Tag Archives: Nextel

President of Nextel Brazil Leaves with Immediate Effect

NextelNII Holdings – which operates in Latin America under the Nextel brand – has announced the immediate departure of Sergio Borges Chaia, the President of the Company’s Brazilian subsidiary, Nextel Brazil.

Gokul Hemmady, NII’s chief operating officer, will now spend the majority of his time, along with Claudio Hidalgo, Nextel Brazil’s chief operating officer, and the local leadership team, overseeing the Company’s operations in Brazil until a successor to Mr. Chaia is named.

The company did not explain the reasons for the sudden announcement, although the statement issued by the company hints at a disagreement about the future plans for the company.

“We have decided to move forward in a new direction to ensure Nextel Brazil is able to execute on its goals and deliver results,” said Steve Dussek, NII Holdings’ chief executive officer. “We thank Mr. Chaia for the time devoted to Nextel Brazil during the past several years and wish him the best in his future endeavors.”

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Nextel Latin America Ratings Lowered on Weak Financial Results

Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services said today that it lowered its corporate credit rating on Latin American wireless carrier NII Holdings – operating in Latin America under Nextel – to ‘B’ from ‘B+’. The outlook is stable.

At the same time, they lowered the senior unsecured debt rating to ‘B-‘ from ‘B’. The recovery rating on the senior unsecured debt remains ‘5’, indicating their expectation for modest (10%-30%) recovery in the event of payment default.

“The downgrade of NII follows the company’s weak operating and financial results in the second quarter of 2012, which were below our expectations, and its lower guidance for full year 2012,” said Standard & Poor’s credit analyst Allyn Arden.

During the quarter, total revenue and EBITDA declined 15% and 56%, respectively, from the prior-year period. Increased competitive pressures, especially in Brazil, and depreciating local currencies caused NII’s ARPU to fall by over 25% compared to the prior-year period. The Brazilian real and Mexican peso declined 23% and 15%, respectively, from the year-ago period, relative to the U.S. dollar.

These factors, coupled with expenses related to the deployment of 3G services in Mexico and Brazil contributed to the sharp decline in EBITDA.

The outlook is stable though, and reflects S&P’s expectation that EBITDA will improve modestly in 2013 from substantially lower levels in 2012 as 3G network expenses moderate and that leverage will be in the low- to mid-5x area. However they said that they could lower the rating if competitive pressures accelerate and adverse currency movements result in sharper declines in ARPU and EBITDA, resulting in leverage rising above 6x. These factors could result also in a revision of business risk assessment to “vulnerable” from “weak.”

Conversely, S&P said it could raise the ratings if the deployment of 3G services in its markets results in churn to improvement and ARPU stabilization such that leverage is in the 4x area or lower on a sustained basis.

Iusacell and Nextel end spectrum disputes

Mexican mobile operators Iusacell and Nextel de Mexico have agreed to withdraw lawsuits filed over a 2010 government mobile spectrum auction. This move ends more than a year of legal battle, Dow Jones reports.

Nextel de Mexico reached an agreement with Grupo Iusacell to end litigation related to the auction, in which Nextel won a nationwide band of 30 MHz that it is using to develop its 3G network. Iusacell disputed the 2010 auction and took court action, claiming that the spectrum caps set by the antitrust regulator meant that Nextel obtained the spectrum unchallenged with the minimum bid.

Regulators defended the caps as a way of evening out the amount of mobile spectrum available to competitors, although the intention of attracting a fifth mobile operator was unsuccessful and another 30 MHz spectrum block remained unassigned. Mexico’s Communications and Transport Ministry welcomed the agreement, stating that it gives legal certainty to operators as they invest in their networks.

Mexico court orders cancellation of Nextel's mobile licence

A Mexican court has ordered Mexico’s Communications and Transport Ministry (SCT) to cancel Nextel‘s mobile licence.

The Nextel-Televisa consortium paid MXN 180.3 million (approximately USD 14.2 million) for 30 MHz of nationwide spectrum in the 1.7 GHz and 1.9 GHz frequency bands in an auction completed in 2010. Mexican judge Alfredo Cid Garcia has now ruled that the consortium has violated the bidding rules, local newspaper Informador reports.

The ruling follows a complaint filed by market competition Iusacell, which claims that Nextel and Televisa paid too little for the spectrum. Nextel has 10 days to appeal the court decision.

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Nextel Adds 443,000 New Subscribers in Q3

NextelNII Holdings -which operates Nextel branded networks in Latin and South America – says that it added 433,000 net subscribers to its networks, bringing its ending subscriber base to more than 10.2 million, a 19 percent increase compared to the subscriber base over the past year.

Financial results for the quarter included consolidated operating revenues of US$1.75 billion, a 21 percent increase, but also reported a net loss of $3 million compared to a profit of US$118.5 million.

Last years profit was boosted by a gain of US$28.4 million from foreign currency transactions, but this year the company lost US$63.9 million from those transactions.

“Our consolidated operating results during the quarter included improved subscriber growth, driven by a significant improvement in net subscriber additions in Mexico,” said Steven Dussek , NII Holdings’ chief executive officer.”

NII Holdings’ consolidated average monthly service revenue per subscriber (ARPU) was $49 for the third quarter of 2011, up nearly $2 when compared to the same period last year, driven primarily by year-over-year improvements in average currency exchange rates.

The company ended the quarter with $4.1 billion in total long-term debt and $2.6 billion in consolidated cash and investments, resulting in $1.5 billion of net debt at the end of the quarter.

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Nextel selects Huawei for 3G Network in Mexico and Brazil

NextelHuawei has won a contract from Latin American mobile operator NII Holdings, which operates under the Nextel brand name. Under the terms of the agreement, Huawei will provide equipment and related services for Nextel’s new W-CDMA networks in Mexico and Brazil.
Huawei will deploy W-CDMA services to build Nextel Brazil and Nextel Mexico’s W-CDMA networks on recently acquired 3G spectrum licenses in Mexico and 3G spectrum for which Nextel Brazil has successfully bid in Brazil. Huawei will develop and deliver the core network, radio access network (RAN) and backhaul, which will be customized for Nextel’s push-to-talk service.

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Televisa-Nextel consortium wins Mexican mobile tender

The consortium comprising media group Televisa and Nextel Mexico, a unit of NII Holdings, has won Mexico’s second mobile spectrum auction.

Mexican telecoms regulator Cofetel declared the consortium the winner of a nationwide licence that aims to increase competition on the local market. According to Cofetel, the consortium offered the minimum bid price of USD 14.2 million for 30 MHz spectrum in the 1710MHz to 2170MHz frequency band in each of the country’s nine mobile operating regions. The amount must be paid to the government within 45 days.

Additionally, the tender winner will have to pay MXN 18.13 billion in annual instalments over the 20-year life of the licence. Market leader Telcel, a unit of America Movil, won 21 blocks of 10 MHz in all operating regions with a bid of MXN 3.79 billion, plus MXN 12.70 billion in other fees during the life of the licences.

Telefonica’s local unit also won six 10 MHz blocks in six regions with a MXN 1.27 billion offer, plus the agreement to pay MXN 5.43 billion in other fees. Nextel said it plans to start selling service on the new network in parts of Mexico as soon as 12 months after it gets the airwaves.

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