Published: August 02, 2011
Yankee Group to FCC: AT&T/T-Mobile Merger Will Result in Higher Prices
BOSTON - (BUSINESS WIRE) - AT&T's proposed $39 billion purchase of T-Mobile USA will have a
negative impact on consumers, warns a new report released by leading
mobility research firm Yankee
Group. After analyzing Yankee Group consumer data and using the U.S.
Department of Justice's (DoJ's) market concentration metrics, Yankee
Group contends the merger will increase market concentration, decrease
competition and raise average mobile prices in the most heavily
populated U.S. wireless markets. The firm urges the FCC to block the
merger unless it plans to take a stronger regulatory stance.
"We believe this merger will reduce choice for consumers and, more
importantly, leave little incentive for AT&T to offer competitive
pricing for unbundled mobile services," said Gigi
Wang, Yankee Group's chief research officer and co-author of the
report, "AT&T/T-Mobile
Merger: More Market Concentration, Less Choice, Higher Prices."
The report also concludes the AT&T/T-Mobile merger would:
-
Give AT&T more than a 50 percent market share in five major markets:
Dallas, Houston, Miami, San Francisco and St. Louis.
-
Grow the number of highly concentrated top 27 cellular markets from 1
to 17, reducing network choices in those markets.
-
Increase mobile phone bills in seven major markets: Seattle and
Houston would see mean increases of more than $5 per month, and
Boston, Dallas, Los Angeles, Miami and New York would see increases of
less than $5 per month.
Yankee Group recommends the FCC:
-
Think creatively about divesture remedies. To reintroduce
competition in highly concentrated markets, the DoJ and FCC should
consider creating a new mobile service provider from smaller
competitors or requiring the merged companies to cede a portion of
their customers to a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) operating
on their network.
-
Regulate unbundled wireless tariffs. The FCC should regulate
the maximum rates carriers can charge for unbundled wireless services.
Otherwise, national carriers can easily extend their market
concentration in wireless to service bundles of wireless and
non-wireless services.
-
Enforce mandatory, reasonable data roaming rates. New
requirements for reasonable data roaming rates went into effect in
June 2011 and both Verizon and AT&T are protesting those requirements.
With data-hungry smartphones making up the majority of new phone
purchases and national network carriers reluctant to provide network
access, the FCC must ensure that smaller regional carriers can compete
by enforcing these mandatory reasonable data roaming fees.
"We think that the FCC and DoJ now have to step up to the plate and
regulate," said Carl
Howe, research director at Yankee Group and co-author of the report.
"Our research shows that the U.S. wireless market is maturing into a
duopoly. While agencies were reluctant to regulate too strongly in years
past because they didn't want to upset a nascent marketplace, those days
are now over; it's now time to get back into the game."
To download a complimentary copy of the report, visit http://web.yankeegroup.com/2011ATTT-MobileMerger-Registration.html
About Yankee Group
Yankee
Group is the preeminent research and advisory firm equipping
enterprises to profit in a mobile world. The core of our content is
proprietary research and analytics on the attitudes, behaviors and usage
patterns of mobile users. Based on this research, we provide actionable
data, insights and advice to marketing, strategy and product executives
driving the mobility revolution in leading companies worldwide.

Yankee Group communications
Shirley Macbeth, +1-617-598-7385
mediarelations@yankeegroup.com
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