MCI has jilted Qwest
yet again.
The Ashburn, Va., long-distance and enterprise network services provider
today deemed Verizon’s latest $8.4 billion ($26 per share)
offer superior to Qwest’s $9.7 billion ($30 per share) proposal.
MCI officials listed several factors they say compensate for the $1.3
billion difference, including “the increasing need for scale and
comprehensive wireless capabilities.”
Verizon Wireless, co-owned by Verizon and Vodafone , is the
second-largest U.S. mobile carrier with 43 million subscribers on a
nationwide network. Meanwhile, Denver-based Qwest serves 767,000 through a
third-party system.
A combined Verizon-MCI could bundle third-generation
offerings with Internet connectivity, data transport and virtual private
network
government agencies.
Other factors cited by MCI include: Qwest’s overall financial picture;
questions about its ability to invest in new capabilities; doubts about
synergies; and feedback from current enterprise customers.
“From the standpoint of risk versus reward, Verizon’s revised offer presents
MCI with a stronger, superior choice,” said Nicholas Katzenbach, MCI
chairman, in a statement.
Verizon, a regional telecom based in New York, upped its offer by about $800
million this weekend to answer
Qwest in the three-month bidding war.
Before today, Qwest had finally pulled ahead of Verizon in the competition
for MCI, but the lead only lasted a week. A Qwest spokesman was not
immediately available for comment, but the carrier could take its offer
directly to MCI shareholders to see if they agree with their board’s
opinion.
Verizon has been pushing financial stability in its proposals and press
releases over the sale price.
“The evolving nature of the telecommunications industry requires that
effective competitors have financial strength and a full array of
offerings,” Ivan Seidenberg, Verizon CEO, said in a statement. “Verizon is a
leading national communications provider with a stable balance sheet, a
premier national wireless business, and a plan to invest in MCI.”
Qwest and Verizon covet MCI because of its large IP data-service deals with
government agencies and corporations. And with the pending merger of SBC
and AT&T
, neither wants to be left behind by
the wave of industry consolidation.
The Baby Bells consider those long-term, high-margin contracts crucial to
their future prosperity, as cable operators, VoIP upstarts and wireless
carriers try to hone in on their traditional businesses.