Quebecor just lost a regulatory battle over “mandatory carriage” for its Sun News Network, but the regulations on an upcoming wireless spectrum auction could be much more favourable to the media giant.
The Montreal-based owner of Videotron and the Sun newspaper chain, among other things, has a solid shot at becoming Canada’s fourth major wireless player now that Verizon has shot down the possibility of setting up shop north of the border, analysts tell Bloomberg News.
“If Verizon doesn’t show up, [Quebecor is] actually in a very strong position to buy a block of spectrum that will not be very expensive,” Maher Yaghi, an analyst at Desjardins Securities, told Bloomberg. “Wireless is currently providing them with a nice growth platform.”
Since it launched wireless services in 2010, Videotron Mobile has built a subscriber base in Quebec of more than 450,000, Bloomberg reported, with the number of subscribers jumping 30 per cent in just the past year.
Shares of the big three telcos soared Tuesday on news that Verizon won’t be coming to Canada.
The government’s auction of the coveted 700-mHz range of wireless spectrum begins later this month, with a deadline for bidders’ deposits.
Under the rules designed to help new wireless entrants, the big three telecoms — Bell, Rogers and Telus — are allowed to bid on one of four available blocks of spectrum, while smaller and new entrants such as Quebecor would be able to bid on two blocks.
Analysts say that gives Quebecor a decent shot at winning one of the four blocks, especially since they could be up against Canada’s cash-strapped and struggling small wireless companies — Mobilicity, Public Mobile and Wind.
At this point, it’s unclear whether the small wireless companies will even participate in the spectrum auction. Wind CEO Anthony Lacavera and others have hinted that, even with the ability to bid on more spectrum than the big players, the small companies may not have the wherewithal to compete against the big players.
"In our view, the policy (still) virtually guarantees that the Big Three, who already have almost all the spectrum in this country (most of which was given to them by the government for free), will acquire 75 per cent of the prime spectrum available," Lacavera blogged last week.
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With Verizon out of the game, that leaves the field potentially open to one of Canada’s regional wireless operators, and Quebecor’s Videotron — which so far operates only in Quebec — is a leading candidate.
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Some analysts point out that Nova Scotia-based Eastlink could also step up to the plate and try its hand at being a national carrier. Canaccord Genuity analyst Dvai Ghose says the auction "now looks benign" for Eastlink, as well as Quebecor, the Wall Street Journal reports.
The news that Verizon isn’t interested in the Canadian market hasn’t stopped the campaign the big three telcos launched this summer to pressure the government into changing the spectrum auction rules.
“For us it’s never been about whether Verizon themselves come to Canada or not — it’s always been about fair access to spectrum, which as you know is the lifeblood of our industry,” Josh Blair, chief corporate officer at Telus, told the Financial Post Monday.
Tech law expert Michael Geist disagreed with that assessment, noting in a blog post Tuesday that “companies like Telus applauded the government when the spectrum rules were first released in 2012 and it was only after Verizon indicated its potential interest in entering the market that the rules were characterized as loopholes and unfair.”
Tech reporter Peter Nowak suggested there could be a number of other potential entrants into the Canadian wireless market ahead of the spectrum auction, including Vodafone, which just this weekend sold its share of Verizon Wireless for $130 billion, suggesting the company may have some spare cash on hand.