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TB4000
01-27-2005, 11:07 AM
Reports: SBC in Talks to Buy Rival AT&T

Thu Jan 27, 9:53 AM ET



NEW YORK - AT&T Corp. shares climbed more than 7 percent Thursday amid reports that SBC Communications Inc., the nation's second biggest regional phone company, is in talks to acquire America's once-dominant telephone brand for at least $15 billion.





AT&T is a 120-year-old telephone icon once known as Ma Bell that handled the nation's telephone calls before it was broken apart 21 years ago. The talks were reported Thursday by The New York Times and Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the discussions.


AT&T shares rose $1.35, or 7.3 percent, to $19.80 in early trading on the New York Stock Exchange (news - web sites), while SBC shares fell 53 cents, or 2 percent, to $24.05.


An AT&T acquisition would give San Antonio-based SBC a company that still has a sizable list of government and corporate clients for long-distance and other telecommunications services, despite several years of financial struggles and customer losses.


AT&T still has nearly 30 million long-distance customers. SBC has about 50 million local-phone customers, mostly in the Midwest and South.


Citing executives, The Times said a deal would likely cost SBC more than $16 billion.


The talks are considered "fluid" and "very, very sensitive," the Times reported, citing executives. The Journal said executives have met sporadically over the past few weeks and that no final decisions have been made.


AT&T declined to comment on the reports, citing a policy against discussing "rumor or speculation about mergers, acquisitions, divestitures or other business combinations," said AT&T spokesman Jim Byrnes.


A message was left for SBC but it was not immediately returned. The papers said SBC had declined to comment.


In July, Bedminster, N.J.-based AT&T said it would no longer market new residential long-distance business. But the company is still aggressively seeking to sign up homes for Internet-based phone service.


Last year, AT&T slashed 12,500 jobs as it retreated from the consumer telephone business.

sOKaLiBoY
01-27-2005, 12:18 PM
at&t sure has been busy recently. first the selloff of their cable service to comcast. then the merger with cingular. now this

ism
01-27-2005, 01:21 PM
It's kinda funny since SBC was an original Baby Bell that bought other Baby Bells Ameritech, Pacific Telesis, and SNET. Now the Baby Bell is going to buy the remnants of Ma Bell. It's sorta like how the Galaxy Alliance found the lions and were finally able to merge and form Voltron again. So much for that 1983 antitrust action.

bluemonq
01-27-2005, 02:45 PM
so what makes this different from the original at&t? i can only think of one part, the at&t business division which is still on its own. didn't at&t also have a cable system? i think that it's now part of comcast, by way of a few other companies? anything else?

ism
01-27-2005, 03:34 PM
so what makes this different from the original at&t? i can only think of one part, the at&t business division which is still on its own. didn't at&t also have a cable system? i think that it's now part of comcast, by way of a few other companies? anything else?In 1997 AT&T bought TCI and Media One (which was essentially a 25% share of Time Warner Cable), becoming the largest cable provider in America. This was intended to break the RBOC's monopoly on local data and voice communications.

The RBOCs had been busy. In 1997 Bell Atlantic bought NYNEX, which merged with GTE to form Verizon. In 1998, Southwestern Bell became SBC Communications and bought Ameritech and Pacific Telesis. In 2000, Qwest bought US West.

In 2001 AT&T spun off its cable services as AT&T Broadband, which was bought by Comcast in 2002. AT&T spun off its wireless as AT&T Wireless which merged with Cingular in 2004.

BellSouth remains the only original RBOC from 1984.

So where is Ma Bell now? AT&T, BellSouth, Qwest, SBC, Verizon, Cingular, Comcast, Lucent.