Jump to content

Sprint/Clearwire Acquisition Discussion (Formerly: Dish offer to acquire Clearwire for $4.40 per share in cash.)


bucdenny

Recommended Posts

With this latest twist, I can't see Clear taking anymore of the Sprint monthly financing.  However, if this drags on long enough, they might be forced to take it...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The thing is Dish, Crest and maybe some other entity have all offered financing to Clearwire as well. There's no guarantee that they would necessarily tap Sprint again when their piggy bank gets low which is why Sprint and/or SoftBank's next move needs to be decisive.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dish's financing actually allows other shareholders to participate based on their shares so long as Dish gets 25%

 

Sprint has a few options. It is worth mentioning that Sprint knew about this decision for a week. Sprint could have matched the offer. Sprint can still raise their offer now and keep the current agreements in place, but I believe Spront want to end this as quick as possible, which may mean letting the deal fail.

After it fails, they have the necessary vote to change the Bylaws to remove the 75% requirement. I think Sprint will keep an eye on now many shareholders actually tender.

 

If it is over 25%, they will raise their offer prior to the rejection, but if it is below 25%, I think they make the new offer after it is rejected.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

They have only accepted financing for a very limited number of months. I believe only 3 times. According to my research Sprint needs all strategic partners to go against the Clearwire recommendation and that may not happen. Sprint can easily lose Intel or one of those cable companies support and not have enough stake in the company. Business is about making money and that is all Intel and the Cable Companies want.

Yeah, they could, except it is the cable cos interest for Dish not to get Clearwire since they will be offering fixed broadband and OTT over Clearwire spectrum and therefore cutiing into cable cos business. I'm pretty sure that Intel has also been promised some business from Sprint for their fledging chipset business. So it is in the strategic investors best interest to vote with Sprint. Sprint was not really interested in Clearwire until Dish showed up. I mean they could have picked up a hell of a lot of shares in the open market at $.97/share last June, but they did not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Let's say Clearwire votes for Dish's proposal, does that mean Sprint loses the 2500 mhz spectrum? With still majority stake in the company, how would this impact Sprint and their NV rollout? Is 2500mhz even worth it for Sprint if they can get 600mhz?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Let's say Clearwire votes for Dish's proposal, does that mean Sprint loses the 2500 mhz spectrum? With still majority stake in the company, how would this impact Sprint and their NV rollout? Is 2500mhz even worth it for Sprint if they can get 600mhz?

No, it just means they have to go through Dish to get the spectrum or have to wait until the independent directors decide that amending the equity agreement to allow sprint to lower the buyout % is smarter than going into bankruptcy.

 

Sprint will still have roughly a 68% in the company. It will have no affect to Sprints currently known plans. Potential plans that sprint and softbank know about is a different story.

 

600mhz and 2.5ghz have different uses. 600mhz is for coverage. 2.5ghz is for capacity and speeds. And yes it is still very much worth it. 2.5ghz will allow sprint to deploy blazing fast speeds that their competitors cannot catch up to. Sprint could deploy enough spectrum to get 1Gbps speeds in most major markets.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah, they could, except it is the cable cos interest for Dish not to get Clearwire since they will be offering fixed broadband and OTT over Clearwire spectrum and therefore cutiing into cable cos business. I'm pretty sure that Intel has also been promised some business from Sprint for their fledging chipset business. So it is in the strategic investors best interest to vote with Sprint. Sprint was not really interested in Clearwire until Dish showed up. I mean they could have picked up a hell of a lot of shares in the open market at $.97/share last June, but they did not.

 

I thought it was part of the agreement that Sprint can't buy any CLWR shares on the open market until November 2013.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I thought it was part of the agreement that Sprint can't buy any CLWR shares on the open market until November 2013.

 

Sprint itself can't... but Softbank can....dun dun dun...

  • Like 5
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sprint itself can't... but Softbank can....dun dun dun...

 

 

AJ

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://blogs.wsj.com/moneybeat/2013/06/14/dealpolitik-how-sprint-can-defeat-dish-on-clearwire-at-less-than-4-40-per-share/?mod=yahoo_hs

 

 

Dealpolitik: How Sprint Can Defeat Dish on Clearwire, at Less than $4.40 per Share

By Ronald Barusch


Dish has topped Sprint S 0.00%’s $3.40-per-share
buyout of the public shareholders of Clearwire by offering $4.40 per share. Could Sprint still defeat Dish and avoid continuing a bidding war, possibly without offering much more than $3.40 per share? I think so.

Dish’s tender offer has two critical conditions.

First, it is subject to holders of at least 25% of the outstanding Clearwire shares accepting the offer. That is a majority of the non-Sprint float. And some Clearwire shareholders have in the past indicated that they see value to holding on to their shares. So there is at least some risk that the minimum condition will not be met.

Second, Dish won’t buy the shares unless Clearwire signs a governance agreement. Nor would the shares be purchased if a court enjoins the signing of the agreement or Dish’s offer. It seems likely that Sprint will start litigation to seek just such an injunction. The corporate and contractual issues arising out of whether that governance agreement is proper are highly complex. I doubt either side’s lawyers are telling their clients with certainty how it will come out.

That leaves the Clearwire board with the possibility of no deal. And no financing. And that could leave the public shareholders between a rock and a hard place. Clearwire has said it will run out of money early next year. Public shareholders do not generally fare well in bankruptcies.

That probably makes the Clearwire board anxious to have more certainty rather than be subject to the unknowable results of litigation and the risk that a few holdout shareholders could kill the Dish deal for all shareholders.

So here is how Sprint could play its cards: It would offer to Clearwire an immediate termination of the $3.40 per share merger agreement without the need to go forward with the shareholders meeting scheduled for June 24. Sprint would also agree to commence an immediate and unconditional tender offer for any and all Clearwire shares at a price which probably could be attractive (at least to the Clearwire board) at below $4.40 per share — because of the certainty Sprint could offer and the other terms outlined below. It might even try to negotiate a price with Clearwire at or near its last $3.40 deal.

No shareholder would be required to accept the offer. Sprint could also offer financing to Clearwire to be sure it has cash—possibly along the same lines offered by Dish.

And to make the deal even more attractive, Sprint could unconditionally agree to commence a new tender offer in a year (or possibly two) at the exact same price. Thus, regardless of what happens to Clearwire, shareholders who stay in now would have a floor on their value down the road.

And in return, Sprint could ask for just one thing: that Clearwire agree not to enter into any agreements with Dish or appoint any of their directors. Once such an agreement is signed, Dish would have nothing to gain in continuing its pursuit of Clearwire shares.

Such a transaction would not guarantee that Sprint would be able to take Clearwire private. But at this point, that objective is probably secondary to avoiding having a Dish as its permanent partner in Clearwire. And it can always try again down the road for a going private transaction once Dish has been sidelined. The only alternatives in keeping Dish at bay seem to be litigation with an uncertain outcome or keeping the bidding going by matching or topping Dish’s $4.40 per share.

 

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The link Rawvega posted demonstrates that Crest Financial overplayed its hand. If I were the managers of Crest I'd be afraid of what may happen when I had to explain how I screwed up Clear. The shareholders probably won't react well to taking a haircut.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The link Rawvega posted demonstrates that Crest Financial overplayed its hand. If I were the managers of Crest I'd be afraid of what may happen when I had to explain how I screwed up Clear. The shareholders probably won't react well to taking a haircut.

 

It really depends on whether Dish gets more than 25% of the shares and at least 3 directors. If they do and Crest gets $4.40, per share, then they have done well. Of course if Sprint has any side deals with shareholders so that Dish does not attain 25% or the three directors matter is tied up in court forever, then they are screwed. One thing is for sure. Nobody is going to be offering $7/share anytime soon.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They do not have to wait until November. If Sprint's deal fails, they will have 68% of the vote. That will give them the necessary amount of votes to amend the EHA. The only thing they are missing is 1 independent board member approval, since they have Intel, Bright House/Concast and Eagle river approval

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

They do not have to wait until November. If Sprint's deal fails, they will have 68% of the vote. That will give them the necessary amount of votes to amend the EHA. The only thing they are missing is 1 independent board member approval, since they have Intel, Bright House/Concast and Eagle river approval

 

 

What does EHA stand for?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

It was bound to happen. That requirement that they be given 3 directors on the board sounded kind of fishy. 

Edited by bigsnake49
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Damn, this is turning into some really good entertainment.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.

  • large.unreadcontent.png.6ef00db54e758d06

  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • Posts

    • Good catch! I meant 115932/119932. Edited my original post I've noticed the same thing lately and have just assumed that they're skipping it now because they're finally able to deploy mmWave small cells.
    • At some point over the weekend, T-Mobile bumped the Omaha metro from 100+40 to 100+90 of n41! That's a pretty large increase from what we had just a few weeks ago when we were sitting at 80+40Mhz. Out of curiosity, tested a site on my way to work and pulled 1.4Gpbs. That's the fastest I've ever gotten on T-Mobile! For those that know Omaha, this was on Dodge street in Midtown so not exactly a quiet area!
    • Did you mean a different site? eNB ID 112039 has been around for years. Streetview even has it with C-band back in 2022 - https://www.google.com/maps/@40.7303042,-73.9610924,3a,24.1y,18.03h,109.66t/data=!3m8!1e1!3m6!1s2ossx06yU56AYOzREdcK-g!2e0!5s20220201T000000!6shttps:%2F%2Fstreetviewpixels-pa.googleapis.com%2Fv1%2Fthumbnail%3Fpanoid%3D2ossx06yU56AYOzREdcK-g%26cb_client%3Dmaps_sv.share%26w%3D900%26h%3D600%26yaw%3D18.027734930682684%26pitch%3D-19.664180274382204%26thumbfov%3D90!7i16384!8i8192?coh=205410&entry=ttu Meanwhile, Verizon's eNB 84484 in Fort Greene has been updated to include C-band and CBRS, but not mmWave. I've seen this a few times now on updated Verizon sites where it's just the CBRS antenna on its own, not in a shroud and without mmWave. Odd.
    • Drove out into the country today.  Dish stuck to my phone like glue. At least -120 rsrp. Likely only good for phone calls (should have tested.) It then switched to T-Mobile. Getting back on Dish was another issue. I am used to dragging out coverage so I expected a few miles, but had to drive at least 10 miles towards a Dish site. Airplane mode, which worked for Sprint, did nothing. Rebooting did nothing. Finally got it to change over about 2 miles from the site by manually setting the carrier to Dish then it had great reception. Sprint used to have a 15 minute timeout but I did not have the patience today.  Previously I did a speed test on Dish out in the country at the edge of Dish coverage. My speeds were 2g variety. Dish has really overclocked some of these sites. Seen rssp readings in the 50s. Would have called them boomer sites with Sprint but much  more common with Dish.  
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...