The Big Four wireless carriers may be warring for LTE spectrum the loudest, but don’t forget that smaller carriers like MetroPCS are also caught up in the battle.
The nation’s fifth-largest provider needs to reinforce and expand its 4G network to support its 500,000 total LTE subscribers, suggested MetroPCS’ Keith Terreri, vice president of finance and treasurer. That’s about 5 percent of the no-contract carrier’s 9.34 million customers, Fierce Wireless reported.
Related stories
- Sprint’s 4G aspirations depend on spectrum deals
- Verizon: Capacity crunch coming to big cities next year
- Upcoming FCC decisions to shape spectrum policy
MetroPCS has deployed LTE to 14 of its markets, and was the first carrier to launch a LTE phone.
Perhaps even more than its rivals, MetroPCS’s fate rides on its ability to convert customers to LTE-ready handsets. MetroPCS delivers a slower-than-average 4G, which Terreri and others have previously acknowledged; however, its 4G significantly outpaces the prevailing 2.5G network, also known as 1XRTT. Without a 3G network, the carrier has little to fall back on.
In fact, MetroPCS is making 4G spectrum its top priority, Terreri said at the Barclays Capital 2012 High Yield Bond and Syndicated Loan Conference. He added that MetroPCS can invest $1 billion to $1.5 billion. Verizon, meanwhile, is defending a deal for $3.6 billion.