T-Mobile’s $26 billion purchase of Sprint was a huge strategic home run fir the wireless provider
T-Mobile‘s big move was the $26 billion purchase of Sprint. It took a long time before many casual observers of the wireless scene figured out what T-Mobile was up to. After all, why would a carrier that all of a sudden was relevant want a badly lagging wireless firm like Sprint? We figured it out fairly early. T-Mobile was gunning for Sprint’s hoard of mid-band 2.5GHz spectrum. What T-Mobile realized was that the carrier with the most mid-band spectrum was going to control 5G in the U.S.

T-Mobile’s purchase of Sprint helped the former become America’s 5G King. | Image credit-PhoneArena
While mid-band didn’t deliver gig download speeds like high-band mmWave does, it travels greater distances than mmWave. While the carriers who were building out 5G using mmWave like Verizon and AT&T bragged of fast download data speed, the fact that they traveled small distances meant that most Verizon and AT&T customers couldn’t access mmWave signals. Not only did mid-band travel greater distances than mmWave, it also was faster than low-band. Thus, mid-band was dubbed the Goldilocks of 5G spectrum.
The latest 600MHz purchase by T-Mobile is valued at $675.2 million
The FCC last year gave T-Mobile the green light to dump some of its high-band millimeter wave (mmWave) spectrum that T-Mobile said cannot be easily made accessible in a manner that will help the public. One part of mid-band where T-Mobile continues to build inventory is the 2.5GHz area that first piqued T-Mobile‘s interest when it bought Sprint.