up some satellite communications spectrum for wireless data use, along with some television spectrum and unused spectrum on the 700MHz band.


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