In a note to investors on Tuesday, Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett said Apple and Deutsche Telekom are âincreasingly likelyâ to strike a deal for T-Mobile to offer the iPhone in the U.S. next year, reports Bloomberg.
The iPhone may help T-Mobile retain lucrative post-paid or contract customers after the telecom lost 510,000 monthly subscribers in the first quarter. Contrasting the massive loss was a combined 688,000 gained customers seen by iPhone-carrying networks AT&T and Verizon over the same period. In February T-Mobile blamed a fourth quarter 2011 loss of 706,000 contract customers on not having access to Apple's smartphone.
âIPhone (sic) availability at T-Mobile USA would likely reduce contract losses at that company, and push Deutsche Telekom U.S. to a net revenue growth position much sooner than the market expects,â Moffett wrote.
T-Mobile was originally looking to bring Apple's handset over to its network as part of a merger with the nation's second-largest carrier AT&T, though the agreement fell through in December. As a result of the breakup AT&T was forced to give Deutsche Telekom $3 billion in cash along with a transfer of $1 billion worth of spectrum to the German company's U.S. arm.
With the additional bandwidth T-Mobile plans to upgrade its network to iPhone-compatible 4G HSPA+ by expanding operations in the 1900MHz spectrum. Tuesday's report is consistent with the carrier's expansion plans and solves the frequency issues that former CEO Philipp Humm referred to as the "key reason" why the company doesn't currently offer the iPhone.
T-Mobile's Bellevue, Wash. headquarters. | Source: SeattlePi
A deal to sell the iPhone through an agreement with T-Mobile's parent company would be a change to Apple's normal operating procedures as the Cupertino tech giant usually makes first-party agreements with carriers. For example, the recent addition of the iPhone on Sprint's network was a $15.5 billion commitment for the telecom. It was reported in June that, while AT&T and Verizon retained the most iPhone customers, Sprint gained the most switchers using Apple's handset.
Representatives from both Apple and T-Mobile declined to comment and no official statement regarding the situation has been issued.
15 Comments
HA!!!!! They've been getting the iPhone since 1966... A COMPLETE LIE.
Phillip Humm is no longer the CEO of T-Mobile.
Seems most likely, but I wouldn't be surprised if they got it this year either. Frankly I couldn't care less about T-Mobile USA but can't wait for Apple to announce China Mobile getting the iPhone.
Why do they have their name plastered on the building so many times in such a small area?
That is a campus with more than one building.