Sprint, T-Mobile merger under consideration again, given change in US regulatory climate
After laying fallow for two and a half years, the proposed merger between T-Mobile and Sprint may be lurching back to life, given the change in the U.S. government, and a new willingness by SoftBank to cede control of Sprint to the combined company's master.

According to sources familiar with the matter cited by Reuters, the possible merger between SoftBank-owned Sprint and Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile is under consideration again. To solidify the deal, and potentially ease the progression of the transaction through U.S. regulators, SoftBank is willing to surrender control of Sprint.
SoftBank has not started negotiations for the possible blockbuster deal. U.S. Federal Communications Commission rules strictly prohibit discussions of nearly any sort during an open broadcast spectrum auction -- which is currently underway, and will conclude in April.
"We may buy, we may sell. Maybe a simple merger." said SoftBank Chief Executive Masayoshi Son during the most recent quarterly earnings conference call. "we may be dealing with T-Mobile, we may be dealing with totally different people, different company,"
Deutsche Telekom, majority owners of T-Mobile, was reportedly open in the summer of 2014 to offers for its U.S. operation for a mostly-cash deal. Discussions were reportedly near-final, with capital ear-marked and financing plans in place for the merger, which would have brought together the third and fourth largest mobile providers in the U.S.
In August 2014, following months of rumors and speculation, Sprint dropped the bid for T-Mobile after assessing regulatory hurdles as insurmountable.

According to sources familiar with the matter cited by Reuters, the possible merger between SoftBank-owned Sprint and Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile is under consideration again. To solidify the deal, and potentially ease the progression of the transaction through U.S. regulators, SoftBank is willing to surrender control of Sprint.
SoftBank has not started negotiations for the possible blockbuster deal. U.S. Federal Communications Commission rules strictly prohibit discussions of nearly any sort during an open broadcast spectrum auction -- which is currently underway, and will conclude in April.
"We may buy, we may sell. Maybe a simple merger." said SoftBank Chief Executive Masayoshi Son during the most recent quarterly earnings conference call. "we may be dealing with T-Mobile, we may be dealing with totally different people, different company,"
Deutsche Telekom, majority owners of T-Mobile, was reportedly open in the summer of 2014 to offers for its U.S. operation for a mostly-cash deal. Discussions were reportedly near-final, with capital ear-marked and financing plans in place for the merger, which would have brought together the third and fourth largest mobile providers in the U.S.
In August 2014, following months of rumors and speculation, Sprint dropped the bid for T-Mobile after assessing regulatory hurdles as insurmountable.
Comments
There are effectively four cell providers in the US. Yes, there are a few regionals, but they're small enough to be almost irrelevant to be any meaningful competition for the big players.
Unregulated capitalism inevitably descends into monopoly, and monopoly is always bad for consumers. If this happens, expect higher prices and slower service expansion.
Alternative reality field detected.
Except it's really, really not. To think otherwise is to completely ignore reality. In the airline industry we now have an oligopoly and certain airfares have gone way up. I run group trips and we can no longer get group discounts because the airlines have merged to the point of being in full control of the market and having all the power in negotations; we can't go somewhere else. Then look at the recent competition in the cellular market, with all of them now rushing to match T-Mobile's unlimited data plans. If the market constricted, all those deals would go away. Why do you think otherwise? What *DATA* do you have other than your opinion and "the free market is always best" brainwashing?