Sprint transfers management to Ericsson

Published: July 10, 2009 at 10:48 AM

OVERLAND PARK, Kan., July 10 (UPI) -- U.S. telecommunications giant Sprint Nextel said it would transfer management of its network operations to Sweden's Ericsson to cut costs.

The companies signed a seven-year deal worth about $4.75 billion, that allows Sprint continued ownership of the network, while Ericsson takes over maintenance of service and cell towers, The New York Times reported Friday.

"We own it. We're not selling it," said Steven Elfman, Sprint's president of network operations.

The deal includes the transfer of 6,000 Sprint workers, who will now work out of Ericsson's U.S. offices.

Telecommunications analyst Edward Snyder at Charter Equity Research said Sprint was forced into making a deal as it tries to carry the Palm Pre smart phone into the market.

"Sprint is doing this out of necessity. The Palm Pre they just released is costing them a pretty penny," Snyder said.

Analysts also said Sprint needed to convince its 50 million customers that Ericsson was up to the job of managing the network.

"It's a big deal for Ericsson that they've been trusted," said Roger Entner, an industry analyst at Nielsen IAG.

Ericsson already handles network operations for 275 million customers. The seven-year deal could save Sprint $700 million, Macquarie Securities analyst Philip Cusick said.

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Roethlisberger could miss Ravens game (4 min)
COL FB: N.C. State 28, North Carolina 27 (6 min)
COL BKB: Purdue 64, Central Mich. 38 (23 min)
WHO: H1N1 deaths near 8,000 (25 min)
Mich. man's model train project wows (31 min)
COL BKB: Georgetown 97, Lafayette 64 (46 min)
McIlroy/McDowell lead dwindles in China (53 min)
fark
If you put a sheep named Rob into a shopping cart and then pushed it into a supermarket, the police...
Hero: Danvers HS students want to sell "Free Meep" shirts to raise money for scholarship. Asinine:...
In the never-ending quest by the government to encourage everyone buy new stuff, comes "Cash for...
It was Mrs. Woods, in the driveway, with the golf club
Can you be blamed for sleepwalking crimes? It's not news, it's fearmongeri...er...ABC News
They took away radio traffic reporters' airplanes, and now they're taking away their radio too