You choose, we deliver
If you are interested in this story, you might be interested in others from The Journal Gazette. Go to www.journalgazette.net/newsletter and pick the subjects you care most about. We'll deliver your customized daily news report at 3 a.m. Fort Wayne time, right to your email.

Technology

  • HP to slash its workforce
    Hewlett-Packard Co. plans to jettison 27,000 workers as the growing popularity of smartphones, the iPad and other mobile devices makes it tougher for the company to sell personal computers.
  • Facebook stock lacks friends, hits the skids
    Facebook’s stock is tumbling well below its $38 IPO price in the social network’s second day of trading as a public company on Monday. Facebook’s stock closed at $34.03, down 11 percent from Friday’s closing price of $38.23.
  • Apple said to launch thinner, faster laptops
    Apple is preparing a new lineup of thinner MacBook laptops running on more powerful chips made by Intel, people with knowledge of the plans said.
Advertisement

AT&T drops T-Mobile bid

To spend $4 billion to abandon merger feds opposed

– AT&T Inc. is bowing out of its $39 billion bid to buy smaller wireless provider T-Mobile USA after the U.S. government tried to block the deal over concerns it would raise prices, reduce innovation and give customers fewer choices.

Monday’s announcement came as little surprise after the Justice Department sued to block the merger on Aug. 31. The deal looked further in jeopardy when the Federal Communications Commission’s chairman also came out against it. The companies withdrew their FCC application last month.

Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett said the announcement was “a bit of an anticlimax.”

“This is like receiving the divorce papers for a couple that’s been separated for years,” he said.

AT&T’s purchase of T-Mobile from Deutsche Telekom of Germany, announced in March, would have made it the largest cellphone company in the U.S. T-Mobile is currently the fourth-largest.

AT&T, the nation’s second-largest wireless carrier behind Verizon Wireless, will now have to pay Deutsche Telekom $3 billion in cash as a breakup fee and give it about $1 billion worth of airwaves, known as spectrum, that AT&T doesn’t need for the continued rollout of its high-speed “4G” network.

It will also enter into a roaming agreement with Deutsche Telekom so that AT&T’s and T-Mobile’s customers can use each other’s networks.

AT&T will book the $4 billion charge to its earnings in the fourth quarter.

In pulling out, AT&T said the government’s attempts to block the deal do not change the challenges of the wireless phone industry, which has been clamoring for more airwaves to expand. The company said the deal would have solved that problem for a time, and without it, “customers will be harmed and needed investment will be stifled.” It called on the government to quickly approve its purchase of unused spectrum from Qualcomm Inc. and come up with legislation to meet the nation’s long-term needs. Many people, however, believe that AT&T had overstated the spectrum crisis.