BUSINESS
Dish Network eyes broadband network
The goal: 30 million customers on 4G system, including high-speed Internet, satellite TV
By Andy Vuong
The Denver Post
POSTED: 08/24/2011 01:00:00 AM MDT
Dish Network wants to build a nationwide mobile-broadband network, revealing details about the strategy behind its recent deals for wireless spectrum in a filing with the Federal Communications Commission.
The network would seek to reach at least 30 million potential customers and use fourth-generation technology in which compatible devices are expected to launch commercially by 2014, according to analysts who reviewed the filing, made late Monday.
Dish plans to offer high-speed Internet access as a stand-alone service and as part of a bundle with its satellite-TV product, said Wells Fargo analyst Marci Ryvicker.
The FCC filing asks the agency to transfer to Dish-spectrum licenses currently assigned to TerreStar Networks, a bankrupt satellite company that offers wholesale wireless voice and Internet services via a hybrid satellite and ground-based network.
Douglas County-based Dish received bankruptcy-court approval to acquire TerreStar for nearly $1.4 billion in July. Dish has agreed to acquire a separate bankrupt wireless-spectrum holder called DBSD.
The filing also asks the FCC to allow Dish to use the spectrum to offer terrestrial-only broadband service. It states that Dish would continue to support TerreStar's hybrid cellphone service as well as offer terrestrial-only service.
"We are excited about the opportunity to put this nationwide spectrum to productive use for competitive and innovative mobile broadband services," Dish Network executive vice president Tom Cullen said in a prepared statement.
Dish said it would use Long Term Evolution Advanced technology. Verizon Wireless and other carriers are building 4G networks based on similar LTE technology.
Blockbuster, which Dish acquired this year, is expected to play a role in the network, Ryvicker said in a research note Tuesday.
Dish specifically notes in the FCC filing that it will use its "bricks-and- mortar network ... to facilitate the deployment of a new service."
Dish chairman Charlie Ergen has said the company would likely partner with an established wireless provider if it were to launch a mobile- broadband service.
A partnership with MetroPCS might make sense because the regional carrier "needs spectrum and has cash to build out the network," said BTIG Research analyst Walter Piecyk.
He said Dish has committed to reach 30 million potential subscribers over six years, basing his estimate on timeline references in the filing.
Specifically, Dish pointed to "buildout principles" in deals involving Sprint, which Piecyk said required the company to reach 15 million potential customers in four years and 30 million within six years.
Dish has about 14 million satellite- TV subscribers.
Andy Vuong: 303-954-1209, avuong@denverpost.com or twitter.com/andyvuong
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Dish Network eyes broadband network
The goal: 30 million customers on 4G system, including high-speed Internet, satellite TV
By Andy Vuong
The Denver Post
POSTED: 08/24/2011 01:00:00 AM MDT
Dish Network wants to build a nationwide mobile-broadband network, revealing details about the strategy behind its recent deals for wireless spectrum in a filing with the Federal Communications Commission.
The network would seek to reach at least 30 million potential customers and use fourth-generation technology in which compatible devices are expected to launch commercially by 2014, according to analysts who reviewed the filing, made late Monday.
Dish plans to offer high-speed Internet access as a stand-alone service and as part of a bundle with its satellite-TV product, said Wells Fargo analyst Marci Ryvicker.
The FCC filing asks the agency to transfer to Dish-spectrum licenses currently assigned to TerreStar Networks, a bankrupt satellite company that offers wholesale wireless voice and Internet services via a hybrid satellite and ground-based network.
Douglas County-based Dish received bankruptcy-court approval to acquire TerreStar for nearly $1.4 billion in July. Dish has agreed to acquire a separate bankrupt wireless-spectrum holder called DBSD.
The filing also asks the FCC to allow Dish to use the spectrum to offer terrestrial-only broadband service. It states that Dish would continue to support TerreStar's hybrid cellphone service as well as offer terrestrial-only service.
"We are excited about the opportunity to put this nationwide spectrum to productive use for competitive and innovative mobile broadband services," Dish Network executive vice president Tom Cullen said in a prepared statement.
Dish said it would use Long Term Evolution Advanced technology. Verizon Wireless and other carriers are building 4G networks based on similar LTE technology.
Blockbuster, which Dish acquired this year, is expected to play a role in the network, Ryvicker said in a research note Tuesday.
Dish specifically notes in the FCC filing that it will use its "bricks-and- mortar network ... to facilitate the deployment of a new service."
Dish chairman Charlie Ergen has said the company would likely partner with an established wireless provider if it were to launch a mobile- broadband service.
A partnership with MetroPCS might make sense because the regional carrier "needs spectrum and has cash to build out the network," said BTIG Research analyst Walter Piecyk.
He said Dish has committed to reach 30 million potential subscribers over six years, basing his estimate on timeline references in the filing.
Specifically, Dish pointed to "buildout principles" in deals involving Sprint, which Piecyk said required the company to reach 15 million potential customers in four years and 30 million within six years.
Dish has about 14 million satellite- TV subscribers.
Andy Vuong: 303-954-1209, avuong@denverpost.com or twitter.com/andyvuong
Read more: Dish Network eyes broadband network - The Denver Post Dish Network eyes broadband network - The Denver Post
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