TOKYO (Reuters) - SoftBank Corp's president said he will go to the United States on Tuesday to meet Sprint Nextel Corp's
SoftBank's billionaire founder and president Masayoshi Son, who proposed a $20 billion deal for a 70 percent stake in the U.S. wireless carrier, faces a challenge from Dish Network, a U.S. satellite TV provider, which is offering $25.5 billion.
Two big Sprint shareholders, Paulson & Co and Omega Advisors, have publicly said the Dish offer looks better than SoftBank's.
Son, speaking to reporters at an event unveiling SoftBank's latest smartphones and mobile gadgets, dismissed suggestions from Dish Network Chairman Charlie Ergen last week that the Dish deal would be good for U.S. jobs, saying Americans would continue to be employed under a Softbank deal.
"The workers who are climbing Sprint's base stations are Americans and we will not be sending anyone from Japan to do that at all," said Son, adding that Sprint's towers would continue to be managed by its own employees as well as workers from telecom equipment vendors Samsung Electronics Co Ltd , Ericsson
Son also said SoftBank offered more expertise than Dish in the latest mobile technology.
"They have never been in mobile before and that will be their biggest hurdle," said Son. He said SoftBank had been at the vanguard of introducing fourth-generation (4G) TD-LTE mobile broadband services in Japan and could help Sprint to upgrade its U.S. network.
TD-LTE is one of the two key types of 4G LTE (long-term evolution) technologies that have been adopted by global carriers and promises faster speeds for mobile wireless.
"The difference here is that SoftBank has the network architecture, that SoftBank has the additional knowhow to bring to Sprint as the sole commercial provider of TD-LTE," he said.
In an interview with USA Today last week, Ergen said Dish's offer would protect American jobs and give the U.S. firm an operational edge over SoftBank as they compete for Sprint.
Son said on Tuesday that he will meet Sprint management as well as its major institutional shareholders to discuss the specific merits of SoftBank's offer for the U.S. company. He gave no further details.
(Reporting by Mari Saito; Editing by Miral Fahmy and Edmund Klamann)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/softbank-president-says-meet-sprint-shareholders-u-063004256.html
printable bracket game change own stacy francis tournament brackets 2012 ncaa basketball tournament walt
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.