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AT&T, BT buy into Rogers Cantel

The acquisition of 33 per cent of Rogers Cantel Mobile Communications by AT&T Corp. and British Telecommunications plc (BT) earlier this month should give the wireless subsidiary of Rogers Communications Inc. more clout with corporate users, according to one analyst.

Rogers Cantel has had a branding agreement with AT&T since 1996, but the ties between Cantel and AT&T are much stronger now that AT&T has a significant financial interest in the Canadian wireless service provider, said Jordan Worth, a telecommunications analyst with IDC Canada Ltd. in Toronto.

โ€œNow Cantel can go out and say these guys own a third of the company,โ€ Worth explained. โ€œThey have a stake and an interest and will share their intellectual property and services.โ€

Although most of Rogers Cantelโ€™s current customer base is residential, Worth noted the company has been trying to make inroads into Canadian corporate accounts over the past year.

โ€œTheyโ€™ve been more successful on the corporate side in competing with Bell for the heavy users,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s the same in the wireless world as it is in the wired. Residential customers are good, but they donโ€™t spend as much money as the corporate users.โ€

Worth said the investment should also mean corporate users will see more bundling of services between AT&T Canada and Rogers Cantel.

This thought was echoed by AT&T president John Zeglis.

โ€œThe investment guarantees a place for wireless in the bundles AT&T Canada will market to its customers and the investment deepens the relationship between AT&T Canada and Rogers Cantel,โ€ he said.

Charles Hoffman, president and CEO of Rogers Cantel, added that Rogers Cantel and AT&T Canada will soon be cementing their relationship by creating a unified corporate sales force and service organization to better serve larger customers.

IDC Canadaโ€™s Worth noted that AT&T isnโ€™t the only telco looking for a tighter coupling of wireless and wireline services. One week prior to the AT&T/BT investment, Bell Canada bought all outstanding shares in its wireless arm, Bell Mobility.

โ€œThey (Bell) wanted control over the wireless to do whatever they wanted with the bundling,โ€ Worth said. โ€œThey donโ€™t want to worry about shareholder interests.โ€

The 33-per-cent stake in Rogers Cantel is estimated to be worth $1.4 billion. AT&T and BT will each own 16.5 per cent of Rogers Cantel. Rogers Communications still holds 51 per cent.

AT&T and BT have been teaming together over the past year on the development of a global network. In Canada, AT&T Canada will be selling access to the global network to corporate users.

Separately, BT acquired 30 per cent of AT&Tโ€™s 31-per-cent investment in AT&T Canada. The investment is worth $600 million. Ultimately, AT&T and BT intend to own all of AT&T Canada, said Alfred Mockett, president and CEO of BT Worldwide.

โ€œWe have secured a path to increase our combined holdings in AT&T Canada to 100 per cent in the next four years as foreign ownership restrictions are relaxed.โ€

Mockett said he believes Canadian ownership restrictions will disappear as commercial pressures and World Trade Organization initiatives lead to greater trade liberalization.

Rogers Cantel will use some of the $1.4-billion investment to improve its digital wireless network, Hoffman said. But most of the money will be used to pare down Rogers Cantelโ€™s $2.2-billion debt.

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