Newsletter
Google Left Banner
700 MHz Auction Slows to a Trickle
25 Feb, 2008
The 700 MHz auction has slowed considerably, leading some to believe this may be the last week of the auction. At the conclusion of round 105, there were 1,090 provisional winning bids among 1,089 provisional winning bidders, for a total of $19,524,595,900 billion bid. Action on the nationwide C block has long since ended, and it appears the regional bidding for the “nationwide” C block will prevail. The C block spectrum can be won in one of two ways, either as a single nationwide license, or broken into 8 “regional” licenses that cover the entire nation. Whichever approach receives the most money, one nationwide bid, or the collective eight regional bids will win. The D block, which has the mandated public safety provision, has only received one bid of $472 million, which is well below the FCC reserve price of $1.3 billion. It will probably be reauctioned at a later date. The remaining activity is centered in the E and B blocks.
Reply
About Telecompetitor
- Verizon Hopes to Rain on iPhone Parade with its Own Storm
- Qwest Launches Unified Communications
- Should Telephone Service be Free?
- Charter Giving Away a Hybrid Car with "Save Green Go Green" Online Sweepstakes
- Verizon Joins Tech Support Parade
- AT&T U-verse TV and AccuWeather.Com Debut Weather On Demand
- Wal-Mart to Begin Selling IPTV
Channel
Events
Upcoming events which offer competitive insight and analysis:
Mobile Internet World
Oct 21 - 23, 2008 - Boston, MA
TelcoTV Conference and Expo
Nov 11-13, 2008 - Anaheim, CA
NTCA Wireless Symposium
Jan 7-9, 2009 - Austin, TX
Featured Article
Time to Prepare for DOCSIS 3.0 is Now
07 Aug, 2008Second quarter results for broadband growth were a tad underwhelming. There are any number of factors which probably contributed to this slowdown, with the economic slowdown and housing crisis certainly towards the top of the list. But growth is also slowing because broadband penetration has grown considerably over the past few years, now ranging somewhere between 50% to 60% (depending on who you ask), and is beginning to slow down. There certainly is more room for growth, but at some point in the near future, broadband penetration will slow even more as it approaches saturation. It’s anyone’s guess what saturation is, but I would bet somewhere around 75% penetration of households (as a national average - individual markets will vary widely). From a service provider’s point of view, that suggests that posting continuing net adds of broadband customers will increasingly involve convincing a competitor's broadband customer base to switch service.

digg this story
google
