Bear in mind that this deal is far from done, Sprint’s shareholders need to approve the deal, as do regulators, and AT&T has already crafted a carefully worded statement regarding the resulting control of spectrum by Sprint (and its control of Clearwire) and thus Softbank after the deal closes. Sprint was a vocal opponent to AT&T’s failed attempt to buy T-Mobile USA, so one might expect that turn-about is fair play. However, it is possible that AT&T is simply setting the stage for its own plans following this merger of East-meets-West, using it as justifications for gobbling up more spectrum down the road.
“I am betting $20 billion that I’m going to be successful.”
Without getting into the earliest depths of Son’s business acumen, put plainly, he knows how to make money. After graduating from the University of California at Berkeley, Mr. Son founded Softbank in 1981, which was then a software distributor. He was an early investor of Yahoo! and E-Trade and was later allowed to be a venture partner of the creation of Yahoo! Japan. After riding the dot-com bubble, and bust, Softbank turned to telecommunications, starting with broadband services. Those operations struggled for four-years while Mr. Son set-up meeting rooms in his apartment building to restructure the operation where it finally returned to profitability.
In 2006, Softbank leveraged itself the hilt to buy Vodafone Japan from its UK based parent. Vodafone Japan was in a similar state that Sprint finds itself today, a distant third in Japan, up against two established and well managed competitors (NTT DoCoMo and KDDI) who had 80% of the market. Vodafone, now Softbank,cut the cost of its monthly service plans by 75% and launched a whole new series of marketing including a popular TV commercial series of a Japanese family with a talking white dog as the father (video below).
It is not likely we will see handsets like the Fujitsu Arrows A with its 13.1MP camera in the US anytime soon.
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The United States, perhaps not surprisingly, has similar consumer trends to Japan when it comes to cell phone subscribers. Mr. Son is on the record stating, “I am a man, and every man wants to be number one.” Dan Hesse will remain the head of Sprint, but Mr. Son intends to be heavily involved in Sprint’s operations and decisions about price plans, devices offered and creative advertising. Could that mean that the US might get a taste of the exotic hardware usually reserved only for Japan? Probably not right away since Softbank is a UMTS/HSPA+ carrier and Sprint operates a CDMA network (and a WiMAX network, and an iDEN network), but both carriers are adopting LTE in future rollouts, so we will say, “Never say never.”
What is certain is that if Masayoshi Son is able to successfully implement his ideas with Sprint, then it will be impossible for AT&T and Verizon to not notice.
“I am betting $20 billion that I’m going to be successful.”
source: The Wall Street Journal
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