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- <text id=93TT2143>
- <title>
- Aug. 30, 1993: The Humongous Hookup
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 30, 1993 Dave Letterman
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 33
- The Humongous Hookup
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>AT&T goes cellular in a big way--and steals yet another march
- on its rivals
- </p>
- <p>By THOMAS MCCARROLL
- </p>
- <p> It was a highly personal kind of deal, done in a quiet hallway
- of a New York City hotel, man to man. The place was the Waldorf
- Astoria, and the players were Robert Allen, chairman of AT&T,
- and Craig McCaw, head of McCaw Cellular Communications. In the
- middle of an edgy negotiation, they had left their factotums,
- emissaries and lieutenants behind and paced the corridor together
- for just 20 minutes before shaking hands on a transaction in
- which the largest U.S. telephone company would buy the No. 1
- provider of cellular service for $12.6 billion in stock. In
- the process, Craig McCaw would become a billionaire and his
- three brothers (Bruce, Keith and John Jr.) all centimillionaires.
- </p>
- <p> The AT&T-McCaw merger, which ranks as the fifth largest in U.S.
- corporate history, raises the ante in an industry that is being
- radically reshaped by emerging technologies, falling regulatory
- barriers and a series of powerful partnerships and alliances.
- It comes only weeks after phone giant British Telecom spent
- $5.3 billion for a 20% stake in MCI Communications, the second
- largest U.S. provider of long-distance service, and it closely
- follows U S West's $2.5 billion investment in media conglomerate
- Time Warner. Although the merger is praised by consumer groups
- because it could lead to lower phone rates and innovative products,
- many analysts predict that it will ring up even more industry
- turmoil as it reduces the boundaries separating long-distance
- and local telephone service. It will also bring AT&T into close
- competition with local telephone carriers, including the seven
- former Bell System companies, collectively known as the Baby
- Bells.
- </p>
- <p> "This is going to set off another round of deals as everybody
- scrambles to find a dancing partner," says Peter Huber, a telecommunications
- consultant in Washington. "Competitors cannot afford to let
- this powerful alliance go unanswered."
- </p>
- <p> Together, AT&T and McCaw will give rivals plenty of reason to
- fret. They are expected to strengthen each other's hold on their
- respective markets. By linking its own computerized telephone
- grid with McCaw's advanced cellular network, AT&T is expected
- to develop a broad menu of customized services. It could, for
- instance, bundle telephone handsets, long-distance and cellular
- service in a single package. With AT&T, Craig McCaw moves one
- step closer to realizing his biggest dream: building the first
- nationwide cellular-telephone network.
- </p>
- <p> The merger turned out to be the richest--and luckiest--deal
- in McCaw's life. The two companies had first spoken of the arrangement
- last November when AT&T agreed to acquire 33% of McCaw Cellular
- of Kirkland, Washington, for $3.8 billion. Negotiations stalled,
- however, over the issue of how to divvy up strategic decisions
- and future profits. The solution of buying all of McCaw, rather
- than just part of it, might not have been possible a few months
- ago. Fortune intervened, however, when the value of AT&T's stock
- rose 46%, or $26.5 billion, between November and two weeks ago.
- Since the purchase price would be in the form of AT&T stock,
- the telephone giant could afford to splurge.
- </p>
- <p> McCaw is itself the product of a series of acquisitions. The
- company grew out of a string of cable-television businesses
- that was put together in the 1960s by J. Elroy McCaw. After
- their father's sudden death in 1969, Craig and his brothers
- built a cable empire that they finally sold in 1987 to Jack
- Kent Cooke for $755 million. The McCaws had switched their focus
- to cellular, becoming initial bidders for cellular-telephone
- licenses after the Federal Communications Commission opened
- up that business to competition in the early 1980s. McCaw's
- big break came in 1986, when the company acquired the cellular
- business of MCI for $120 million. A year later, it bought the
- Washington Post Co.'s cellular business in Miami for $240 million.
- By 1988, McCaw was the largest cellular-telephone operator in
- the country, with 132,000 subscribers.
- </p>
- <p> But the most valuable commodity of McCaw Cellular is Craig
- McCaw. Soft-spoken and unassuming, McCaw is a demanding chief
- executive who drives a 10-year-old car and wears a $30 plastic
- digital watch. A licensed pilot, he relaxes by flying his De
- Havilland-Beaver seaplane to remote lakes in the Pacific Northwest.
- The McCaw family, including Craig and his brothers, owned 20%
- of their company's stock. When the AT&T purchase is completed,
- their holdings will be worth a combined $2.8 billion, making
- the McCaws AT&T's largest independent shareholders. Craig, who
- will become an AT&T board member, will receive shares valued
- at $1.01 billion.
- </p>
- <p> The cost of McCaw's visionary expansion is a staggering debt
- load of nearly $5 billion and losses of $715 million in the
- past two years. Even with that burden, McCaw is expected to
- play a crucial role in AT&T's quest to conquer the emerging
- field of wireless communications. Almost all calls now originate
- or terminate on conventional wall-jack telephones (even if they
- are cordless within the home). But analysts predict that cellular-type
- phones will gradually replace hard-wired sets. That could mean
- trouble for local telephone companies, whose monopoly depends
- on phones remaining tied down to a small area.
- </p>
- <p> McCaw could turn out to be the Trojan horse that lets AT&T into
- the rigidly fortified local telephone business. Under the terms
- of the 1984 court-ordered breakup of the Bell System, AT&T is
- barred from re-entering that market. But with McCaw in hand,
- AT&T could skirt the restrictions, bypassing the local telephone
- network completely to provide long-distance cellular service
- directly to customers. If it succeeds, AT&T can sharply reduce
- the access fees it must pay the local carriers for the right
- to connect to their networks. Last year it paid $14 billion
- to the Baby Bells for that privilege.
- </p>
- <p> The Baby Bells are worried about losing prime customers. Pacific
- Bell, for instance, relies on 10% of its high-volume customers
- for 50% of its residential toll revenues. If AT&T helps this
- kind of customer bypass the network, the Baby Bells claim, they
- would be left with higher-cost, less profitable customers, which
- would invite rate increases. Says William Fer guson, chairman
- of New York-based local phone company NYNEX: "Consumers could
- end up paying for this deal."
- </p>
- <p> Although Ferguson will try to shoot down the deal, the AT&T-McCaw
- merger looks as if it may fly. While the Justice Department
- has yet to give the two companies the go-ahead, the FCC has
- in the past looked favorably at such transactions. If the agency
- does not approve, it can expect to be swiftly inundated with
- demands from the rest of the industry to be saved from the competitive
- behemoth that technology has spawned.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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