Bidding stalls again on key U.S. wireless Airwaves
Posted on Tue, 5 Feb 2008 23:46:42 CST | by Luigi Lugmayr
More News Ticker News
By Peter Kaplan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Bidding stalled on Tuesday in the closely watched auction
of a piece of wireless airwaves that the U.S. government is selling, according
to data released by the Federal Communications Commission.
There were no new offers for the nationwide "C" block slice of wireless spectrum
to top previous high bids totaling $4.74 billion.
Tuesday's pause prompted speculation that bidding for the C block spectrum may
have run its course, and that the most likely possible winner could be either
Verizon Wireless or Internet search leader Google Inc .
Bidders' identities are kept secret until the entire auction ends, under FCC
rules. The end won't come until bidding has stopped on all five blocks of
spectrum up for sale in the auction, which will probably take at least another
week or two.
The $4.74 billion in bids for eight regional pieces of the C block airwaves on
Monday surpassed a $4.71 billion offer made last Thursday for a nationwide
package of the spectrum.
Stifel Nicolaus analyst Rebecca Arbogast said there were several possible
scenarios as to what companies had bid on the C block airwaves.
The most likely of those, she said, is that Verizon Wireless pushed the C block
bids up to $4.74 billion on Monday in order to top an earlier bid by Google.
It was also possible that the earlier, $4.71 billion offer was made by Verizon
Wireless, and that another competitor is aiming to force Verizon to up its bid,
Arbogast said.
Bidding on the C block had temporarily stalled on Friday after Thursday's $4.71
billion offer. That bid exceeded a $4.64 billion minimum price set by the FCC
and triggered a condition sought by Google that would require the winner to make
the spectrum accessible to any device or software application.
Analysts have said Google may drop out of the bidding after hitting the minimum
price, content to let Verizon acquire the C block spectrum as long as the
open-access conditions are guaranteed.
The C block is one of five groups of 700-megahertz spectrum being offered. The
top bids on Tuesday totaled almost $18.94 billion for all five blocks, raising
more money than any previous FCC auction.
The 700-megahertz signals are valuable because they can go long distances and
penetrate thick walls. The airwaves are being returned by television
broadcasters as they move to digital from analog signals in early 2009.
Other potential bidders in the auction that began January 24 range from
entrenched carriers AT&T Inc and Verizon Wireless, to possible new competitors
like Google, EchoStar Communications Corp and Cablevision Systems Corp .
Verizon Wireless is a joint venture of Verizon Communications Inc and Vodafone
Group Plc .
(Reporting by Peter Kaplan; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Posted on Tue, 5 Feb 2008 23:46:42 CST | by Luigi Lugmayr
I4U Gadget Models
I4U News Product Reviews
All I4U News Categories
Hot Gadgets
- Nikon D700 available for Pre-Order
2008-07-04 07:54:20
- God of War Sony PSP is red hot
2008-07-04 00:36:40
- Redecorate with the cool Nintendo Wall Graphics
2008-07-02 03:40:12
- JVC NX-PN7 docks iPod and iPhone at the same Time
2008-06-26 00:49:02
- Sony HDR-CX12 unveiled
2008-06-19 00:03:44
- KumoTek KT-X Humanoid Robot Kit
2008-05-28 05:00:00
More Gadgets
Subscribe to I4U Gadget Flyer
Stay in touch with our weekly round-up of the Top 10 Technology stories with our free newsletter.

More stories