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classic cardycheap data and make it pretty profitable." But T-Mobile's biggest challenge may be that it is no longer the only value proposition for mobile subscribers. Consumer Reports found that customers spent $20 to $50 less per month using T-Mobile than with carriers like AT&T and Verizon. But plenty of smaller contenders are looking to expand their share of the market, including Virgin Mobile, Boost Mobile, Leap and MetroPCS. "For a long time, they were the value brand for young people and teenagers," said Jan Dawson, an analyst at Ovum, a technology research firm. "It's getting quite crowded in their core territory. Their only hope may be to reinvent themselves entirely." T-Mobile did not respond to a request for comment. Its parent company issued a statement on Wednesday saying that it would join AT&T in defending the
ugg classic cardy merger plan in court. Complicating matters for T-Mobile is that it has largely remained motionless for several months while waiting for the deal to close. It is likely, analysts say, that T-Mobile froze any negotiations with Apple and other hardware vendors over new phones to avoid competing with AT&T on pricing and release dates. That could hinder the carrier's ability to dazzle potential subscribers with new smartphones in the coming months - a severe handicap to growth if the company were not going to be folded into AT&T. The plot thickens if Apple announces a deal with Sprint to distribute the iPhone, as is widely expected. That would leave T-Mobile as the nation's only major carrier without the phone. The Web has
ugg classic cardy black been full of speculation that anyone from Google to Sprint may step up with a bid to buy T-Mobile. But analysts say that is unlikely to happen, largely because Sprint is already grappling with how to blend several technologies into one cohesive network. Adding T-Mobile's technology to the mix would be an expensive and Sisyphean task. It is also unlikely that a company like Google or Apple would toss its hat into the ring, say analysts, despite indications that both companies are looking to transform the communications business. Neither would want the headache of running a telecommunications network or to run the risk of souring relations with other carrier partners. In the longer run, analysts say, it seems likely that Deutsche Telekom, which has long itched for a way to exit the United States market, will either spin T-Mobile off as an independent entity or look for ways to sell pieces of the company. Some analysts say that an international company like NTT DoCoMo of Japan, France Télécom or Telefónica of Spain that wants to establish a footprint in the United States could look to add T-Mobile to its portfolio. Others say T-Mobile could look attractive to a cable company like Comcast or Time Warner that may want to enter the wireless market. T-Mobile has 5,400 cellular base stations, beating Verizon, which owns only 4,300. Regardless of the outcome, analysts say T-Mobile is likely to eventually shift hands, ideally to a new owner that will not upset the Justice Department. "Deutsche Telekom has made it very clear that they don't have any desire to invest more in the U.S. market and they don't want to be the long-term owners of this asset," said Ms. Bienenstock of Sanford C. Bernstein. "But it will be very valuable to someone."
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