Iraq plans to award mobile network license
According to Iraq’s Minister of Communications, Farouq Abdul-Qadir Abdulrahman, Iraq is planning to award the previously announced fourth mobile network license in the first quarter of next year. The new operator will be expected to provide competitive rates to existing operators, as the war-torn country focuses on improving telecom services.
Fifteen companies, including USA-based Verizon Communications, South Africa’s MTN, Turkcell, UAE’s Etisalat, France Telecom, and Vodafone had expressed an interest so far.
It emerges that the license has already officially been awarded to the state-owned Iraqi Telecommunications and Posts Co (ITPC), and the government is now looking for outside investors to build the network.
The country has three operators, Zain, Asiacell and Korek Telecom.
Verizon plans landline business spinoff on July 1 (USA)
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Land line business of Verizon Communications Inc will be spinoff in 13 states plus parts of California. According to the company, the record date for the planned spinoff of New Communications Holdings Inc., a subsidiary of Verizon, to Verizon stockholders will be June 7.
The sale of the landline operations of Verizon to Frontier Communications Corp resulted in the formation of New Communications.
Verizon stockholders will collectively own between about 66 percent and 71 percent of the shares of Frontier and Frontier stockholders after the spinoff.
Vodafone eyes emerging markets, especially east
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Vodafone has emerged more powerful and stronger under the leadership of Vittorio Colao, the chief executive of the company. He announced that the UK mobile phone group will increase its dividend by at least 7 per cent during each of the coming three years.
Colao took over the charge of Vodafone in 2008 with an aim to extract better performances from the group’s existing businesses and his commitment has been recognized by some of the investors. Vodafone’s fourth-quarter and full-year results for 2009-10 came as signal that Colao’s efforts to improve the group’s businesses are at best a work in progress and it also matched analysts’ predictions.
2.6 per cent fall in the revenue paid by Vodafone’s UK customers has been recorded in the three months to March 31 compared with the same period last year, a remarkable improvement as compared to the previous three quarters. Vodafone starting to sell Apple’s popular iPhone in the UK in January was also partially responsible for operator’s better performance.
However, the company still lags behind its competitors wherein O2, the second-largest operator, recorded revenue growth of 3.1 per cent in the three months to March 31. There is also uncertainty about the economic recovery means that it is not relying on its European businesses to fuel rising group sales but looking towards the emerging markets. Search for growth in the emerging market began way back when Vodafone purchased Turkish business in 2005 for $4.6bn and the initiative was taken by the then CEO of the company, Arun Sarin.
Vodafone’s purchase of a controlling stake in India’s fourth-largest mobile operator in 2007 for $10.9bn was also the product of Sarin’s mind and now under Colao’s leadership, Vodafone’s Indian business has become the country’s second-largest mobile operator by revenue.
Colao also highlighted that if dividend payments resume at Verizon Wireless, there are prospects of higher remuneration for shareholders in the future but the company has not received a Verizon Wireless dividend since 2005 because payments were blocked by Verizon Communications.
Verizon’s profit decreased in 2009
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: The 2009 profit of Verizon Communications has gone below Wall Street forecasts. In the year 2009, new subscribers and those upgrading phones accounted for a higher proportion of its overall customer base as compared to the year before, while the traditional phone business continued to suffer the setback.
According to Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg, 53 cents to 55 cents per share, excluding special items is expected by the company in the fourth quarter. Income of $2.39 to $2.41 per share is expected for the whole year. However, 58 cents per share for the quarter and $2.44 per share for the full year was predicted by Thomson Reuters.
4G hotspots to be launched by Sprint in 10 cities
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Becoming the first one to offer so-called 4G wireless services, Sprint Nextel Corp. is ready to introduce a new device that brings super high-speed wireless Internet service. Known as Overdrive, the device enables PCs, smartphones, games consoles to connect to Internet via operator’s mobile network.
The overdrive will cost $99.99 while the data will cost $60 per month and is ready to be launched in 10 cities by next week. According to Sprint Chief Executive Dan Hesse, 27 wireless markets covering about 30 million people are currently covered by the company’s 4G services.
Sprint reported losing more than half-a-million subscribers and the company is also struggling to compete with large rivals AT&T Corp. and Verizon Communications Inc.
