Optus snaps up 3G spectrum from Qualcomm
Optus snaps up 3G spectrum from Qualcomm
Nicole McCormick |
February 08, 2010
telecomseurope.net
Thumbnail:

SingTel-owned Optus has doubled its 2100MHz spectrum pool in Australia’s eight capital cities, buying 10MHz of the prized 3G spectrum from Qualcomm-controlled 3G Investments Australia.
The deal is subject to approval from the Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC).
In 2001, Optus paid A$206 million (€130.7 million) at auction for 10Mhz of spectrum at 2100 MHz.
An Optus source told The Australian that the price it paid Qualcomm – which picked up its untouched 10 Mhz spectrum block during 2001’s 3G auction – was roughly in line with its A$206 million auction price on a straight line depreciation basis.
“The purchase of 10Mhz of 2100Mhz spectrum is illustrative of how Optus is building further capacity in its mobile network to meet the explosive growth in demand for data services,” Optus managing director of products and delivery, Andrew Buay, told The Australian.
“We plan to maximize this additional spectrum to support the future growth of 3G mobile services among our retail and wholesale customer base,” he said.
“We think it was important for Optus to get the 2100MHz spectrum [from Qualcomm],” Ovum’s Australian mobile analyst, Nathan Burley, told telecomasia.net.
“If you look at all the spectrum bands – 850MHz, 900MHz, 800MHz, 2100MHz - Optus was the most spectrum constrained,” he said.
Qualcomm is believed to have been trying to sell its 2100MHz block for some time, but was waiting for the right price.
The fact that Telstra shied away from the Qualcomm-owned block could suggest that it is confident it will be able to take part in the coming “digital dividend” spectrum allocation, a planned sale of 2.5GHz spectrum.
The government has threatened to block Telstra’s participation in both auctions in the event that it does not agree to the government’s structural separation plans.
Source:
Similar
Tell Us What You Think
Recent popular content
News Today Title Only
Video from Telecom Channel
The real Blyk story told here
Blyk’s advertising funded model has changed from being MVNO retail based to a wholesale model being taken up by mobile operators that are seen by some quarters as an 'unnecessary evil'
read more
analystwire_opinion_blog
Frontpage Content by Category
Industry experts forecast trends in a decade. One key theme: the hardest decisions will not be about technologies, but the business models to monetize them
features_industryview
Frontpage Content by Category with Image
Frontpage Content by Category with Image
Qualcomm
How wireless operators will win by putting consumers in control of their mobile content experience.
How wireless operators will win by putting consumers in control of their mobile content experience.
Genesys
Learn how to optimize service delivery—both within and outside the contact center—to improve customer loyalty and reduce churn.
Learn how to optimize service delivery—both within and outside the contact center—to improve customer loyalty and reduce churn.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Digg
0 comments











