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  1. #1
    4phun
    Guest
    Sprint Preps Price War
    http://www.thestreet.com/s/sprint-pr...l?puc=googlefi

    By Scott Moritz
    Senior Writer
    1/18/2008 5:10 PM EST

    Sprint's pain will soon hurt rivals as the wounded telco readies for a
    price war.

    New Sprint chief Dan Hesse is busy picking a new management team and
    rewriting a strategy to lift the No. 3 wireless shop out of its
    subscriber-shedding nose dive. Hesse has already put a freeze on new
    developments in the company's bold move into fourth-generation network
    technology called WiMax.

    Among the next steps being considered, say people familiar with the
    company, is a speed-up of the network migration of Nextel's iDEN users
    to CDMA, and a possible sale of the iDEN network.

    But another move could make waves for the otherwise smooth-sailing
    wireless industry: Sprint is likely to overhaul its pricing plans in
    an effort to keep and win back customers.

    With more than two out of three people in the U.S. already using cell
    phones, the number of potential customers is limited and growth has
    slowed . And increasingly, one company's growth will have to come from
    another company's user roster.

    Price-cutting in wireless is almost nonexistent. Instead of lowering
    prices, telcos have preferred to boost monthly minutes in their
    promotions. That may soon change, say observers.

    In desperation, Sprint could cut its monthly service charges, or, in a
    move dreaded by other players, the company could adopt fixed-rate
    unlimited-usage programs similar to smaller telcos like Leap Wireless
    or MetroPCS .

    The speculation comes as Sprint said Friday that it was slashing 4,000
    workers and closing 125 stores in an effort to bring costs down.
    Sprint says it will take a charge of about $200 million, or roughly
    $50,000 for each employee it sends off with severance pay.

    The Reston, Va., telco says the cost cuts will save an estimated $750
    million in annual expenses.

    Sprint's struggles date back to a botched merger with Nextel and the
    exodus of big-spending Nextel customers. The decline of Sprint and
    Nextel has served the competition well.

    Both AT&T (T - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) and Verizon Wireless --
    jointly owned by Verizon and Vodafone -- will have very strong
    subscriber numbers later this month.

    But good times may not last. Verizon was down $1.82 to $39.09 Friday
    in the wake of Sprint's announcement.

    Investors, already concerned that the free-spending consumer has put a
    lock on the money as the economy cools, are starting to take cover
    ahead of a damaging price battle in wireless.




    See More: Rumor: Price War About to Erupt in Cellular




  2. #2
    larry
    Guest

    Re: Rumor: Price War About to Erupt in Cellular

    4phun <[email protected]> wrote in news:cdf480de-2269-4320-ba2d-
    [email protected]:

    > Among the next steps being considered, say people familiar with the
    > company, is a speed-up of the network migration of Nextel's iDEN users
    > to CDMA, and a possible sale of the iDEN network.
    >


    The iDen customers will NEVER accept the ****ty poor CDMA walkie-talkie
    service from any carrier. CDMA was never a trunk radio service, no matter
    how you spin it. But, for iDen to work, it has to have TOWERS that Nextel
    never installed. Guys pulling wires through crawlspaces under houses need
    those towers Nextel never installed to make it work right.

    Duhh......(c;




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