AT&T continues to weigh up a takeover for a major European operator, with its CEO Randall Stephenson claiming the market conditions and slow rollout of 4G on the continent represent a huge opportunity for investment.
The US operator has previously hinted at European expansion, and has been linked with rumoured purchase of Telefonica, EE and speculation regarding a bid for Vodafone is increasing now it has sold its stake in Verizon Wireless for $130 billion.
AT&T has apparently debated entering the European market for the last decade, but now believes that conditions are more favourable for expansion than those in the US.
In contrast, the majority of smartphone users in the US are already on these contracts, raising fears of market saturation.
However, according to The Times, Stephenson says regulatory changes would be needed if the European market was to come out of its slump and has called for longer spectrum licences to increase investor confidence. Vodafone has attributed much of its recent struggle in southern Europe to regulations that limit how much it can charge for certain services.
Stephenson is throwing his weight behind EU proposals to harmonise spectrum allocation and says it would make it easier to break into different European markets.
AT&T’s desire to expand into Europe could be fuelled by its 2011 failure to acquire T-Mobile USA for £25 billion due to regulatory concerns from the Federal Communications Commission and the Department of Justice.
Who are Britain’s mobile operators? Try our quiz!
Troubled chip giant Intel will invest more than $28 billion to construct two new chip…
In Q3 Apple rejoins ranks of top five smartphone makers in China, as government welcomes…
IT spending growth in 2025 comes as CIOs move from proof-of-concept, and begin investment into…
Industry supply chain analyst says Apple cut orders for the iPhone 16 for Q4 2024…
Heavy fine for LinkedIn, after Irish data protection watchdog cites GDPR violations with people's personal…
UK competition regulator begins phase one investigation into Alphabet's partnership with AI startup Anthropic