It’s not yet time for Sprint to pop
the champagne corks but the carrier has averted a financial crisis by
mortgaging some of its 2.5 GHz spectrum. Wall Street gives the carrier
credit for the move which buys time to pay off creditors.
Sprint proposed a $3.5 billion sale
and leaseback; the spectrum it’s mortgaging is being used in about 77
percent of its 2.5 GHz-enabled sites and 33 percent of its 1.9
GHz-enabled sites, according to Bloomberg. It’s
the third and final part of the plan by SoftBank Group Corp. owner
Masayoshi Son to use special-purpose entities to turn key assets into
cash.
Sprint has staved off creditors for
the moment but still has work ahead. Gimme Credit analyst Dave Novosel
called the move “a great short-term solution … but they are going to
need to generate cash flow to pay off these debts.”
The number four wireless carrier has
$37 billion in debt, seven years of losses and a mature wireless market
requiring promotions and price cutting to retain customers, according to
analysts. CEO Marcelo Claure has said if the company is revived it
would be “the greatest turnaround in history.”
Claure took over in 2014, and has dramatically cut prices, sometimes offering half off his competitors’ rates, according to Bloomberg. Recently he cut Sprint’s unlimited family plan to $140 for four people, compared with $160 at T-Mobile.
But while the lowered rates help
retain customers, they’re not enhancing Sprint’s bottom line. “At some
point you have to start attracting customers without giving away the
store,” said Novosel. Continue Reading
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