Trump is approving an anti-competitive merger that will cost you money

Zippyjuan

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https://www.vox.com/2019/7/29/8932025/trump-sprint-tmobile-hotel

Sprint/ T-Mobile merger. It would reduce phone service providers from four to three.

Sprint and T-Mobile, the No. 3 and No. 4 mobile phone companies in the United States, got the green light from the Trump administration on Friday to merge, a baffling decision that’s bad for ordinary Americans but suspiciously good for Donald Trump.

Sprint and T-Mobile currently compete at the lower end of the marketplace, offering cheaper prices for somewhat inferior networks compared to Verizon and AT&T. Merged, they’ll be able to raise their prices without losing market share.

In turn, this will reduce competitive pressure on Verizon and AT&T. Whether that reduced competition manifests itself in higher prices, less favorable terms of service, or slower investment in the next generation of improved technology is difficult to forecast. Regardless, going from four national mobile network service providers to three is clearly going to be bad for consumers — especially because the nature of this market is that it’s extremely difficult for a new competitor to just waltz in.

Nonetheless, Trump’s Justice Department — the same Justice Department that previously sought to block a much less obviously problematic telecom industry merger — decided to approve the purchase.

The overall idea is so obviously unsound that the conditions under which the merger was approved involve a convoluted effort to turn Dish, the satellite television company, into a fourth national mobile provider. But if maintaining the existence of a fourth provider is important (and it is!), then the solution is obvious: block the merger.

One has to suspect that Trump’s close ties to Sprint’s Japanese owner and T-Mobile’s sudden interest in patronizing Trump’s hotels may have played a role. What’s more, the decision to approve the merger casts a suspect light on the Trump DOJ’s earlier effort to stop AT&T from buying Time Warner, making that look more like political retaliation against CNN than sober antitrust analysis.

T-Mobile’s fitful relationship with competition, explained

To understand the context for the deal, it’s important to know that Sprint and T-Mobile, though both second-tier players in the US mobile phone market, are both part of much larger global conglomerates.

T-Mobile, in particular, is the US subsidiary of a German company called Telekom that once upon a time was Deutsche Telekom, the state-owned telecommunications utility of West Germany. Way back in 2001, Telekom decided to enter the US market by buying a company called VoiceStream Wireless and rebranding it as T-Mobile.

After nearly 10 years of experimentation, Telekom reached the conclusion that the return on investment of being a second-tier player in the US wasn’t worth it. It wanted to sell the company (and its considerable assets in terms of infrastructure, stores, and built-in customer base) to someone else and then plow the cash into investing in its core markets or dividends for its shareholders.

In theory, you could simply spin off the company and sell it to anyone with cash. But as a freestanding company, T-Mobile is only modestly profitable — stuck with an inferior network to the big two and locked into competition with Sprint at the low end. The ideal customer for T-Mobile, from Telekom’s viewpoint, would be an existing player in the industry for whom it would make sense to overpay for T-Mobile because of the benefits of reduced competition.

In 2011, it found a willing taker for that deal in the form of AT&T — but DOJ and the Federal Communications Commission, acting as custodians of the public interest, wouldn’t let them.

And competition worked. Forced to try to make the best of things, T-Mobile adopted a new “uncarrier” strategy that helped drive down mobile phone prices and force Verizon to offer an unlimited data plan. Meanwhile, though T-Mobile’s return on investment continued to be less than what the bosses back in Germany wanted, the company was making money.

When Sprint announced in the spring of 2018 that it was going to merge with T-Mobile, the company’s stock fell immediately because markets’ instinct was to say the deal would never be approved. After all, not only had the AT&T deal set a precedent but the precedent turned out to be successful. What would change?

Sprint, T-Mobile, and the DOJ have a weird plan
The reason that allowing the United States to go from four mobile phone providers to three providers is okay, according to the Justice Department, is that they have a plan to create a fourth competitor.

Specifically, Dish, the satellite television company — which already owns the minor player Boost Mobile — is also going to acquire Sprint’s prepaid subsidiary Virgin Mobile. What’s more, the new merged T-Mobile has committed to giving Dish seven years’ worth of access to its infrastructure to resell. That means that while there will be only three companies with a national mobile phone infrastructure, there will be four sellers of that infrastructure. Boost, meanwhile, is supposed to spend that seven-year window building out its own infrastructure. So ultimately, there will be four players after all and everything will be okay.

This definitely might work.

But it’s a bit of an odd bankshot solution to a problem when there’s a very straightforward alternative — don’t allow the merger. If you don’t allow the merger, then there will definitely be four competitors standing. If Dish wants to get into the mobile phone business and Sprint wants to merge with someone, maybe Sprint can merge with Dish (the other major satellite TV player, DirectTV, is already owned by AT&T). But fundamentally, the government doesn’t need to micromanage the details. It just needs to say that in order to preserve the principle of four mobile competitors, it’s not going to let any of the four players merge.

It’s simple. But in the Trump era, nothing is simple.

There are a lot of questions about Trump and antitrust

The Trump Justice Department has now made big conflicting decisions on antitrust that seem very hard to explain in terms of legal or economic analysis but easy to explain in terms of the president’s personal interests.

In November 2017, the Trump Justice Department somewhat unexpectedly sued to block AT&T from buying Time Warner. When that deal was initially announced in Obama’s final year in office, it was the subject of a fair amount of political controversy, but most legal experts expected the deal to be approved.

This was basically a so-called “vertical” merger between companies in related industries that didn't compete directly with each other, and the Justice Department normally approves such deals. But there’s been a lot of interest in recent years in strengthening antitrust enforcement, and plenty of people (including me) thought the Trump administration had this right on the merits.

The precedent AT&T cited for the deal was the Obama DOJ’s approval of Comcast buying NBCUniversal (which is one of several major investors in Vox Media), which was allowed to go forward under the stipulation that Comcast would abide by a laundry list of conditions. In practice, however, enforcing those conditions has proved difficult, so the idea that a simpler solution — block the deal — would be better made some sense.

But critics alleged that Trump was simply looking to retaliate against Time Warner for what he saw as unfair coverage by CNN, which Time Warner owns. That issue did not directly present itself in court, but the judge ruled in favor of the merger. Subsequent reporting by Jane Mayer indicates that Trump did order then-Chief of Staff John Kelly to have the merger blocked in order to punish CNN. In Mayer’s telling, however, economic adviser Gary Cohn subsequently told Kelly not to give the DOJ that order. Whether Kelly listened to Trump or to Cohn is unclear, though it’s also clear that Trump’s appointees at the Justice Department could have known the president’s views on this matter simply by reading his tweets.

Regardless of exactly what happened back then, it’s certainly difficult to understand why the administration would object to a gray area merger proposal on the grounds that conduct remedies had proven too hard to enforce and then approve a clearly anti-competitive merger on the grounds that a complicated series of conduct remedies will make it work.

Raising further eyebrows is that Masayoshi Son, the chair of Sprint’s Japanese parent company SoftBank, has been aggressively courting Trump since the lame-duck era, lavishing him with praise and visits.

SoftBank has very close business ties to the government of Saudi Arabia. Trump has only vetoed five bills during his time in office, and four of them were about bipartisan efforts to distance the United States from Saudi Arabia. His finances are opaque, but he appears to have gotten a fair amount of Saudi money through his hotels.

And T-Mobile suddenly became a big customer at Trump’s hotels once it needed approval for a merger.

More at link.
 
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Trump intervenes in the economy.. zippy posts negative media coverage

Trump is not intervening in the economy.. zippy posts negative media coverage
 
Are these run through the president? I would have thought this type of thing was handled at a lower level.
 
https://www.theverge.com/2019/3/5/18251722/t-mobile-trump-hotel-washington-sprint-merger-lobbying

T-Mobile admits it spent $195,000 on Trump’s hotel while lobbying for Sprint merger

T-Mobile has admitted that after it began lobbying for a merger with Sprint, it started to book stays for top executives at President Donald Trump’s Washington hotel. Over ten months, T-Mobile spent a total of $195,000 at the Trump hotel, it detailed in a letter to Congress Democrats last month that was seen by The Washington Post.

Last April, T-Mobile announced it was merging with Sprint. But for the merger to go through, it still needs the Trump administration to give its approval, as well as the Federal Communications Commission. In January, The Washington Post found that just a day after the merger was announced, the carrier booked nine T-Mobile executives to stay at Trump’s hotel. While at the hotel, the executives wore bright magenta shirts with the company logo.

The flurry of booking activity was a sharp contrast to T-Mobile’s previous hotel reservation patterns. The company had only purchased stays at Trump’s hotel for two officials in the past, staying for only two nights. Since the merger, the carrier has booked the hotel for at least 52 nights.

But may have actually stayed at a different hotel while paying for rooms in Trump's hotel:

https://bgr.com/2019/01/16/t-mobile-trump-hotel-booked-execs-sprint-merger/

The day after the merger announcement last year, Trump’s DC hotel prepared to welcome what a list denoted as “VIP Arrivals” from T-Mobile. Legere’s name on that list was shown with an “R” after it, which let the hotel’s staff know he’s a repeat visitor. Legere has also been seen chatting at the hotel with former Trump presidential campaign manager Corey Lewandowski.

After the Post cornered him last week in the lobby, Legere apparently quickly checked out and shifted to a different DC property. His Twitter followers knew about it, because Legere started tweeting about the bar at the Four Seasons in Georgetown.
 
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3 bad 4 good, shouldn't we have 5, no wait 25 carriers?
 
3 bad 4 good, shouldn't we have 5, no wait 25 carriers?

Let's go for the monopoly. One carrier. They charge as much as you can pay. No competition so there is no incentive to offer any lower prices. Free market solution?
 
Let's go for the monopoly. One carrier. They charge as much as you can pay. No competition so there is no incentive to offer any lower prices. Free market solution?

So in other words, three won't compete for customers? Only 4 can do that?
 
Since I don't have a cell phone and even if I did I would not go with sprint or t mobile. A lot of people are starting to live without cell phone so they may have to become competitive.
 
I use tracfone and piggy back off ALL carriers. Spend about $250 a year and get reception and download anywhere that others, regardless of carrier, do. Can have one friend on Verizon not get any signal. A friend on Sprint get it. I get it. In another local the friend on Verizon gets it. The friend on Sprint doesn't. I get it.

Don't care.
 
I was a long time customer of Sprint, mainly because they had unlimited data. Then T-Mobile offered that plus a huge Military discount. I switched. T-Mobile customer service is fantastic, Sprint, not so much.
 

Well , he is probably talking about the Lounge . The steak is pretty good at the bar in Georgetown at the four seasons , nice leather chairs . If the weather is nice you can go out by the fire pit . You can get breakfast to 11:00 through the week . Lounge is open 2:30 pm to Midnight on Sun and midnight the rest of the week but to 1:00 am on Fri & Sat .
 
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I was a long time customer of Sprint, mainly because they had unlimited data. Then T-Mobile offered that plus a huge Military discount. I switched. T-Mobile customer service is fantastic, Sprint, not so much.

Around here AT & T has dead spots and it and verizon have crappy customer service and are expensive . My two business phones run over 100 a month and one hardly gets used. That is verizon and it was the same with AT & T.
 
Around here AT & T has dead spots and it and verizon have crappy customer service and are expensive . My two business phones run over 100 a month and one hardly gets used. That is verizon and it was the same with AT & T.

Do tracfone. It piggy backs off other carriers. I've never had a dead spot except in places I go specifically to have a dead spot. Don't even need a "plan." Buy it as you need it.

You can buy last years "best" phone for $50 bucks. Then add minutes, data, etc.
 
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Around here AT & T has dead spots and it and verizon have crappy customer service and are expensive . My two business phones run over 100 a month and one hardly gets used. That is verizon and it was the same with AT & T.


T-Mobile has unlimited roaming also. So you can use other networks. It also works in foreign countries. Free data and text. Voice $0.25 a minute, but if you are connected to WiFi, it is free.
 
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