Sprint inks $480 million deal for U.S. Cellular customers

From CNET News.com: Sprint is starting to flex some muscle with regional carriers.

The company announced today that it has inked a deal with U.S. Cellular for $480 million. Sprint will acquire 20MHz of PCS spectrum in the 1900MHz band across Chicago, South Bend, Ind., and Champaign, Ill. Sprint will also get 10Mhz spectrum in the St. Louis market. U.S. Cellular has also sold off 585,000 of its customers, approximately 10 percent of its subscriber base, to Sprint.

"Acquiring this spectrum will significantly increase Sprint's network capacity and improve the customer experience in several important Midwest markets including Chicago and St. Louis," Sprint CEO Dan Hesse said today in a statement.

Sprint's acquisition comes against the backdrop of major changes at the company. Sprint announced last month that Japanese technology company Softbank will invest $20.1 billion into its operation to acquire 70 percent of its stock. The move is designed to help Softbank expand internationally, and Sprint fix its ailing business.

After announcing its Softbank deal, Sprint also took control of Clearwire by acquiring some of that company's stock from another investor, Eagle River Holdings. It was believed that Softbank viewed Clearwire, which offers 4G services to carriers and consumers in select markets, as a high-value target that it wanted to control as part of its deal with Sprint.

Sprint's deal with U.S. Cellular might also be a response to T-Mobile's recent announcement of plans to merge with another regional carrier, MetroPCS. Through that deal, MetroPCS shareholders will get $1.5 billion in cash and own 26 percent of the new operation. T-Mobile parent company Deutsche Telekom will own the remaining 74 percent.

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