HomeMy WebLinkAbout20120309Comments.pdfCynthia A. Melilo (ISB # 5819)
Cynthia A. Melilo PLLC
8385 W. Emerald Street
Boise, ID 83704
Telephone: (208) 577-5747
Facsimile: (208) 361-3441
Email: camcæcamlawidaho.com
Attorneys for Idaho Telecom Allance
Molly O'Leary (ISB # 4996)
Richardson & O'Leary PLLC
515 North 27th Street
P.O. Box 7218
Boise, ID 83707
Telephone: (208) 938-7900
Facsimile: (208) 938-7904
E-Mail: moiiycærichardsonandolearv.com
Attorneys for CTC Telecom, Inc.
BEFORE THE
IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION )
OF TRACFONE WIRELESS, INC., FOR )
DESIGNATION AS AN ELIGIBLE TELE- )
COMMUNICATIONS CARRIER )
)
)
)
)
CASE NO. TFW-T-09-01
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS
OBJECTING TO THE STIPULATION
AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
WIRELESS, INC. AND THE IDAHO
PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
STAFF
The Idaho Telecom Allance ("ITA"), by and through its attorneys of record,
Cynthia A. Melilo PLLC, and CTC Telecom, Inc., dba CTC Wireless, by and through its
attorneys of record, Richardson & O'Leary, PLLC (collectively, "Intervenors"), hereby
jointly file these Comments Objecting to the Stipulation and Motion of Tracfone
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
WIRELESS, INC. AND IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION STAFF - TFW-T-09-01
1
Wireless, Inc. ("TracFone") and the Staff of the Idaho Public Utilities Commission
("Staff").
BRIEF REVIEW OF PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND AND DISCUSSION OF
COMMISSION FINDINGS
On October 29, 2009, TracFone filed an Application, pursuant to Section
214(e)(2) of the Communications Act of 1934, for designation as an Eligible
Telecommunications Carrier ("ETC"). Application at 1. On February 5, 2010, the
Commission issued an Order denying TracFone's Application. See Order No. 30996.
On March 1, 2010, TracFone filed a Petition for Reconsideration and an
Amended Application for ETC designation. On March 8, 2010, Commission Staff filed
an Answer to TracFone's Petition. Subsequently, TracFone submitted a letter
withdrawing its Petition for Reconsideration and expressing its support for a process
that would facilitate a Staff review and recommendation regarding its Amended
Application within 60 days.
On May 14, 2010, CTC Telecom, Inc. (then dba Snake River PCS) ("CTC") and
Idaho Telecom Allance (1ITA") each filed, pursuant to Commission Rule of Procedure
71, IDAPA 31.01.01.071, a Motion to Intervene Out of Time and Petition to Intervene.
On May 28, 2010, the Commission issued an Order granting CTC's and the ITA's
Petitions to Intervene. See Order No. 31096.
Following discovery and a technical hearing, on April 21,2011, the Commission
issued Order No. 32231 outlining a post-hearing briefing schedule and expressly limiting
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
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the scope of the parties' legal briefs to whether TracFone is legally obligated to remit
certain fees pursuant to the Idaho Emergency Communications Act (IECA) or the Idaho
Telecommunications Service Assistance Program (ITSAP). Thereafter, the Commission
received post-hearing briefs from the Company, Intervenors and Commission Staff.
On July 29, 2011, the Commission issued Order No. 32301, denying TracFone's
application for ETC designation on the basis that TracFone's designation as an ETC in
Idaho would not be in the public interest. Order 32301 at page 4. The public interest
analysis hinged on (i) TracFone's failure, during its twelve years of operation in Idaho, to
remit any fees pursuant to the IECA or ITSAP; and (ii) TracFone's continuing
unwillngness to remit such fees. Based upon all of the arguments presented in public
comments, discovery, hearings and briefings, the Commission found that TracFone
"failed to demonstrate that granting its Amended Application for designation as an ETC
in Idaho would be in the 'public interest''' because "TracFone's intransigence and refusal
to remit applicable fees represents an obvious conflict with the 'public interest' . . ."
Order 32301 at page 9. The Commission went on to say that "An agreement to
voluntarily contribute applicable fees to the aforementioned IECA and ITSAP Funds
should be viewed as a minimum requirement for any telecommunications carrier
seeking designation as an ETC in Idaho." Order 32301 at page 9 (emphasis supplied).
In Order 32301, the Commission clearly stated that "the Commission wil not
grant ETC status to TracFone until the Company, at minimum, assents to the payment
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
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of IECA and ITSAP fees, as well as any past due amounts accrued dunng its 12-
year tenure of operations in Idaho." Order 32301 at page 9 (emphasis supplied).
On August 19, 2011, TracFone filed a Motion for Reconsideration, claiming that
the Commission misapplied applicable law in determining that TracFone must remit the
IECA and ITSAP fees.
On September 19, 2011, the Commission issued Order No. 32358 denying
TracFone's Petition for Reconsideration and upholding Order No. 32301, stating that
they were "not persuaded that TracFone's Petition compels (the Commission) to deviate
from (their) previous finding that the Company's wilful non-payment of the IECA and
ITSAP fees is contrary to the public interest." Order 32358 at page 7. Nothing in Order
No. 32358 nullfied any of the findings of fact or conclusions of law in Order 32301.
On October 28, 2011, TracFone filed a Notice of Appeal, appealing the decision
of the Commission to the Idaho Supreme Court.
On February 8, 2012, TracFone and Staff filed a Stipulation and Motion setting
forth a proposed settlement of the matters at issue before the Idaho Supreme Court to
allow TracFone to be designated an ETC in Idaho (the "Stipulation").
On February 17, 2012, the Commission issued a Notice of Proposed Settlement,
Order No. 32463, inviting comment on the proposed settlement.
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
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i. NON-PAYMENT OF PAST DUE ITSAP FEES IS NOT IN THE PUBLIC
INTEREST
A. The Stipulation and Motion is in Contravention of the Express
Language of Section 56-904, Idaho Code and May Not be Adopted by the
Commission.
The Telecommunications Service Assistance Program is established in Title 56, chapter
9 of the Idaho Code. The language of Section 56-904 mandates that the Commission
shall determine and impose ITSAP surcharge fees upon every Idaho
telecommunications carriers' end users. The statute further mandates that such fees be
uniform.
Recovery of telecommunications service revenue reductions --
Administration. (1) The Idaho public utilties commission shall determine
and impose a uniform statewide monthly surcharge on each end user's
business, residential and wireless access service. The surcharge shall be
an amount sufficient to reimburse each carrier of residential basic local
exchange service for the total amount of telephone assistance discounts
provided as well as the carrier's and the administrator's expenses of
administering the plan. § 56-904, Idaho Code (emphasis supplied).
Nowhere does the statute grant the Commission the authority to waive the mandatory
surcharge.
As previously noted by Staff, TracFone has acknowledged that it is "a telephone
corporation providing telecommunication services for compensation within this state."
Staff Post-Hearing Brief at page 3; see also, § 56-901 (2), Idaho Code. So, there is no
question regarding TracFone's obligation to remit the fees, regardless of its business
decision not to collect them as required. Because the proposed settlement calls for
waiving the mandatory surcharge upon the end users of TracFone for 11 of the 12 years
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
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TracFone has conducted business in Idaho, the Commission lacks the authority to enter
into such an agreement.
liThe Idaho Public Utilties Commission has no authority other than that given to it
by the legislature. It exercises a limited jurisdiction and nothing is presumed in favor of
its jurisdiction." Ada County Highway Dist. v. Idaho Public Utilities Commn.! 151. Idaho
1! 253 P .3d 675 (Idaho 2011), citing Alpert v. Boise Water Cotp., 118 Idaho 136, 140,
795 P.2d 298,302 (1990).
Section 61-501, Idaho Code, sets forth the Commission's general authority:
61-501. Investment of authority. The public utilties commission is hereby vested
with power and jurisdiction to supervise and regulate every public utilty in the
state and to do all things necessary to carry out the spirit and intent of the
provisions of this act.
Chapter 5 of Title 61 of the Idaho Public Utilties Law, delineates the
Commission's express authority regarding specific matters within its Title 61 jurisdiction.
Chapter 5 of the Public Utilties Law does not address the Idaho Telecommunications
Service Assistance Program. Rather that authority is found solely in Section 56-904,
Idaho Code. As previously noted, Section 56-904 does not confer discretionary authority
upon the Commission regarding the setting and imposition of uniform ITSAP fees upon
all telecommunications end users.
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
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B. The Stipulation and Motion with Respect to the ITSAP Fees Does Not
Comport with Commission Order No. 32301 and Order No. 32358.
The proposed settlement set forth in the Stipulation is not fair, just and
reasonable, nor is it in the public interest. Therefore, it is in violation of applicable state
and federal law and should not be approved by the Commission.
TracFone and Staff propose that the Commission grant ETC status to TracFone
in exchange for TracFone's agreement to remit ITSAP fees retroactive only to January
1, 2011.1 That is one-twelfth of the requirement stated by the Commission in Order
32301.2 Order 32301 at page 9.
According to the Stipulation, the proposed settlement "complies with the spirit
and intent of the Reconsideration Order and constitutes substantial compliance
therewith." Stipulation at paragraph 6. Payment of one-twelfth of what the Commission
required in Order 32301 is not substantial compliance. Nor does it comply with the spirit
and intent of Order 32301 or Order 32358 ("Reconsideration Ordet'. The Commission
stated in Order 32301 that "(t)he success of both the IECA and ITSAP hinges upon the
support of telecommunications carriers operating in Idaho. Specifcally, IT SAP relies
upon the cooperation of telecommunications carners who, like TracFone, directly
market their service offenngs to low-income consumers." Order 32301 at page 8
(emphasis supplied).
1 Note that the proposed payment period is not even retroactive to the date TracFone first made
application to the Commission for ETC status.2 TracFone has been operating in Idaho for more than 12 years. Tr. at 105, 11. 7-9.
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
WIRELESS, INC. AND IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION STAFF - TFW-T-09-01
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Nowhere in the Reconsideration Order does the Commission state that it wil
accept less in terms of payment than what it stated in Order 32301. Rather, the
Reconsideration Order clearly states that the Commission reaffrms Order No. 32301.
Order 32358 at page 11. The proposed settlement does not comport with Commission
Order Nos. 32301 or 32358, and should be rejected by the Commission.
C. Any Waiver of Past-Due ITSAP Fees Requires an Express Finding by
the Commission, Based on Documentary Evidence in the Record That Has
Been Fully Vettd By All Parties to this Case, Regarding the Specific
Amount of Fees Being Waived and the Impact of Any Such Waiver on the
ITSAP Fund and Idaho's Telecommunications Consumers.
In its Post-Hearing Brief, Staff stated, "The payment of applicable ITSAP,
Telecommunications Relay Service (TRS) and E911 fees, including past due
amounts, should be a necessary pre-condition to granting TracFone's Amended
Application for designation as an ETC in Idaho." Staffs Post-Hearing Brief at p. 2
(emphasis supplied). As further noted by Staff, "(t)he ITSAP was created in order to
'maximize federal 'lifeline' and 'link-up' contributions to Idaho's low-income consumers.
Idaho Code § 56-901 (1). The ITSAP is dependent upon the support of
telecommunications carriers) operating in Idaho, particularly those carriers who, like
TracFone, directly market their service offerings to low-income consumers. Recipients
of ITSAP funding must 'meet narrowly targeted eligibilty criteria based solely on income
or factors directly related to income established by the department of health and
welfare.' Idaho Code § 56-901 (3)." Staff Post-Hearing Brief at page 3.
As Staff pointed out in its Post-Hearing Brief, "TracFone does not dispute the
Commission's authority to order the Company to pay into the ITSAP Fund. TracFone
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
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concedes that the ITSAP fee falls under the Commission's jurisdiction. See Tr. at p. 76,
1.21." Staff Post-Hearing Brief at page 3.
Although TracFone is eager to add the revenue generated by serving Idaho
Lifeline customers to its bottom line; TracFone has been anything but a team player
throughout its 12-plus years of conducting business as a telecommunications carrier in
Idaho, let alone in this application proceeding. "TracFone's Amended Application and
testimony at the technical hearing demonstrate that, unless it is compelled to do so by
the Commission, the Company has absolutely no intention of contributing to the ITSAP
and the E911 Service Fund. In state after state where the Company has filed
applications for designation as an ETC, TracFone has chosen a combative approach
and fought against the payment of such fees and assessments." Staff Post-Hearing
Brief at page 2.
Despite this strong language, the Stipulation now declares that forgoing 11 years
of revenue rightly due to the ITSAP fund from TracFone is in the public interest. Since
Idaho telecommunications consumers are the ones that have been making up any
shortall in the ITSAP fund due to TracFone's intransigence, at the very least, Idaho
telecommunications consumers who dutifully contribute to the ITSAP fund have a right
to know exactly how much they would be short-changed by the proposed settlement.
Based upon the information set forth in Intervenors' Exhibit A, attached hereto
and incorporated herein, it appears that the proposed settlement would short-change
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
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the ITSAP fund and, consequently, Idaho telecommunications consumers, by a quarter
of a millon dollars, and that is a conservative estimate.
II. NON-PAYMENT OF PAST DUE IECA FEES IS NOT IN THE PUBLIC
INTEREST
A. The Stipulation and Motion with Respect to the IECA Does Not
Comport with Commission Order No. 32301 and Order No. 32358.
The Stipulation calls for TracFone to be granted unconditional ETC status in
Idaho upon the filng of a declaratory judgment action seeking a determination as to
whether the IECA applies to TracFone, in lieu of complying with its obligations under
Order 32301 to make payment of all fees due under the IECA since TracFone began
conducting business in Idaho.
This proposed settlement, as it relates to the IECA, does not comport with
Commission Order 32301 or Order 32358. First, the shortened payment obligation falls
far short of the 12 years required in Order 32301. Second, until a court determines that
TracFone is not subject to the I ECA, ETC status should not be granted because, as
determined by the Commission in Order 32301, TracFone does not meet the minimum
requirements to meet the federally-mandated public interest standard. Both Order No.
32301 and Order No. 32358 clearly state that, unless and until TracFone remits all
applicable fees, it would not be in the public interest to grant it ETC status. The
Commission has already found that the IECA is applicable. Order 32301 at page 6.
Therefore, the purpose of any declaratory judgment action would be for TracFone to
establish that the IECA is not applicable. At a minimum, TracFone should not be
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
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granted ETC status unless and until a court determines that IECA is not applicable to
TracFone.
Allowing TracFone to be eligible for ETC status upon merely "filing" or "initiating"
a declaratory judgment action is contrary to both the letter and spirit of the findings of
fact and conclusions of law in Order No. 32301 and Order No. 32358. Moreover,
TracFone could have initiated a declaratory judgment action in 2009 when it first applied
for ETC status or in May of 2010 when the Idaho Emergency Communications
Commission ("IECC") issued its letter in opposition to TracFone's Amended Application
based on its position that TracFone's failure to remit the statutorily mandated 911 fees
is a violation of the IECA. TracFone would like everyone to believe that waiting to grant
it ETC status until the conclusion of a declaratory judgment action would be a grave
injustice to the low-income population of Idaho. But, as has been pointed out
throughout the nearly two and a-half year history of this case, TracFone alone is
responsible for any delay in its abilty to serve the low-income population of Idaho. The
only real injustice to Idaho low-income citizens at issue here is TracFone's failure to
collect and remit the statutorily mandated fees that are intended to assist the very
consumers TracFone feigns concern for.
Granting TracFone ETC status prior to it remitting a single penny of the statutorily
mandated 911 fees wil only further exacerbate the problem caused by its 12-year
history of thumbing its nose at Idaho law.
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
WIRELESS, INC. AND IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION STAFF - TFW-T-09-01
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B. Any Waiver of Past-Due IECA Fees Requires an Express Finding by
the Commission, Based on Documentary Evidence in the Record That Has
Been Fully Vettd By All Parties to Case No. TFW- T -09-01, Regarding the
Specific Amount of Fees Being Waived and the Impact of Any Such Waiver
on Idaho's Counties and Citizens.
"In its Amended Application, TracFone boasts that it wil provide accss to
emergency services and that its customers wil receive an E911-compliant handset free
of charge. See First Amended Application at 24. Consistent with this assertion, Staff
believes that it is not in the public interest of Idaho customers to allow TracFone to be
designated as an ETC without requiring the Company to collect and remit applicable
E911 fees, including any past due amounts." Staff Post-Hearing Brief at page 5.
Yet, despite Staffs clearly worded position regarding TracFone's obligation to
remit the statutorily mandated 911 fees, the Stipulation calls for allowing TracFone to be
deemed in compliance with the IECA once it pays the past due fees for 2011 alone,
rather than the entire 12 years' worth of delinquent fees it owes to Idaho counties and
their citizens. At the rate of $1.00 per access line per month, the counties would be
short-changed by more than four millon dollars, based on the information contained in
Intervenors' Exhibit A. Throughout the 12 years TracFone has been doing business
in Idaho and failng to remit the statutorily mandated 911 fees, its subscribers have been
served by the 911 centers supported by the very fees it refuses to pay.3 Not
insignificantly, by not assessing the mandatory 911 fees, TracFone gained a clear
3911 calls by wireless subscribers have increased from 55 thousand calls per day in 1996, to
approximately 400 thousand calls per day as of June 2011. See, Intervenors' Exhibit A: CTIA
Advocacy Wireless Facts.
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
WIRELESS, INC. AND IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION STAFF - TFW-T-09-01
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competitive pricing edge in the Idaho market, which helped fatten its bottom Iine4 at the
expense of Idaho's 911 system. If ever there was a case of putting the cart (of
TracFone's foreign investors) ahead of the horse (of Idaho's public interest), the
Stipulation as it regards TracFone's obligations under the IECA is that case.
III. CONCLUSION.
The terms of the Stipulation do not comport with the findings of fact and
conclusions of law in the Commission's Order No. 32301 or Order No. 32358 and,
therefore, TracFone's and Staffs Motion to approve the Stipulation should be denied.
Intervenors respectully request that the Commission remain steadfast in its
refusal to grant ETC status to TracFone until TracFone, at a minimum, paysall past due
ITSAP fees and fully complies with any court order resulting from its challenge of the
applicabilty of the IECA to it. Simply put, placing the burden of TracFone's
intransigence on the backs of Idaho's telecommunications consumers and Idaho's
emergency communications system, while rewarding TracFone's conduct with the
opportunity to further increase its bottom line for its investors, is not in the public interest
of Idaho and its citizens, and would be contrary to applicable state and federal law.
In the alternative, Intervenors respectully request that the Commission re-open
the TracFone application proceeding to receive additional evidence on the question of
the economic impact of TracFone's non-payment of all statutorily mandated fees and
4 According to América Móvil's Annual Reports for the years 2002 through 2009, and 4th Quarter
Reports for 2001, 2010 and 2011, TracFone's profits have risen by nearly 2,00% since 2003.
http://w.americamovil.com/amxlen/cm/investor/repY.html?p=29&s=41 ;
http://ww.americamovil.com/amxlen/cm/investor/repQ.html?p=29&s=40; .See also, Intervenors'
Exhibit A.
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
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enter new findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the public interest based on
such evidence.
In addition, because the Commission based its decision in Orders No. 32301 and
32358 solely on TracFone's refusal to pay the statutorily mandated ITSAP and 911
fees, it did not address the other public interest arguments and evidence presented to
the Commission at the technical hearing and made a part of the record. To the extent
the Commission elects to reverse itself regarding the public purpose fees at issue here,
it should enter findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding all of the other evidence
and arguments presented to it at the hearing regarding TracFone's failure to meet the
public interest standard required of a telecommunications carrier that desires to receive
ETC status in one or more areas served by a rural telephone company.
Lastly, if the Commission grants ETC status to TracFone upon the payment of all
past-due ITSAP fees and the mere filng of the declaratory judgment action as proposed
in the Stipulation, such status should be automatically revoked in the event TracFone
appeals. any decision adverse to it.
SIGNATURE PAGE FOLLOWS
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
WIRELESS, INC. AND IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION STAFF - TFW-T-09-01
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DATED this 9th day of March 2012.
By:
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
WIRELESS, INC. AND IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION STAFF - TFW-T-09-01
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on this 9th day of March 2012, I caused to be served a true
and correct copy of the foregoing by the method indicated below, and addressed to the
following:
Jean Jewell
Idaho Public Utilities Commission
472 West Washington Street
Boise, ID 83702
jean. jewelltmpuc.ldaho.gov
D U.S. Mail
D Overnight Mail
rg Hand Delivery
DFax
D Electronic Mail
Neil Price
Idaho Public Utilties Commission
472 West Washington Street
Boise,lD 83702
Neil.pricetmpuc.ldaho.gov
D U.S. Mail
D Overnight Mail
rg Hand Delivery
DFax
D Electronic Mail
Mitchell F. Brecher
Debra McGuire Mercer
GREENBERG TRAURIG, LLP
2101 L Street, NW, Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20037
brechermtmgtlaw. com
mercerdmtmgtlaw. com
D U.S. Mail
D Overnight Mail
D Hand Delivery
DFax
rg Electronic Mail
Dean J. Miler
McDEVITT & MILLER LLP
420 West Bannock Street
Boise, ID 83702
joetmmcdevitt-miller.com
D U.S. Mail
D Overnight Mail
D Hand Delivery
DFax
rg Electronic Mail
INTERVENORS' COMMENTS OBJECTING TO STIPULATION AND MOTION OF TRACFONE
WIRELESS, INC. AND IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION STAFF -TFW-T-09-01
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EXHIBIT A
AMERICAN MOVIL
ANNUAL REPORTS
Annual Reports -America Móvil Page 1 of 1
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Reports
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http ://www.americamovi1.com/amx/enJcmJinvestor/repY.htrn1?p29&s4 1 2/20/20 12
LE
L
D
1
—
telcel launches itsGSM Il1UAmërica MOvil launches
services with coverage in 56 GSM services in Nicaragua.
Mexican towns and cities.
America MOvil enters into an
I!elecom Americas agreement with Millicom Inter
aquirs from the Braziliangovern-national Cellular pursuant to
rnentnewPCSllcensestoprovide which itwillacquirethe latter’s
wireless service in thecityofSao interest in the Colombian cellular
Paulo,in Paran-Sta.Catarina and in company Celcaribe,SA
BahIa-Sergi.
11
strategy on improving the
company’s profitability.
America MOvil’s U.S.subsidiary,Tracfone is the largest Mobile Virtual Network Operator
in the United States and has become a premier prepaid wireless service provider in that
country.It registered a significant improvement in its financial position in 2002.
Total revenues came in at 413 million dollars aftertaking into account a one-time adjust
ment in the company’s revenue deferment policy that reduced fourth quarter revenue
by 21.2 million dollars.In the absence ofsuch change and ofa certain release ofexcess
reserves associated with the payment oflocal taxes,revenues would have increased
slightly relative to the previous year.Bythe end of the fourth quarter,MOUs were up
18.3%over a year earlier,providing good support to ARPUs.
Cost control measures continued to yield results,with SG&A expenses down 38%on the
year.As a result ofthe above,the EBITDA loss posted in 2002 was barely g million dollars,
when the previousyear had seen a s 36 million dollar loss.In fact,without the change in
accounting policy and reserves mentioned above the companyvirtually would have bro
ken-even in the year lit did better than break-even in the second half).
Tracfone had more modest subscriber growth than in 2001,with net additions of 55 thou
sand subscribers,ending the year with nearly 2 million subscribers.But it significantly
reduced churn,from a monthly average of8.8%to 5.4%in 2002.It achieved this decline
through continued use ofloyalty and customer retention programs started back in 2001
and various marketing initiatives.
The company began to sell only digital phones in 2002;by year-end,42.2%ofthe sub
scriber base was digital.
Fivatcial Results>>USA Stbscribers>>USA
(,,,iIII,,,cf US
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United States
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America Móvil -2003 Annual Report
mérica MôviI acquires an option to America MOvil acquires 51%of
rgentinean wireless company CTI.Salvadorian telecommunications company
Upon exercising the option later in the year Compañla de Telecomunicaciones de El Sal-
it acquired approximately 1.2 million sub.vador (CTE).Thecompany had approxi
scribers.In the same month.America MôviI mately 623 thousand fixed lines and 52
increased its participation in Ecuadorian thousand wireless subscribers.
subsidiary Conecel from 8o%to 100%.
UThe Nicaraguan Government
accepts America Móvils offr fr its 49%
ownership interest in Empress Nicaraguen.
se de Telecomunicaciones.S.A.,which
offers fixed,wireless and other telecommu
nications services in Nicaragua.
g.America Mövil acquires through
ecom Americas a controlling interest in
Brazilian wireless company BSE,5.A.,
adding approximately 1 million subscribers
to its subscriber base.
Móvils bid for an interest
company BCP,S.A..
a.....,.,......tely 1.7 million subscribers.
was accepted.The transaction closed three
months later.
11
In 2003 TracFone Wireless,Inc.,America Móvil’s sub
sidiary in the United States,continued to be a leader in
the sector of prepaid wireless telephony in the U.S.,
finishing the year as the largest mobile virtual network
operator in the country and one of the ten largest opera
tors in terms of subscribers.
The subscriber growth registered in the year was over
50%,taking its subscriber base to nearly three million
subscribers at the end of December.
TracFone’s revenues increased 46%in 2003,to 547 mil
lion dollars.Its EBITDA came in at 35 million dollars.
For the first time,it turned in an operating profit (18
million dollars).
The improvement in the company’s operating results,
obtained in spite of a more competitive market and an
uncertain economic situation,was a result of innovative
and aggressive sales and marketing initiatives as well as
significant improvements in customer retention—which
significantly reduced churn—lower call-center operating
costs,and strict company-wide expense controls.In
recognition of exemplary customer service and vendor
performance,Wal-Mart,named TracFone the electronics
vendor of the year.
23
Ve acquired a 69.0%in
terest in hmpresa NicaragUense de
Telecomunicaciones [Enitel)from the
government of Nicaragua.Enitel is
the sole provider of wiretine services
in Nicaragua and one of three mobile
operators in the country [including
America Móvil’s Sercom Nicaragua).
Ne sold our 60.0%interest in
el,an Argentinean broadband
company.
1•United States>Tracfone 4 EL Salvador >CTE
Licensed Pop:294 Licensed Pop:7
Wireless penetration:60%Wireless penetration:23%
Wireless subscribers:4,394 Fixed line penetration:13%
Revenues:787 Wireless subscribers:518
America Mávils interest:98.2%Fixed lines:781
Number of employees:428 Revenues:411
America MóviLs interest:94.9%2 Mexico >Telcel Number of employees:2,406
Licensed Pop:106
Wireless penetration:36%Honduras>Megatet
Wireless subscribers:28,851 Licensed Pop:7
Revenues:6,287 Wireless penetration:lOoo
America Móvils interest:100.0%Wireless subscribers:198
Number of employees:9,354 Revenues:42
America Móvil’s interest:100.0%3 Guatemala >Telgua and Sercom Number of employees:251
Licensed Pop:12
Wireless penetration:23%6 Nicaragua >Sercom and Enitel
Fixed line penetration:9%Licensed Pop:6
Wireless subscribers:1,306 Wireless penetration:13%
Fixed lines:901 Fixed line penetration:4%
Revenues:553 Wireless subscribers:453
America Mávil’s interest:99.0%Fixed lines:214
Number of employees:2,138 Revenues:172
America MOvit’s interest:99.0%
Number of employees:2.392
Colombia >Comcel
Licensed Pop:46
Wireless penetration:23%
Wireless subscribers:5,814
Revenues:741
America Móvils interest:99.2%
Number of employees:1,813
20 04 JANUARY:
reIevant
events
MAh
N
Our subscriber base in Ecuador increased
51%during the course of the year to reach
2.3 million subscribers.Almost 800 thou
sand subscribers were added in 2004.Wire
less market penetration in Ecuador rose to
28%in 2004.
Revenues of our Ecuadorian subsidiary
Conecel,which operates under the commer
cial name Porta,rose at a faster pace than
subscribers (5 9%)and reached a total of 379
million dollars.Conecel’s 2004 EBITDA
rose 47%year-on-year,topping 129 million
dollars,accounting for an EBITDA margin
of34%of revenues.
Our success in Ecuador through 2004 has
been driven by continued expansion of our
prepaid and postpaid services such as new
value added services available through our
Porta Ideas web page and membership re
wards programs that promote customer loy
alty.Prepaid card sales actually rose 69%in
the year while prepaid equipment sales rose
by 343%.We continued to improve cus
tomer service at Porta with 14 new customer
>50%subscriber growth
for second consecutive
>Largest prepaid wireless
provider and MVNO
Revenues rose to 787
milLion US dollars
Our operations in the United States ob
tained 1.4 million subscribers in 2004,
bringing their total subscriber base to nearly
4.4 million.For the second consecutive year,
subscriber net additions expanded by ap
proximately 50%.Tracfone finished 2004
as the largest prepaid wireless service pro
vider and Mobile Virtual Network Operator
(MVNO)in the United States.Through
agreements with all major US wireless carri
ers,Tracfone can offer its customers nation
wide coverage.During the second half of
2004,Tracfone launched GSM equipment
service centers and the remodeling of several
others.The share of sales realized through
our own customer attention centers actually
rose 500 basis points in 2004.Conecel also
began a process to obtain the ISO 9000 Cer
tification,which corroborates our excellent
quality ofservice.
sales.The prepaid phones,equipped with
patented technology which allows customers
to keep track of their spending at all times,
are sold through major retailers and on-line
Revenues increased slightly less (44%)than
subscribers,to 787 million dollars.EBITDA
for the year came in at 48 million dollars
and was 36%higher than that seen the year
before,with the EBITDA margin staying in
the 6%range in spite of the fast pace of sub
scriber growth.
United
States year
Financial ResuLts Subscribers
ifl,ihOfldO4fli irn.:,,,s
787
753
607 547
03 04
160VEI4UE5
4.4
03 04
48
11111111
03 04
EBiTDA
as well.
21
America MóviL 2005 Annuat Report
HOW A GREAT STORY...
million
wireless
subscribers
America Móvil has grown by
in the last five years
CHAPTER
2
rf he setting of our story is the Americas
It is the 14 countries where we have established telecom opera—‘..
tions.13 oftheni in Latin America,where 453 million people livc.Thc
other one is the United States,with a population of nearly 3(H)nul—.1
lion people.if —
Ann iii i Mosl is thr ft idnt._ss iirlrss sri sir r s opr i itoi in L itni
America .nid the number one player ii the prcpaid wireless market ,.
in the United States.Commitment,coverage and qualiR of service
have brought us to the leading position in the region.r —
At the end of 200)).the year of our inception,market penetration .
in the Latin American countries svhcre we operate today stood at N.
a conibmed 12.13v the end of 2)115,it had grown to 45,which S 4
means that the svircless market ni svhat is today our reiziou cx———
V
panded by I 52 million subscribers in these live sears,more than
half of these ness subscribers joined us at Ainéric,i Móvil.—-
.
4
___
In the United States,prepaid services were virtually non—‘
\istr nt ni 2))))))VA s’s r ii.onr of tIn pinnr i.is s kin..,to
develop the rcpaid yirclcss market.Today this market is the
main driver of subscriber grossth in the country.
4
Central.America
Our wireless subscriber base in Central America -comprising our operations in Guatemala.
El Salvador,Honduras.and Nicaragua-grew 59.5%in 2005 to 3.9 million dienrs.Together
with 2.0 million fixed lines,our Central American operations had close to 6.0 million lines
at the end of the year.Wireless penetration expanded by an average of 9 percentage points
in the region.Guatemala and El Salvador finalized the year with above 33%penetration
while Nicaragua and Honduras were in the high teens by year-end 2005.
2005 revenues reached 1.4 billion dollars.having risen 24.5%in the year.Central America’s
EBITDA ended 2005 at 700 million dollars,52.0%oftotal revenues.
Financial Results Subscrbers
(rEiwon001001)(,nfliUOR)
1.000 0
1.250
1.000
El ul
_____
04 05 04 05 04 05
REVENUES EURDA
::
i
/
1
4
,
/1
1
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!
’
Wireless Subscribers
millions)
Projected Wireless
Penetration in AMX Region*
countries million wireless net million pops covered
subscriber additions in Latin AmericaintheAmericas
in 2006
Cua)
Wireless Subscribers en
by Region
Andeafl Central United
22,9%AmeriCa &States
9.3%
120
80
80
:3-
CumCaCu20
MeTC0SUI
10.8%
aa
:3-a
Ca
:0-Co
60
50 II
a)’a)I
0-1 02 08 028 089 088 08
Market corineflsUu
o Dl 02 03 0-4 05
•I
.1
EBITLJP growing at a faster pace than revenues.
Net Income Revenues by Region
(billioos of dollaro)(%)
Andean Central United
America &States
Caribbean 80
0
MercsErBmzilMexico
lS.S
Is
46.4w0
ci Return on Equity
DI 02 02 D°l 05 06
9
I
.-r,•jg-;,
€4•_—‘
‘•::i
;.-7 ‘i
/
1.
‘‘
OUR COMPPNY
____
PT P OLPNCE
______
k
1ANme5:2%ri
_
licensed po104
Wireless penetration:54%
.
Licensed pop:7 L pop:7 licensed pop:5
Wireless penetration:53%Wi penetration:25%Wireless penetration:35%
Fixed line penetration:14%Wire market share:40%Fixed line penetration:5%
Wireless market share:34%Wirel subscribers:736 Wireless market share:70%
Fixed line market share:84%Revenues 118 Fixed line market share:100%
Wireless subscribers:1,288 EBITDA:5k Wireless subscribers:1,277
Fixed lines:837 America Mdv’ll’s interest:100.0%Fixed lines:260
Revenues:476 Number of empl9yees:399 Revenues:245
EBITDA:236 ..EBITDA:114
America Móvil’s interest:95.8%America Móvils interest:99.3%
Numberof employees:2,594 Number of employees:1,812
2006 RELEVPNT EVENTS
July:Our Chilean subsidiary started offering wireless services November The new Nationaland International Calling-Party-PayswithGSMtechnologyandlauncheditsnewbrand,Claro.regime came into effect in Mexico,which requires the calling par
ty to pay forthe full cost of a call in both national and international
August:We integrated our companies in Nicaragua,Sercom and long distance calls.Mexico had only Local Calling-Party-Pays,aEnitel.Sercom had been established in 2003 to develop wireless system implemented in May 1999.
operations in the country.Enitel,a fixed-line and wireless opera
tor,was acquired in 2004.December:America Móvil acquired from Verizon Communica
tions Inc.and other shareholders a 100%ownership interest in
September:Our Central American subsidiaries in Guatemala,El Verizon Dominicana,our first operation in the Caribbean.II OnSalvador,Nicaragua and Honduras decided to adopt the Claro December 13th,America Móvil’s and America Telecom’s Share-brand name fortheir wireless services.holders Assemblies approved the merger of America Telecom in
America MOvil.The merger became effective on that date.
OPEROTING REVIEW
United States
Our operation in the United Statea reached 7.9 million aub
acribera,an increaae of 28.7x/x relative to the year before.
Tractone gained 1.8 million aubacriberx in 2006,exceed
ing the previoua year by 100 thouaand.Wirelexa prepaid
penetration ratea reached 1 0.2x/x in 2006.
Tracfone revenuea went up 31 .5x/x to 1.3 billion dollara.
MOUa in 2006 increaaed 5.1%relative to laat year.AR
PUa were down 5.4x/x,explained by a decreaae in the aver
age price per minute.EBITDA roxe to 88 million dollarx,
increaxing 1 0.5x/x relative to 2005.EBITDA margin came
in at 6.8x/x.
Caribbean [Dominican Republic’
ix
Li
Thix operation oonxolidatex with
PMX ax of Decvmbcr 200x
In December we completed the acquixition trom Verizon The financial rexulta of what ix now Claro Dominicana
of ita operationx in the Dominican Republic,which contrib-were conxolidated with America MOviI’x only that month.
uted 2.1 million wireleax aubxcriberx and over 750 thou-They provided ua with additional revenuex of 87.4 million
aand fixed linea to our operationa in the Americax.dollara.
I
I
lix B
ice -
ice
ax
ox ox cx ox ox
REtv\..tt Exlrox
xc
Li
IX
In
h
Ox OE I
REVEtUEx Exixoc
22
What a remarkable change!
At the time we went into
business,only one in seven
Latin Americans had access
to telecom services.
CD
=
mm
(I
.
,
‘1
U
%1
.
U,
Operating Review
Revenues for the full year rose 7.7%annually,to 1.4 bil
lion dollars,with service revenues increasing at a 10.9%
Revenues amounted to 2.2 billion dollars of which only
1.9 billion dollars were consolidated in America Mdvii.
2007 EBITDA totaled 878 million dollars )onlv 770 mil
lion dollars appear in our consolidated figures).Their
combined EB1TDA margin was stable at 39.4%,while
the consolidated margin came in at 41.4%.
I
pace.EBITDA for the year reached 159 million dollars,
expanding 80.2%annually on the back of rising reve
nues and lower costs.It climbed 4.5 percentage points
in the period to 11.3%of revenues.
,...,.....NICAN REPIJILIC.PUERTO RICO &JAMAICA)
-,
I
F
In
III ‘Ii
06 07 06 07 06 07 06 07REVENUESEXITEDWIREIE55FIXED
We finished December with 3.5 million wireless sub
scribers in the Caribbean,having added 570 thousand
subscribers organically,and 786 thousand clients by way
of acquisitions in Puerto Rico and just recently Jamaica.
U,
InUI
-.0
-
i .I —Ill!
06 07 06 07 06REVENUESEBITD*
Tracfone added 1.6 million subscribers in the year to
finish 2007 with 9.5 million clients,20.5%more than
a year before.
22
“With solid growth ahead in
both voice and data,America
Móvil shall continue to post
good results,strengthening
and enlarging our client base.”
Relevant
Financial
Data
2007 US$Data In millions ofconstant Mexicanpesos asof
December31.2oo7.eept foreamlngspershare.2007 2006 Var%Millions
——.p -—
311,580
126,013
404%
85,194
27.3%
_______
58,588
____
1.67
321
126,858
349,121
35449
48.70%
‘Nfr_
28.2%
41.3%
28,675
11,598
40.4%
39.6%7,841
TotaL Revenues
EBITDA
EBITDA Margin
Operating Profit
Operating Margin
Net Income
Earnings per Share (EPS,pesos)
Earnings per ADR (US dollars)
Total Shareholders’Equity
Total Assets
Weighted Average of Common
Shares Outstanding (millions)
Return on Equity
243,005
89,183
36.7%
61,034
25.1%
44,422
1.25
2.33
113,747
328,325
273%
5,392
0.15
31.9%
33.6%
33.5%
11.6%
6.3%
11,674
32,128
35,459
46.40%
-0.9%35,149
We determine EBITDA as shown in this reconciliation:
Operating Income 85,194 61,034
Plus
Depreciation 31,163 19,775
Amortization 9,656 8,374
EBITDA 126,013 89,183
*millions of constant Mexican pesos as ofDecember 31.2007
tiHi.
..------—-,
B
80L09080
XEd’
equity
Pops covered in
Latin America
9
Revenues
(millions of Meocan pesos)
‘c
13
OUR COMPANY
AT A GLANCE
OUnited States:Tracfone’5 flThttat*beefl-Dominican Republic,flPias Ciaro
Licensed pop:304 Puerto RIco S Jamaica:Clara Licensed pop:28
Wireless penetrstion:12%Licensed pop:16 Wireless penetration:66%
Wireless market share:30%Wireless penetration:76%Wireless market share:39%
Wireless subscribers:11,192 Fixed line penetration:9%Wireless subscribers:Z178
Revenues:1,480 Wireless market share:40%Revenues:735
E8ITOA:269 Fixed line market share:89%EBITDA:219
America Movil interest:98.2%Wireless subscribers:4,809 America Móvil interest:100.0%
Number of employees:594 Fixed lines:1,605 Number of employees:1,701
Revenues:2,160
[J Mexico:Teicei EBITDk 797 flBrazil:Ciaro
Licensed pop:106 America Móvil interest:100.0%Licensed pop:191
Wireless penetration:73%Number of employees:Z530 Wireless penetration:78%
Wireless market share:72%Wireless market share:26%
Wireless subscribers:56,371 flArgentina,Paraguay6 Umguay Clara Wireless subscribers:38,731
Revenues:12,114 Licensed pop:48 Revenues:6,288
EBITDA:6,348 Wireless penetration:108%EBITDA:1,486
America Movil interest:100.0%Wireless market share:32%America MOvil interest:100.0%
Number of employees:16,526 Wireless subscribers:16,589 Number of employees:9.296
Revenues:2.255
flcefltàlAanm4a-Guatemeia,Honduras,EBITDA:765
El Salvador&Nicaragua:tiara America MOvil interest:100.0%Licensed pop:17
Licensed pop:33 Number of employees:2,398 Wireless penetration:95%
Wireless penetration:84%..Wireless market share:19%
Fixed line penetration:20%‘flC*flhIa:Comcei Wireless subscribers:3,002
Wireless market share:34%Ucep’pop:43 Revenues:497
Fixed line market share:66%Wireless penetration:95%EBITOA:16
Wireless subscribers:9,158 Wireless market share:67%America Móvil interest:100.0%
Fixed Lines:2,240 Wireless subscribers:27,390 Number of employees:1,405
Revenues:1,444 Revenues:2,917
EBITDA:657 EBtTDA:1.406
America Móvit interest:98.7%America Mévil interest:994%Licensed popuistion in millions.
Number of employees:Z869 Number of employees:3,681 ot ilollars
Prepaid market onlyfiEcuadecConecel
Licensed pop:13
Wireless penetration:88%
Wireless market share:71%
Wireless subscribers:8,304
Revenues:1,067
EBITDA:484
America Móvil interest:100.0%
Number of employees:1,879
2008 RELEVANT
EVENTS
In March,our operations in Argentina,use and exploitation of 30 megahertz Brazil.We initiated operations in Parâ,
Psragusy and Uruguay Iformerly Cli in the 1900-megahertz band over a 20-Maranhao and Amazonia.Claro has
Móvill were re.branded to Claro.To-year period,completed its nationwide coverage in
day,13 of our subsidiaries,including the country.
all those in Central America and the In the same month,we agreed with
Caribbean,share the same brand,the Ecuadorean Government the re-In August,we announced the acqui
newal,for a new 15-year term,of our sition of a 100%interest in Estesa
On May 7”’America Móvil was award-concession to provide wireless servic-Holding Corp.,a provider of cable
ed a license to provide wireless servic-es in Ecuador.television,broadband residential and
es in Panama through its Panamanian corporate data services in Nicaragua.
subsidiary.Claro Panama,S.A.Under In July 1511)we started providing wire-
the license,Claro has the right for the less services in the northern region of
14
OPERATING REVIEW
LcbJaUomInIcan
Rico &Jamaica
We finished December with 4.8 million wireless sub
scribers in the Caribbean,having added 1.3 million.
Our subscriber base grew 37.6%relative to 2007
with the Dominican Republic showing the fastest
growth (44.6%).
United
States
We obtained 2.2 billion dollars of revenues in 2008,
roughly the same amount as a year before,although
mobile revenues rose 25.3%year-on-year.The sig
nificant number of net additions had a bearing on
EBITDA,which came in at 797 million dollars,or the
equivalent to 36.9%of revenues.
C
ROVINIAS EOIT5A
FInancial Results Sublcdb.fa
Total net adds in 2008 were 1.7 million taking our sub-Revenues were up 57%annually to 1.5 billion dollars,
scriber base to 11.2 million,which represented an in-with service revenues rising 8.8%.EBITDA climbed
crease of 17.6%year-over-year.69.2%to 269 million dollars,with the EBITDA margin
jumping 6.8 percentage points in the year.
Ui Puerto
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27
EXHIBIT A
AMERICAN MOVIL
QUARTERLY REPORTS
Carlos Garcia-Moreno
F .‘Chief Financial Officer
carlos.garciamoreno@amovil.commu-I Daniela Lecuona Torras
Investor Relations Officenidaniela.lecuona@americamovil.com
AMERICA MOVIL’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2011
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,February 9,2012 -America Móvil,S.A.B.de C.V.(“America Móvil”)
[BMV:AMXI [NYSE:AMXI [NASDAQ:AMOVI [LATIBEX:XAMXL],announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2011.
30DM accesses America Móvil finished December with 300 million accesses,of which 242 mil
lion were wireless subscribers,7.4%more than a year before,and 58 million
RGUs that increased 12.3%over the period.
New churn Beginning in October we changed the methodology for booking active subscrib
policy in ers in Mexico,Colombia and Ecuador.As we excluded from the subscriber statis
tics those lines that have not had any air-time recharge during the churn period,
and Ecuador our net additions for the fourth quarter came to be only 304 thousand,bringing
the figure for the year to 16.7 million.
Postpaid base •In the postpaid segment we added 1.6 million subscribers in the quarter,taking
up 21%bY the total for the year to 6.1 million.Our postpaid subscriber base rose 20.5%in
2011.
4Q Revenues •Fourth quarter revenues totaled 182 billion pesos.They were up 12.3%from the
up 12%boY year-earlier quarter,with wireless revenues expanding 15.4%and fixed-line rev
enues 6.8%.
Mobile data •At constant exchange rates,mobile data services rose 27%and fixed broadband
revenues revenues followed with 15%,while PayTV revenues exhibited a 48%annual in-+27%boY crease.Every single product line in the South American block experienced solid
revenue growth.
EBITDA up •EBITDA of 64.5 billion pesos in the fourth quarter was up 3.9%from a year be-
3.9%boY fore,contributing to a 15.1%increase in our operating profits,to 38.3 billion pe
sos.The latter rise also reflects a reduction in depreciation charges,since at the
end of 2010 we booked extraordinary charges as we began to integrate the fixed
and mobile networks.
Net income of •Net income came down to 16.3 billion pesos as the depreciation of the peso in
MXP l6Bn the last quarter and the increase in net debt that took place throughout the year
to fund the acquisition of stock of Telmex,Telmex Internacional,Net Servicos
and StarOne as well as our own stock repurchases brought about an important
increase in our comprehensive financing costs.
MXP 7lBn in •Our net debt rose to 321 billion pesos in December from 207 billion at the close
Distributions of 2010 to help fund 70 billion pesos in stock purchases and 54 billion pesos in
share buybacks.Our cash flow from operations more than covered our capital
expenditures of 121 billion pesos and dividends of 17 billion.
I lighlights
elevant
Events
u bscribers
America MOvil
Consolidated
01
()1’croIin
slex cO
elce!
elmex
ii hr,iafiaiuhl
1I?.
ercosur
]aro Argentina
laro l’a raguav
laro Uruguay
laro Chile
razil
laro
Embratel
NFl
Andeans
oiriccl Colombia
elmex Colombia
liro Fcuador
laro l’eru
ent ru Anerica
luro (uitemala
laie’FE Salvador
Euro Nicaragua
laro I londuras
:laro l’anama
lam Costa Rica
aribhecm
laro Dominicana
laro l’uerto Rico
SA
raeFone
Total accesses
+8.3°/a YoY
m r-I r
m c’iI
Total Accesses
(millions)
Total Accesses
351)We finished December with 299.6 mfflion +8.3%
accesses,8.3%more than in 2010.This 123°/figure comprises 241.8 million wireless 250 +
subscribers,29.4 million landlines,15.1 mu
lion broadband accesses and 13.4 million -
PayTV units.In SouthAmerica,the number 150
of fixed lines was up 18.6%year-on-year Wa +7.4°/a
and that of broadband accesses 27.7%.
Our PayTV business exhibited an annual
increase of 33.1%.0
•Wirdine &Others •Wireless
Wireless Subscribers
242M America Móvil finished December with 241.8 million wireless subscribers,7.4%more
Wireless subs than at the end of 2010.Net additions for the quarter were 304 thousand.This figure
reflects the impact of a change in the methodology for booking active subscribers in
Mexico,Colombia and Ecuador.The change of methodology described above resulted
in net disconnections of 2.3 million,2.4 million and 151 thousand in Mexico,Colombia
and Ecuador,respectively.
-1Q10 4Q11
New churn
policy in
Mexico,
Colombia
and Ecuador
35M postpaid
subs,+21a/a
Y0Y
Subscribers
America MOvil
cjn’sohdated
A Ic
N1.-xtctt
Fe-lcd
id nte’c
Inf’i’tflt’snal
‘‘i .ttittis
Mercosur
Clam Argentina
Clam Paraguay
(‘(are Uruguay
(laro Chile
Bra,t)
(‘(are
Fm bra1(1
N UI
Andeans
(onicel Columbia
elinex (dunibia
Claro Ecuador
(laro Peru
Central ,\nwrica
(lam Guatemala
((are El Salvador
Claro Nicaragua
laio Honduras
(‘(are Panama
(‘(are Costa Rica
(.aribbean
(‘(are l)omtnicana
(,‘laro l’eterto Rico
L S,\
rae’Eeoc
Pursuant to the new methodology —which is consistent with our conservative stan
dards —we now exclude from the subscriber statistics those lines that have not had
any air-time recharge over a given period,with the corresponding impact on operating
metrics.Our strategy has been increasingly oriented towards developing a greater
presence in the postpaid sector and seeking out only the best prepaid clients.It is
important to note that in the absence of the above-mentioned change,the chum rates
would have been lower in all three cases than they were a year before.
We gained 1.6 million postpaid net additions in the fourth quarter,taking the net
additions for the year to 6.1 million,23.7%more than the year before.Our postpaid
subscriber base was up 20.5%in 2011,to 34.7 million,growing substantially more
rapidly than the prepaid one in all our operations save Panama.
2.9M net adds Brazil gained 2.9 million subscribers in the quarter,almost as many as the year before.
in Brazil InArgentina,net additions of 613 thousand more than tripled those of the year-earlier
quarter.In each of Central America and the Caribbean,the U.S.and Peru we added
approximately half a million subs in the fourth quarter.
Tess Subscribers as of ber 2011
Thousands
Tolal(’t
:ountry Dec11 Sep’11 Var.%Dec’10 Var.°/a
dexico 63,678 68,002 .3,4%64,138 2.4%
Brazil 60,380 57,514 5.0%51,638 16.9%
hUe 5,537 5,361 3.3%4,871 13.7%
rgentina,Paraguay and Uruguay 20,744 20,123 3.1%19,637 5.6%
:olombia 28,819 31,197 -7.6%29,264 -1.5%
:cuador 11,057 11,209 .1.3%10,624 4.1%
‘enl 11,254 10,756 4.6%9,686 16.2%
:entral America’and Caribbean 18,524 18,021 2.8%37,417 6,4%
iSA 19762 19,269 2.6%17,749 11.3%
‘otal Wireless Lines 241,755 241,451 0.1°/225,024 7.4°!
Includes total subscribers ofall companies in which America Mdvii holds an economic interest;does not consider the date in which
the companies startedbeing consolidated.‘Central America includes Panama and Costa Rica In every table.
3
Carlos Garcia-Moreno,_%
Chief Financial Officer
carIos.garciamoreno@Jamovil.commicDanielaLecuonaTorras
Investor Relations Office111)(I”%/I daniela.lecuona@americamovil.com
AMERICA MOVIL’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2010
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,February 8,2010 -America Móvil,S.A.B.de C.V.(“America Móvil”)
[BMV:AMXI [NYSE:AMX][NASDAQ:AMOVI [LATIBEX:XAMXLI,announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2010.
277M •America Móvil finished December with 276.5 million accesses of which 225 mu
accesses lion were wireless subscribers and 51.5 million were fixed RGUs.They both grew
at a similar pace of around 12%year-on-year.
8.2 M new •We added 8.2 million wireless subscribers in the quarter.Postpaid net additions,
wiieless subs 1.9 million,were twice as many as those gained in the year-earlier quarter.Net
additions for the year topped 24.1 million.
Net adds •Brazil gained 2.9 million wireless subscribers in the quarter,Mexico 1.7 million,
double in Colombia 624 thousand and Chile 486 thousand.The quarter’s subscriber gainsMexicomorethantripledinCentralAmericaandmorethandoubledinMexicofromthe
year before.
4Q Revenues •Fourth quarter revenues were up 6.0%year-on-year to nearly 162 billion pesos
+6°/s YoV with net service revenues expanding 5.5%.Revenues for the year totaled 607.9
billion pesos with wireless service revenues increasing 12.8%buoyed by 40.4%
data revenue growth.
4Q EBITDA •EBITDA came in at 61.2 billion pesos in the quarter bringing the total for the year
to 247.5 billion pesos.They increased by 4.8%and 6.3%respectively from the
year-earlier periods.The quarter’s EBITDA margin,37.8%,was very similar to
that of a year before in spite of the fast pace of subscriber growth.
Net profit of •Our operating profit was 34.4 billion pesos in the quarter,which resulted in a net
MxI’24.2Bn profit of 24.2 billion pesos equivalent to 60 peso cents per share (97 dollar cents
per ADR).Net income reflects extraordinary non-cash charges for a net amount
of 3.9 billlion pesos.
____________
Capital •In 2010,our operating cash flow allowed us to fully fund our capital expendi
outlays of tures,which totaled 81.9 billion pesos.In addition it permitted us to spend 66 bil
MxP lOlBn lion dollars on the acquistion of stock of Telmex Internacional,Net Servicos and
Carso Global Telecom;to engage in share buybacks in the amount of 18.2 billion
(by both America Móvil and Telmex);and to effect dividend payments totalling
17.2 billion (not including those made by Telmex to America Móvil after June
2010).
Net debt •Our net debt ended the year at 207.1 billion pesos —equivalent to 0.84 times LTM
down MxP EBITDA—having come down by 10.4 billion throughout the year in spite of the1Q.48n sizeable capital outlays and distribution payments.Our short term debt is now
only 9.0 billion pesos.
I liglilichts
elevant
Events
u bscribers
mérica MOvil
onsolidated
O1crat1oIo.
lexico
dccl
elmex
Iii frn?tional
U1 I iii I?
Niercosur
laro ,\rcentina
tarn l’araguav
tarn Uruguay
lain (bile
Bra,
lam
mbratel
ET
ndeans
omcel Colonibia
elmex Colombia
‘lam Panama
‘orta Ecuador
elmex Leader
lame l’eru
:ciitrat America
laio Guatemala
lame El Salvador
laroN aragua
laro I londuras
aribbean
arc,I)ominicana
lam Puerto Rice
‘Lire Jamaica
tract one
Total1’1
:ountry Dec10 Sep’10 Var.°/o Dec’09 Var.°/o
vfexico 64,138 62,440 27%59,167 8.4%
Brazil 51,638 48,767 5.9%44,401 16.3%
Chile 4,871 4,385 11.1%3,597 35.4%
S.rgentina,Paraguay and Uruguay 19,637 19,442 1.0%18,236 7.7%
:olombia and Panama 29,413 28,753 2.3%27,797 5.8%
icuador 10,624 10,328 2.9%9,449 12.4%
‘eru 9,686 9,294 4.2%8,311 16.5%
:entral America and Caribbean 17,269 16,771 3.0%15,587 10.8%
.SA 17,749 16,657 66%14,427 23.0%
rotal Wireless Lines 225,024 216,836 3.8°!200,972 12.0°!
m i’-I c
111(11
Total Accesses
(millions)
277 +12%
+13°/a
225 +12%
4Q%i
Total Accesses
277 M We finished December with 276.5 million 3L3
wireless subs accesses,12.1%more than in 2009.This
figure comprises 225 million wireless sub-
scribers,28.4 million landlines,13 million -,
broadband accesses arid 10.1 million PavTV 350
units.Excluding Mexico,the number of
fixed lines was up 15.0%year-on-year and
that of broadband accesses 23.3%.PayTV 50
was the fastest growing division,with a
31.8%annual increase.4Q17
•&Othsrs •llirchss
T/Vireless Subscribers
8.2M net adds America Móvil added 8.2 million wireless subscribers in the fourth quarter,23.4%
in 4Q +23°/s more than in the year-earlier quarter,with a strong showing in the postpaid segment
YoY in which we gained 1.9 million clients,twice as many as the prior year.Total net
subscriber gains for the year were up 31.8%to 24.1 million,bringing our wireless
subscriber base to 225 million at the end of 2010 for a 12%year-on-year increase.
2.9M net adds Brazil gained 2.9 million subscribers in the quarter,Mexico 1.7 million,Colombia 624
in Brazil thousand and Chile 486 thousand.The quarter’s subscriber gains more than tripled
in Central America arid more than doubled in Mexico from the year before.In Chile
and Colombia they were up 64.4%and 50.1%year-on-year respectively.
MM subs in At the end of the year our subscriber base comprised 64.1 million subscribers in
Mexico Mexico,51.6 million in Brazil,29.3 million in Colombia arid 18.4 million in Argentina.
We also had 17.7 million clients in the U.S.arid approximately 10 million in each of
Central America,Ecuador and Peru.The fastest growth in relative terms was observed
in Chile,with 35.4%,followed by Tracfone in the U.S.with 23.0%.
Wireless Subscribers as ecember 2010
Thousands
Highlights
elevant 3,,-
vents
Subscribers
America Móvil
(onsobdated
1-li i in
I ,
ft_I’
kicel
lelniex
listi national
ii
Mercosur
Claro Argentina
:laro Paraguay
lam Uruguay
Clam Chile
razil
lam
mhratel
NET
Andeans
(‘omcel (olombia
elmex Colombia
(lam Panama
l’orta Ecuador
‘Telmex Ecuador
Clam Peru
Central America
(‘laro (uaternala
(‘lam El Salvador
(‘laroN caragua
(‘laro I londuras
Caribbean
Claro Dorninicana
Clam l’uerto Rico
Tarn Jansaica
I rae’lone’
Includes total subscrihers ofall companies in which America Móz’il holds an economic interest;does not consider the date in which
the companies started being consolidated.
3
Carlos Garcia-Moreno
.j’Chief Financial Officer
-carlos.garciamorenoamovil.commrIDanielaLecuonaTorras
ri-i cia I Investor Relations Office
daniela.lecuona(an,ericamovil.com
AMERICA MOVIL’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2009
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,February 2,2010 -America Móvil,S.A.B.de CV.(“America Móvil”)
[BMV:AMXJ INYSE:AMX][NASDAQ:AMOVI ILATIBEX:XAMXL],announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2009.
201M subs America Móvil surpassed the 200 million subscriber mark in December,finishing
the year with 201 million subs.In the fourth quarter we added 6.6 million clients,
which brought to 18.2 million our net additions for the year.
Brazil leads •Brazil led the way in net additions followed by Tracfone,in the U.S.,and Mexico,in net adds with 2.1 million,1.2 million and 807 thousand subscribers respectively.
Strong •In practically all of our operations postpaid subs increased more rapidly than the
postpaid prepaid ones.In Mexico,the Dominican Republic and Chile postpaid gains in thegrowthquartersignificantlyexceededthoseseenayearbefore.
4Q Service •Fourth quarter revenues totaled 107.1 billion pesos.They rose 13.4%fri annualrevenuesuptermsonthebackofservicerevenuegrowthof14.8%.The most dynamic compo
nent of service revenues was data,which ramped up 48.7%in the period,as all of
our operations exhibited vigorous growth in this line.
EBITDA •At 40.8 billion pesos,our EBITDA was up 16.9%from a year earlier,with the
+17%in 4Q EBITDA margin climbing 1.1 percentage points to 38.1%.
09 Revenues Through December our revenues reached 395 billion pesos,with service revenues
ofMxP395Bn increasing 17.1%from a year before.EBITDA totaled 158.9 billion pesos,14.8%
more than in 2008.
Accelerated •Operating profits totaled 23.2 billion pesos in the quarter,down slightly from the
depreciation year-earlier quarter on account of higher depreciation charges as we accelerated
the depreciation of GSM networks in some countries.In 2009 our operating profits
added up to 105.8 billion pesos.
09 Net •A net profit of 13.0 billion pesos in the fourth quarter brought about a total of 70.5income+19/a billion pesos in net income for the year,an 18.5%annual increase.
Net debt!•Our net debt came down by 37.9 billion pesos in ‘09 to 83.5 billion pesos —equiva
EBITDA of lent to 0.5 times EBITDA —while distributions to shareholders via share buybacks0.5x and dividends reached 50.4 billion pesos and capital expenditures 45.4 billion.
Offer for •On January 13th our Board of Directors authorized us to submit an offer for all
CGT and Til outstanding shares of Carso Global Telecom and Telmex International.Accep
tance of such offers by the respective shareholders would lead to America MOvil
consolidating both Telmex and Telmex International.
I lighlights
Relevant
hveiits
Su b&.crihers
Anwrica MOvil
Consolidated
i’.4’ViLin
()s-r-?ie;ts
Mexico
Telcel
diii iHltioflaI
I ,iivnc
\leicesur
(laio Argentina
(lain I’araguav
(lare Uruguay
(l,iio Chile
Brazil
(lam
A i-idea ns
(omeel (elornliia
(orii_vcl Ecuador
(lam Peru
Central America
(I.e-n (uatcnu!a
(lan FT Salvador
(T.imeNicaragua
(Tare I lenduras
(ariblitan
(l,ime Dominican
(Tare l’uerte Rico
Claro Jamaica
USA
TracEone
:ount Dec’09 Sep’09 Var.°/o Dec’08 Var.%
4exico 59,167 58,360 1.4%56,371 5.0%
razil 44,401 42,278 5.0%38,731 14.6%
hue 3,597 3,302 9.0%3,002 19.8%
wgentina,Paraguay and Uruguay 18,236 17,697 3.0%16,589 9,9%
olombia and Panama 27,797 27,357 1.6%27,390 1.5%
cuador 9,449 9,047 4,4%8,304 13.8%
not 8,311 7,867 5.6%7,178 15.8%
entralAmerica 9,535 9,407 1.4%9,158 4.1%
:aribbean 6,052 5,819 4.0%4,809 25.9%
ISA 14,427 13,201 9.3%11,192 28.9%
‘otalWireless 200,972 194,335 3.4°/182,724 10.0%
:entral America 2,259 2,248 0.4%2,240 0.8%
aribe 1,531 1,545 -0.9%1,605 4.6%
‘otal fixed 3,789 3,793 -0.1°!3,844 -1.4°!
‘otal Lines 204,761 198,128 3.3°!186,568 9.8°!
(I)Includes total subscriber,ofall companies in which America MOvilholds an economic interest;does not consider the date in which the
companies started being consolidated.Total wireless historical data does not include recentacquisitions.
rr.ci%,II
Subthrs
America MOvil finished December with 201 million wireless clients,3.4%more than in
6.6M net adds the prior quarter and 10.0%more than a year before.We added 6.6 million subscribersin4Qinthefourthquarterbringingthetotalfortheyearto18.2 million.
Brazil led the way in terms of net additions with 2.1 million in the quarter,followed
3.3M net adds by Tracfone,in the U.S.with 1.2 million (64.9%more than in the same period of 2008)in Brazil ....——
USA and Mexico with 807 thousand.Argentma gamed c1 thousand subscribers in the
period while Colombia-Panama,Peru and Ecuador all obtained somewhat more than
400 thousand subs.
Throughout 2009 the same pattern held,with Brazil pulling ahead of the rest of our
operations with 5.7 miffion subs,trailed by Tracfone (3.2 million),Mexico (2.8 million)
and Argentina (1.6 million).At the end of the year we had close to 60 million subs in
Mexico,44 million in Brazil,28 million in Colombia and 17 million in Argentina.In
the U.S.we had over 14 million clients,which makes Tracfone the largest operator
by subscribers in the prepaid segment of the market.
For the most part our operations registered in the fourth quarter a faster increase of
Faster their postpaid subscriber base than of the prepaid one in annual terms,helped along
postpaid by their better coverage,quality of service and technological platform that allows
them to offer more varied data services.The increase in postpaid net adds from a year
before was particularly noteworthy in Mexico,the Dominican Republic and Chile.
Highlights
Relevant
Events
Subscribers
America MOvil
Consolidated
Mexttati
Opcratiotts
\lexico
1i.lccl
itttcrttnhtt,tai
O1ttrsttttttis
Niercosur
(‘lam o\rgentina
Claro I’araguav
Claro I.ruguav
(laro Chik’
Bravil
(laro
Andeans
Comcel Colombia
Conecel Ecuador
Claro I’eru
Central America
Claro Guatemala
(‘laro El Salvador
ClaroNicaragua
Claro I londuras
Caribbean
Claro Dominican
Clam i’uerto Rico
(‘laro Jamaica
I r,tsltsne’
Thousands
Total15t
America Móvil Consolidated Results
With the South American economies recovering more rapidly than anticipated from
the crisis that shook the world towards the end of 2008,subscriber growth in those
countries reaccelerated,helping America MOvil surpass its net subscriber additions
target for 2009 and post revenue increases that were driven also by strong secular
demand for wireless data services.In North America revenue expansion was solid
even in the face of an extremely weak economic environment.
3
Carlos GarcIa-Moreno
Chief Financial Officer
carlos.garciamoreno@amovil.com
rnrIc Damela Lecuona Torras
Investor Relations Office
daniela.lecuonafiamericamovil.com
AMERICA MOVIL’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2008
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,February 5,2009 -America Móvil,S.A.B.de C.V.(“America Móvil”)
[BMV:AMX][NYSE:AMXJ [NASDAQ:AMOV][LATIBEX:XAMXL],announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2008.
Record of •We added 10.1 million subscribers in the fourth quarter,making it our best quarter
1O.1M net ever,with Colombia,Brazil and Ecuador showing stronu performances with respectaddsin4Q.
to the year-earlier quarter.
29.3M net •Through 2008 we gained 29.3 million subscribers,2.3%more than a year before.We
adds in 08 ended the year with 182.7 million wireless subscribers and 3.8 million fixed lines,for
a total of 186.6 million lines.
3M net adds •In Brazil we obtained 3 million subs in the quarter and in each of Mexico and Colom
in Brazil bia 2 million.Tracfone,in the U.S.gained 743 thousand clients whereas Argentina,
Peru,Ecuador and the Caribbean each registered approximately half a million net
additions in the period.
Service •In annual terms,our fourth quarter revenues were up 11.6%to 94.4 billion pesos,
revenues up with service revenues rising 14.7%on the back of strong subscriber and data rev
15%YoY;enue growth.At 37.0%year-on-year,data-revenue growth more than doubled that ofdata+37%..service revenues.In 2008 revenues totaled 346 billion pesos,having mcreased 13.6
from the year before.
4Q EBITDA •Fourth quarter EBITDA was up 7.3%year-on-year to 34.9 billion pesos,with the mar
up7.3%YoY gin declining to 37.0%from 38.5%the previous year,mostly on account of strong
subscriber growth.EBITDA rose 11.8%in 2008 to 138 billion pesos.
°p.profit up •We obtained an operating profit of 23.6 billion pesos in the quarter to finish the year
15.2°/s YoY with 96.7 billion pesos,15.2%more than the previous year.
4Q Net profit •Our net income stood at 16.3 billion pesos in the quarter and 60.1 billion pesos in the
of MxP year as a whole.The quarter’s net income represented 49 peso cents per share or 74
_____________
16.3Bn dollar cents per ADR.
Capex of Our capital expenditures topped 68 billion pesos in 2008 whereas our distributions
MxP 68Bn &to shareholders (via both share buybacks and dividends)reached nearly 52 billion
distributions pesos,for a combined total of 120 billion pesos.Except for 11.5 billion pesos that weofMxP52Bnfinancedinthemarket,the rest of the above-mentioned outlays was covered by our
cash flow.
Net debt of •At the end of the year our net debt stood at 121.5 billion pesos equivalent,which
MxP121.5Bn represented 0.88 times EBITDA (last twelve months).Our cash position represented
approximately 85%of our short term debt at the time.
lighlights
‘tileant
Events
ubscrihers
America MOvil
Consolidated
Operahons
exico
Telcel
jot,rnnti,inal
)j ‘(‘)rltl(’fl
Mercosur
(laro Argentina
(laro l’araguav
((.1ro Uruguav
(lao (bile
[I,/I
(lar,
,\ndtjns
(omcel Colombia
oncuel Ecuador
Ularo l’eru
Central America
Claro Guatemala
Claro El Salvador
(‘laroNicaragua
(Iaro I londeras
Caribbean
Clara Dominicana
(laro l’uerio Rico
Miphonc Jamaica
USA
racFme
m I—I c:
m c’i I
182.7 million Altogether we gained 29.3 million wireless subscribers in 2008—2.3%more than in
subs in the 2007—and finished the year with 182.7 million subscribers,19.1%more than a yearAmencas.....before.Together with 3.8 million fixed lines in Central America and the Caribbean,
we had a total of 186.6 million lines at the end of 2008.
56.4M subs In Mexico net additions in the fourth quarter were just shy of two million bringing
in Mexico,to 6.4 million the total figure for 2008.Our subscriber base finished the year at 56.4+12.7%YoY million clients.It was up 3.7%sequentially and 12.7%year-on-year.
4Q net adds Claro Brazil added three million subscribers to end December with 38.7 million,28.1%
of 3M n more than a year before.At 8.5 million,net additions in 2008 were 34%higher than inBrazil2007.They represented 28.7%of the total net adds of the market,making Claro the
leader in subscriber growth for the year,both in the Brazilian market.
2M net adds Colombia followed Brazil with just over two million net subscriber gains in the quar
in Colombia ter—87.2%more than in the same period of 2007—and 5.1 million subs in the year,
closing December with 27.4 million clients,22.6%more than a year before.
553K net adds Argentina obtained 553 thousand new clients in the fourth quarter,bringing to 1.9
in Argentina million the year’s total.Wireless penetration in the country has reached an estimated
113%and is the highest in Latin America.
455K net Peru and Ecuador each obtained 455 thousand net additions each in the fourth
adds each in quarter,to finish December with 7.2 and 8.3 million clients,respectively.In Chile we
Ecuador and almost doubled our net additions from a year before —to 214 thousand —taking ourPerusubscriberbasetothreemillion.
9.2M subs In Central America we obtained slightly more than one million net additions in 2008,
in Central of which 110 thousand were added in the fourth quarter.Our combined subscriber
America base in the region ended December with 9.2 million,12.3%more than in 2007.
ibers as of December2008
Thousands
Highlights
Re1e ant
Events
Sul.’s,cribers
America Mrivil
Consolidated
loin
(
Mexico
Telcel
lit t,’tiirilii’iral
Vlercosur
(Yarn \rgen1ina
Claro Paraguay
(‘lam Lruguav
C Lire C bile
Brazil
Glare
Andearis
Conicel Colombia
(‘iiieccl Lcuador
(‘laro lieru
Central America
Glare Guatemala
(Yarn El Salvador
ClaroNicaragua
Claro I fonduras
Caribbean
(Yarn Dominican
Clam Puerto Rico
Miphone Jamaica
USA
TracFone
Totalt1t
ountry Dec’08 Sep’08 Var.°/o Dec’07 Var.0!,
vlexico 56,371 54,381 3.7%50,011 12.7%
lrazil 38,731 35,668 8.6%30,228 28.1%
Chile 3,002 2,787 7.7%2,672 12.3%
rgentina,Paraguay and Uruguay 16,589 16,044 3.4%14,618 13.5%
Colombia 27,390 25,373 7.9%22,335 22.6%
icuador 8,304 7,849 5.8%6,936 19.7%
‘eru 7,178 6,722 6.8%5,455 31.6%
entral America 9,158 9,048 1.2%8,157 12.3%
aribbean 4,809 4,255 13.0%3,496 37.6%
iSA 11,192 10,449 7,1%9,514 17.6%
Fotal Wireless 182,724 172,577 5.9°/153,422 19.1°!
Central America 2,240 2,234 0.3%2,197 1.9%
Caribbean 1,605 1,620 -0.9%1,669 -3.8%
otaI Fixed 3,844 3,854 -0.2W 3,866 -0.6W
Fetal Lines 186,568 176,431 5.7°/157,287 18.6W
(1)Includes total subscribers ofall companies in which AmericaMdvii holds an economic interest;does not consider the
date in which the companies started being consolidated.Total wireless historical data does not include recent acquisitions.
3
Caries Garcia-Moreno
,
Chief Financial Officer
carlosgarciamoreno@amovil.com
Ii,-)Daniela Lecuona Torras
I’’Investor Relations Office
daniela.lecuona@americamovil.com
AMERICA MOVIL’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2007
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,February 5,2008 -America Móvil,S.A.B.de C.V.(“America Móvil”)
[BMV:AMX][NYSE:AMX][NASDAQ:AMOV][LATIBEX:XAMXL],announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2007.
1OM net adds •We added 10 million subscribers in the quarter,bringing to 28.6 million our netin4Qsubscriberadditionsfor2007,6 million more than we had estimated at the begin
ning of last year.
157.3M lines •As of December we had 153.4 million wireless subscribers,including 50 million
in Mexico.Together with 3.9 million fixed lines in Central America and the Ca
ribbean,we had a total of 157.3 million lines.
6.8M net •Of the year’s net additions 6.8 million were obtained in Mexico,6.3 million in
adds in Brazil and 3.4 million in Argentina.Colombia,Central America and Peru eachMexico6.3 ....added m excess of 2 rrullion subscribers,Peru being the operation that exhibMinBrazil
in ‘07 ited the fastest rate of subscriber growth among our operations.In the U.S.we
gained 1.6 million clients and in the Caribbean 1.4 million.
Mexico gains •In the fourth quarter Brazil had its best quarter ever,having added 2.2 million
2.5M subs,subscribers,31.5%more than in the same period of 2006.Mexico obtained 2.5Brazil2.2M million,slightly above the previous year’s figure.Argentina and Colombia both
gained just over a million subscribers.
4Q service •Our 2007 revenues,312 billion pesos,were up 28.2%year-on-year,with service
revenues up revenues increasing by 31.4%.Fourth quarter revenues came in at 85.2 billion285%YoY pesos,driven by a 28.5%expansion of service revenues.
‘07 EBITDA •EBITDA rose 41.6%from the previous year,to 127 billion pesos,of which 32.8 bil
of MxN lion were obtained in the fourth quarter.The EBITDA margin stood at 40.7%for127Bntheyearandwasalmostfourpercentagepointshigherthanin2006,with most
of our operations registering higher margins.In the case of Brazil,Colombia and
___________
Argentina,margins improved by 12 to 14 percentage points in the year.
‘07 Operating •We generated 86 billion pesos in operating profit,21.3 billion in the fourth quar
profit up 40%ter.The year’s profit was up 40%annually.
‘07 Net profit •Our net profit totaled 58.6 billion pesos in 2007,exceeding the previous year’s by
of MxN 58.6 31.9%.It resulted in earnings per share of 45 peso cents,54.3%more than in 2006.
Bn In the fourth quarter our net profit was nearly 50%higher than a year before.
Capital •Share buybacks and dividends amounted to 54.2 billion pesos,capital expendi
outlays of ‘cures to 34.6 billion pesos arid the purchase price of our Puerto Rican and Jamai
MxN 114.lBn can operation to 26 billion.These outlays,which added up to 114.8 billion pesos,
were mostly funded by our own cash flow,as our net debt increased by only 22.6
billion pesos.At the end of the year our net debt was equivalent to 0.73 times
EBITDA (last twelve months),slightly less than at the end of 2006.
I lighlights
Relevant
Events
Subscribers
America MOvil
Consolidated
AlL I (10
()In’nltn)ns
Mes.ico
[èlcel
lnh itzonaj
I 0 Ii
Mercosur
CTI Argentina
Cli l’araguay
(Fl Uruguay
(laro Chile
Iir,iii
(lar,’
Andeans
Quince1 Colombia
Conecel Ecuador
Claro l’eru
Central America
(laro Guatemala
Claw El Salvador
(IaroN caracua
(laro I londuras
Caribbean
Claro I )ominican
Claro l’uerto Rico
Nliple’ne Jamaica
USA
Traclone
Fri (J’%ZI I
Subscribers
‘07 net adds America Móvil surpassed the 150 million subscribers mark in the fourth quarter to
of 28.6M subs end the year with 153.4 million subscribers,23%more than a year before.We added 10
million subscribers in the quarter,which brought to 28.6 million our net additions for
the full year 2007,of which 786 thousand clients were obtained through acquisitions
(Puerto Rico and Jamaica).Together with 3.9 million fixed lines in Central America
and the Caribbean,we had a total of 157.3 million lines at the end of 2007.
50M subs In Mexico we reached 50 million subs,having added 2.5 million subscribers in the
Mexico fourth quarter,somewhat more than in the same period of last year.Our subscriber
base increased 5.3%over the quarter and 15.8%relative to a year before.We obtained
a total of 6.8 million new subscribers in 2007.
3GM subs in In Brazil,our net additions in the fourth quarter,2.2 million,were 31.5%greater than
Brazil in the fourth quarter of 2006 making it our strongest quarter ever.Net additions for
the full year came in at 6.3 million,exceeding by 21.6%those registered the previous
year.They accounted for 30%of the growth of the Brazilian market in 2007,which
made us the leader in subscriber additions.At year-end,our subscriber base totaled
30.2 million,26.6%over 2006.
Altogether,in Argentina,Paraguay and Uruguay we obtained 1.1 million clients in the
fourth quarter,bringing to 3.7 million our net additions through December.in spite
of the high penetration rate in Argentina,our net additions in that country matched
those seen a ‘ear ago.Our combined subscriber base rose to 14.6 million and was up
in annual terms.
In Colombia,we added 1.1 million clients in the quarter and 2.8 million in the year.
The quarter’s gains exceeded by 40.6%those of the fourth quarter of 2006.At the
end of the year we had 22.3 million subscribers in Colombia,14.4%more than a year
before.
In Peru,where our subscriber base topped 5.5 million,our net subscriber additions
came in at 639 thousand in the fourth quarter—47%more than a year before—bring
ing to 2.1 million the total for 2007.In Ecuador our subscriber base expanded by 340
thousand in the fourth quarter and by 1.3 million in the year.In Chile it increased
by 110 thousand and 300 thousand,respectively.
“t47.
Thousands
Tota1°
:ounhy Dec’07 Sep’07 Var.°!,Dec’06 Var.°!,
alexico 50,011 47,516 5.3%43,190 15.8%
Brazil 30228 27,981 8.0%23,881 26.6%
hile 2,672 2,562 4.3%2,372 126%
rgenfina,Paraguay and Uruguay 34,618 13,520 8.1%10,875 34.4%
:olombia 22,335 21,257 5.1%19,521 14.4%
icuador 6,936 6,596 5.2%5,657 22.6%
‘em 5,455 4,815 33,3%3,369 61.9%
CentralAmerica 8,157 7,345 11.3%5,875 38.8%
:arjbe 3,496 3,000 16.5%2,140 63.3%
USA 9,514 8,803 8.1%7,896 20.5%
FoixiWirelesu 153,422 143,394 7.0°!124,777 23.0°’
:mtmlAmerica 2,197 2.114 3 96%2,160 1.7%
:adbe 1,669 1,688 -1.2%1,753 -4,8%
rotal Fixed 3,866 3,802 1.7°!2,894 33.6°!
rotal Lines 157,287 147,196 6.9°!127,671 23.2°!
ighlights
elevant I
vents
iihscrihers
America MOVII
‘onsolidated
Vt(’tI’i
>1 (‘!‘flIs’II’
CXICO
k’lcel
friui’tliitiiflhill
ercosur
TI Artentina
‘TI Paraguay
—II Lruguay
laro Chile
razil
laro
Andeans
Oflicel Colombia
oi’cel Ecuador
lai’a,Peru
‘entral America
laro cuatemala
laro El Salvador
laroNicaragua
Jaro Ilonduras
ribbean
laro f)ominicana
laro Puerto Rico
liphonc Jamaica
‘SA
‘racFone
CTI adds
3.7M subs
in ‘07
Colombia
gains 2.8M
subs in ‘07
5.5M subs in
Peru,+61.4°/o
YoY
,,,,,,,,,,,,r,,,Ir,,t
Ta,a!,,ireIn,hi’Iascal dMadce,wi ,,d,d,
3
Carlos Garcia-Moreno
F Chief Financial Officer
carlos.garciamoreno@amovil.com
.-.Daniela Lecuona Torras
I-’’.Investor Relations Office
daniela.lecuona@americamovil.com
AMERICA MOVIL’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2006
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,February 7,2007 -America Móvil,S.A.de C.V.(“America Móvil”)
[BMV:AMX][NYSE:AMX][NASDAQ:AMOV][LATIBEX:XAMXL],announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2006.
31.4 M •America Móvil added 31.4 million wireless subscribers iii 2006 to finish the year
wireless net with 124.8 million subscribers,33.7%more than the year before.The net addiaddsin06......
108 M tions mcluded 10.8 million obtamed m the fourth quarter,8.7 million organi
4Q06 cally and 2.1 million through the acquisition of the operations of Verizon in the
Dominican Republic.Together with 2.9 million fixed lines,America Móvil had a
total of 127.7 million lines at the end of 2006.
Mexico gains Mexico contributed with 7.3 million net subscriber additions during the year,
7.3 M subs,Brazil 5.2 million,Colombia 5.7 million and Argentina 3.4 million,with Ecuador
Brazil 5.2 M and Peru generating approximately 1.5 million each and Tracfone,our operation
in the U.s.1.8 million.
2006 revenues.Our revenues totaled 234.2 billion pesos in 2006,23.6%more than the year be-
of MXP 234 fore,driven by service revenues,which expanded at a 26.8%annual rate.In theflUPfourthquarter,service revenues increased 7.3%sequentially and 23.3%year-on-
year,to 65.4 billion pesos.
2006 EBITDA.EBITDA expanded nearly twice as fast as service revenues,reaching 86 billion
margin of pesos,of which 24.4 billion were obtained in the fourth quarter.The consolidated367°/EBITDA margin rose by over 6.5 percentage points relative to 2005,from 30.2%to
36.7%,with most operations seeing improvements in their EBITDA margins,par
ticularly in Brazil and Colombia,whose margins climbed 16 percentage points in
the year.
Op.profits up.Operating profits of 58.9 billion pesos in 2006,including 16.9 billion pesos ob
67.9%tained in the fourth quarter,exceeded the previous years’by 67.9%.
Net profit of •We obtained a net profit of 10.8 billion in the fourth quarter and 43.4 billion pesos
MXN 10.8 Bn in the year.Earnings per share in 2006,1.21 pesos,were 33.1%greater than the
ones observed in 2005.
Distributions •Our cash flow from operations allowed us to cover significant outlays with little
of MXN 24.4 ...
Bn reliance on debt fmancmg.Overall,our capital and dividend outlays totaled 82.3
billion pesos,of which 33.7 billion pesos represented investments on plant and
equipment,24.2 billion acquisitions -mostly the purchase of our operation in the
Dominican Republic-and 24.4 billion pesos the amount spent on share buybacks
and dividends.The latter figure includes the effect of the merger of Amtel into
America MOvil,equivalent to a share buyback of 13.7 billion pesos.Our net debt
increased by 9.6 billion pesos in the year.
I lighlights
Relevant
Events
Subscribers
Am&ica MOvil
Consolidated
Vperahens
Mexico
Telcel
Iuhrnaflanai
0/i’UtHU?S
Mercosur
CTI Argentina
CII l’araguay
CTI Uruguay
(iwo Chile
Bra,il
(lire
,\ndeanc
(omwl C olonibia
(onceel Ecuador
Claro Peru
(:entral America
Clam Guatemala
Claro El Salvador
(‘laroNicaragna
(laro I londuras
Caribbean
(‘Lire Dominic
USA
Tracbone
I.I-I I
America Móvil added 10.8 million wireless subscribers in the fourth quarter of 2006,
including 2.1 million obtained through the acquisition from Verizon of its Dominican
operations,to finish December with 124.8 million subscribers.This represents an in
crease of 33.7%year-over-year.Along with 2.1 million fixed lines in Central America
and 735 thousand in the Dominican Republic,America MOvil reached a total of 127.7
million lines at the end of the year.
31.4 M net The number of net additions in 2006 topped 31.4 million,29.3 million of which wereaddsin2006organic.The latter figure was similar to the one observed the previous year.On aver
age,the region where we operate in Latin America saw wireless penetration increase
by over 10 percentage points in the year,to 56.8%for the region as a whole.
Our Mexican operations added 2.5 million subscribers in the fourth quarter,bringing to
7.3 million their net additions in 2006 to close the year with 43.2 million clients,20.3%
more than a year before.Even though we faced a more difficult competitive environ
ment,our net additions in Mexico ended up exceeding those of 2005 by 5.5%.
In Brazil we captured 1.7 million clients in the fourth quarter,which represented
42.2%of the net additions in the Brazilian market.Through December,we gained
5.2 million subscribers in Brazil,4.4%more than in 2005.At the end of the year,our
Brazilian subscribers totaled 23.8 million,28.0%more than a year before.
In its strongest quarter of the year,our Argentinean operation added one million
clients bringing to 3.4 million the number of net additions through the year.Our
subscriber base in Argentina rose by 52%in 2006,to over 10 million clients.Uruguay
and Paraguay exhibited the fastest annual growth rates,155.1%and 118.5%respec
tively,reaching 428 and 376 thousand subscribers by year-end.
Subscribers as of December 2006
Thousands
Total”’
:ountry Dec’06 Sep’06 Var.%Dec’05 Var.°/o
vlexico 43,190 40,720 6.1%35,914 20.3%
Brazil 23,881 22,172 7.7%18,659 28.0%
rgentina 10,070 9,002 11.9%6,627 52.0%
Chile 2,372 2,103 12.8%1,884 25.9%
‘araguay 376 344 9.3%172 118.5%
Jruguay 428 334 28.1%168 155.1%
Colombia 19,521 18,755 4.1%13,775 41.7%
cuador 5,657 5,213 8.5%4,100 38.0%
°eru 3,369 2,809 19.9%1,950 72.7%
l Salvador 1,266 1,131 11.9%859 47.4%
uatemala 2,596 2,365 9.8%1,913 35.7%
-londuras 736 639 15.3%427 72.5%,
sJicaragua 1,277 1,115 14.6%748 70.8%
)ominican Republic 2,140
J.S.A.7,896 7,230 9.2%6,135 28.7%
rotal Wireless 124,777 113,930 9.5°!93,329 33.7°/
l Salvador 837 830 0.8%809 3.5%
uatemala 1,062 1,046 1.5%953 11.5%
‘Jicaragua 260 255 2.0%235 10.8%
)ominican Republic 734
rotal Fixed 2,894 2,132 35.8°!1,996 45.0°!
rotal Lines 127,671 116,062 10.0°!95,325 33.9°!
Subscribers
124.8 M
wireless
subs in the
Americas
7.3 M net
adds in
Mexico in
2006
42.2%share
of 4Q06 net
adds in
Brazil
10 M Subs in
Argentina,
up 52%YoY
Flighlights
Rek’ant
Events
ubserihers
America Movil
(tnoIida led
‘vh’ittii
()peratietns
Nlexiuo
elcel
in t,’rniu(tonal
01;t’raiitstts
N lersctsu r
(fl Argentina
CTI Paraguay
CII Uruguay
(lan (hi Ic
Braid
CUro
Andeans
(noted Colombia
Conecel Ecuador
Clam Peru
Central America
Clam Cuatemala
CTaro El Salvador
ClaroNicaragua
(laro I londuras
Caribbean
Claro Dominicana
USA
racFone
(11 Includes total subscribers rfill companies inuinch dm6rica MCciihold’a,,economic interest;does sot considerthe dotein which the companies started being ea,,ralidatod.Total
wire!,,,historicaldatadin,lilt ,iielud,recent ocquinstian./,r m net meancigful
Equity ,oircli a tob.e,rbers a of De,ember31,2006124376
Carlos CarcIa-Moreno
Chief Financial Officer
carlos.garciamoreno@amovil.comrrnu’-ic
Paulina Amieva Gerard
III (%hF•Investor Relations Office
paulina.amieva@amovil.com
AMERICA MOVIL’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2005
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,February 7,2005 -America Móvil,S.A.de C.V.(“America Móvil”)
[BMV:AMXI [NYSE:AMX][NASDAQ:AMOVI [LATIBEX:XAMXLJ,announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2005.
32.2 M net •With 9.7 million net subscriber additions in the fourth quarter—our largest ever
additions in terms of organic growth—the total net additions for 2005 rose to 32.2 mu
2005 lion.This brought America MOvil’s wireless subscriber base to 93.3 million,all
of them in the Americas,representing a 52.7%expansion of our subscriber base
in the year.Nearly all the subscribers were equity (or proportional)subscribers.
In addition to our wireless base,America Móvil had 2.0 million fixed lines at the
end of 2005,for a combined total of 95.3 million lines.
8 M net adds •In 2005 our Colombian operations experienced the greatest growth in absolute
in Colombia terms,with 8.0 million subscribers,followed by Mexico’s,with 7.1 million;Bra
zil’s,with 5.0 million;and Argentina’s,with 3.0 million.Tracfone,our U.S.op
eration,and Conecel,our Ecuadorean subsidiary,both added close to 1.8 million
subscribers in 2005.
2005 •America Móvil’s revenues totaled 182.2 billion pesos in 2005,30.8%more than
revenues up a year before.Of that amount,52.4 billion were generated in the fourth quarter.
3l%yoyto The latter figure represents a 27.6%increase year-over-year.Service revenues
were up 7.4%in the quarter and 29.0%year-on-year.Prepaid ARPUs rose se
quentially in most operations.
4Q05 •EBITDA for the year came in at 55.1 billion pesos,exceeding the previous year’s
EBITDA by 26.8%.The EBITDA margin was 30.3%.Fourth quarter EBITDA amounted to
ma gin at 15.2 billion pesos,or 29.1%of revenues;a year before EBITDA had represented
25.5%of revenues.Although our subsidiaries added even more subscribers in
the fourth quarter of 2005 than they had in the same period of 2004,most of them
registered improvements in their EBITDA margins.
Operating •Operating profits reached 33.7 billion pesos and were up 38.8%in relation to
profit up 2004,whereas the company’s net profit for the year totaled 31.6 billion pesos,up
°Y°Y 85.4%from the year before,driven by operating profits,foreign exchange gains
and one-time benefits associated with a corporate restructuring that took place in
the fourth quarter.The net profit for the year is equivalent to 0.87 pesos per share
or 1.60 dollars per ADR.
Net debt of •Net debt ended 2005 at 55.8 billion pesos,12.0 billion pesos more than a year
MxP 56 Bn before.Among other things,the increase in debt helped cover capital expendi
tures and adquisitions of 50 billion pesos and share-buybacks and dividends that
together amounted to 19 billion pesos (including an extraordinary dividend of
10.7 billion pesos paid in December).
IiitIilitIit-,
Relevant
Events
Subscribers
America Mevil
Consolidated
IL ti(flhl
Opcrafioiis
Mexico
felcel
Inh’rtiafii’;zal
raft
Mercosur
CTI Argentina
(TI l’araguav
CTI Uruguay
rnartcom Chile
Brazil
Clara
Andeans
omcel Colombia
(onec’el Ecuador
tIara l’eru
entral America
ACT (Guatemala)
(TE (El Salvador)
Enitel (Nicaragua)
Sercom Hondura.
LSA
Highlights
Relevant
Events
u[iycribc’r—
Amrica ,1Ovil
onsolidated
Is t tCti
Opt rations
Mexico
lelcel
iritil lshonal
()till)ill
Pole totis11
Cl ArgeIltin,a
UTI Paraguay
CTI Iirtiguav
Siiaartconi (Jul.’
[Irajil
I.are
Andeans
(iuco’I (tslornhia
(oflerr.’l Icuador
Clam l’i’ru
Central America
ACT (Guatemala)
CIT (Fl Salvador)
Enitel (Nicaragua)
rcom Honduras
SA
Iraclont
Telcel gains
7JM new
clients
5MM net
adds in
Brazil
Net adds
of 3.OM in
Argentina
Ecuador
obtains 1.8M
in 2005
354 K net
adds in Peru
m r-I c
ri-i i’s/i I
Telcel in Mexico obtained 7.1 million new subscribers in the year,with 2.3 million net
additions in the fourth quarter,a record for the company.By the end of the year,our
subscriber base in Mexico numbered 35.9 million,24.5%more than in 2004.
In Brazil we added 5.0 million subscribers in the year,to reach 18.7 million subscrib
ers in December,a 36.6%increase in the base year-on-year.Whereas the expansion
in the base was solid in the fourth quarter (7.2%sequentially),it did not exhibit the
marked seasonality that we had come to expect from the experience of other years.
Argentina expanded its subscriber base by 84.7%in the year and 19.3%in the quarter.
Net additions in the fourth quarter totaled 1.1 million and throughout the year they
reached 3.0 million.The subscriber base in Argentina numbered 6.6 million at the
end of 2005.In Paraguay and Uruguay,CTI Móvil delivered sequential growth rates
of 24.0%and 51.8%in the fourth quarter,respectively;including those operations,
our wireless subscriber base comprised 7.0 million in this region.
Conecel in Ecuador obtained 1.8 million new subscribers in 2005—one million more
than in 2004—to finish the year with 4.1 million,76.3%more than a year before.It
had a record number of net additions in the fourth quarter,554 thousand,which
exceeded those of the same period a year before by 555%.
ribers as of December 2005
Thousands
Total°’Equity
ountly Dec-05 Sep-05 Var.%Dec-04 Var.%Dec-OS Sep-OS Var.%Dec-04 Vae.%
texico 35,914 33,572 7.0%28,851 24.5%35,914 33,572 7.0%28,851 24.5%
razil 18,659 17,401 7.2%13,657 36.6%18,354 17,148 7.0%13,306 37.9%
rgentina 6,627 5,555 19.3%3,587 847%6,627 5,555 19.3%3,587 847%
hue 1,884 1,792 5.1%1,539 22.4%1,884 1,792 5.1%0 n.m
araguav 172 139 24.0%77 124.8%172 139 24.0%0 n.m
lntguay 168 111 51.8%5 n.m.168 111 51.8%5 n.m.
lercosur 8,851 7,397 16.5%5,207 70.0%8,851 7,597 16.5%3,592 146.4%
olombia 13,775 11,334 21.5%5,814 1369%13,664 11,243 21.5%5,767 136.9%
cuador 4,100 3,546 15.6%2,326 76.3%4,100 3,546 15.6%2,326 76.3%
em 1,950 1,596 22.2%1,102 76.9%1,950 1,596 22.2%0 n.m.
oilcan 19,825 16,476 20.3%9,242 114.5%19,715 16,385 20.3%8,094 143.6%
I Salvador 859 735 13.7%518 65.8%822 723 13.7%489 68.1%
ua1ema1a 1,912 1,750 9.3%1,306 46.5%1,895 1,734 9.3%1,293 46.6%
londuras 427 346 23.2%198 115.2%427 346 23.2%198 115.2%
Iicaragua 748 627 19.4%453 65.3%742 621 19.4%448 65.6%
cmtralAtnerica 3,946 3,478 13.5%2,474 59.5%3,886 3,425 13.5%2,428 60.1%
ISA.6,135 5,122 19.8%4,394 39.6%6,024 5,029 19.8%4,314 39.6%
otal Wireless 93,329 83,645 11.6%61,107 52.7%92,743 79,629 16.5%60,584 53.1%
I Salvador 808 804 0.6%781 3.5%774 770 0.6%737 50%
uatemala 953 939 1.5%901 5.7%944 930 1.5%892 5.8%
ticaragua 233 229 2.6%204 9.6%233 227 2.6%212 9.9%
otal Fixed 1,996 1,971 1.2%3,897 8.2%1,951 1,927 1,3%1,842 6.0%
otal Lines 95,325 55,617 11.3%63,004 51.3%94,694 81,556 16.1%62,426 01.7%
(1)Includes totalsubscribers ofall companies i,r which AmericaMdnlholdsan economic isterest;does lot coss,derthe dat,which thecompanies started bei,tg
cossolidoted.Totalwireless historical data does sot s,cludc recent Ociluisitrolls.
(2)t,reludes totalsubscribers weighted by the economic nstere,t held is each company.
rim.totmoasigglul
Peru grew at a quick pace over the last quarter of 2005,acquiring 354 thousand sub
scribers,twice as many as those obtained in the same period a year ago.With these,
our subscriber base in that country reached 2.0 million.In Chile we gained 92 thousand
subscribers in the fourth quarter,to end the year with a total of 1.9 million.
3
Carlos GarcIa-Moreno
Chief Financial Officer
r-I carlos.garciarnoreno@arnericarnovil.com
Investor Relations Officeru7IPaulinaAmievaGerard
paulina.amievaCcvarnericamovil.com
AMERICA MOVIL’S FOURTH OUARTER OF 2004
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,January 27,2005 -America Móvil,S.A.de C.V.(“America Móvil”)
IBMV:AMX][NYSE:AMX][NASDAQ:AMOVJ [LATIBEX:XAMXL],announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2004.
The fourth quarter of 2004 was the best ever in net subscriber additions for
America Móvil as it gained 7.0 million new wireless subscribers,bringing the
year’s total to 17.3 million new subscribers.For the first time since the company
began operations,substiantially all the subscriber growth was organic.
•America Móvil closed the year with 61.1 million wireless subscribers,nearly
all of them equity subscribers.Together with 1.9 million fixed lines,America
Móvil had a total of 63 million lines at the close of the year.
•In Mexico,America Móvil gained 2.0 million subscribers in the fourth quarter;
in Brazil,1.7 million;in each of Argentina and Colombia,it obtained more than
1.0 million new subscribers;and in the U.S.,550 thousand.
•America Móvil’s revenues reached 135 billion pesos in 2004,of which 40 billion
were generated in the fourth quarter.This represented annual rates of growth
of 49.1%and 43.3%respectively.Quarter-over-quarter,revenues expanded by
15.9%.
•At 42.1 and 23.5 billion pesos,EBITDA and operating profits were in line with
America Móvil’s targets despite the sharp acceleration of subscriber growth
observed throughout the year which significantly raised subscriber acquisition
costs.EBITDA increased by 25.7%in 2004 and represented 31.2%of reve
nues.
•The year closed with a net profit of 16.5 billion pesos,up 4.4%over 2003.A
net profit of 1.6 billion was recorded in the fourth quarter after allowance for
deferred taxes in the amount of 3.2 billion pesos.The latter was equivalent to
13 peso cents per share and to 24 dollar cents per ADR.
•Net debt was almost unchanged in constant pesos at 42.4 billion pesos,as Amé
rica Móvil’s operating cash flow was sufficient to cover capital expenditures of
22.4 billion pesos and the acquisition of equity interests in several companies
for a combined net amount of 6.1 billion pesos.In addition,America MOvil
spent 13.6 billion pesos in share buybacks and dividends.
•America Móvil continued with the expansion of a GSM platform in Latin
America.All its operations are now offering both voice and data services that
run on their GSM networks.
Telcel adds
2.0 M subs in
4Q04
AMX
revenues up
49.2%yoy
AMX gains
17.3 M subs
in 2004
AMX reaches
61.1 M subs
Net profits of
16.5 bn MxP
in 2004
Net debt
unchanged at
42.4 bn MxP
Continued
GSM
expansion
EBITDA
totals 42
billion MxP
Subscribers
In the last quarter of 2004,America Móvil gained 7.0 million subscribers,making it
the best quarter on record in terms of subscriber growth.This resulted in net sub
scriber additions of 17.3 million in 2004,nearly 1.5 times as many as in all of 2003.
In that year the subscriber base increased by 12.1 million,but 4.2 million of those
came through acquisitions;in 2004 substantially all the growth was organic.Total
wireless subscribers ended the year at 61.1 million,for a 39.3%increase in the year.
Togethei fixed and wireless lines totaled 63.0 million at the end of 2004,37.8%more
than the 45.7 million lines seen in 2003.
Leading the subsidiaries in terms of net additions is Telcel,which acquired 5.4 mil
lion subscribers in 2004—2.0 million of them in the fourth quarter—and brought
Mexico’s subscriber base to nearly 29 million in Decembet
The Brazilian operations,under the brand name Claro,reached 13.7 million sub
scribers at the end of December 2004,a net increase of 4.1 million compared to
the previous year.On an annual basis,our subscriber base in Brazil expanded by
43.4%,while on a quarterly basis,it grew by 13.9%,as net additions in the last three
months of the year totaled 1.7 million.
December 2004 4 -...
Thousands
Total”Equity °
ounby Dec-04 Sep-04 Var.%Dec-03 Var.%Dec-04 Sep-04 var.%Dec-03 Var.%
4exico 28,851 26,831 7.5%23,444 23.1%28,851 26,831 7.5%23,444 23.1%
rgentina 3,587 2,573 39.4%1,411 154.2%3,587 2,573 39.491 1,298 176.3%
Irazil 13,657 11,985 13.9%9,521 43.4%13,306 11,650 14.2%9,135 45.7%
:olombia 5,814 4,746 22.5%3,674 58.2%5,767 4,737 21.8%3,516 64.0%
cuador 2,326 1,970 18.1%1,537 51.3%2,326 1,970 18.1%1,537 51.3%
El 5alvador 518 421 22.9%216 139.9%493 223 121.2%110 347.9%
;uatemala 1,306 1,155 13.1%870 502%1,293 1,143 13.191 859 50.5%
londuras 198 140 41.3%27 625.8%198 140 413%0 n.m
1icaragua 152 391 14.7%220 105.3%448 391 14.7%99 353.2%
Jruguav 5 0 nit 0 no 5 0 eli 0
J.S.A.4,394 3,843 14.39’2,952 48.99 4,315 3,774 14.3%2,899 48.99’
btal Wireless 61,107 54,060 13.0%43,873 39.3%60,589 53,432 13.4%42,898 41.2%
1 5alvador 781 778 0.4%704 10.9%737 409 80.2%359 105.3%
uatemala 901 885 1.8%930 -3.1%892 877 1.8%919 -2.9%
licaragua 214 211 1.7%205 4.6%212 209 1.7%0 n.m
otal Fixed 1,897 1,874 1.2%1,839 3.2%1,842 1,495 23.2%1,278 44.2%
otal Lines 63,004 55,934 12.6%43,712 37.8%62,431 34,926 13.7%44,175 41.3%
Subscriber growth in Argentina accelerated throughout 2004,with CTI gaining 1.0
million subscribers in the last quarter (39.4%sequential growth)and 2.2 million in
the year as a whole.At the end of 2004 CTI’s subscriber base,3.6 million,was 2.5
times greater than the one seen the previous year.In Uruguay CTI began operations
in December.
Our operations in Colombia added 2.1 million new subscribers throughout the
year—1.1 million of them in the last quarter—and ended 2004 with 5.8 million sub
scribers.In Ecuador net gains totaled 789 thousand in the year and 356 thousand in
the quarter,and its subscriber base ended December with 2.3 million subscribers.
For the second year in a row Tracfone,which operates in the United States,contin
ued to exhibit subscriber growth of nearly 50%.It added 1.4 million clients in the
year and finished 2004 with 4.4 million subscribers.3
.p
môiI
Highlights
elevant
vents
t.iL’-critsers
nu9ricrt MOs’il
onsolidated
\le.swin,
);tc’ratunls
M\Io
(let1
II1,1151
),‘ili,’,i—
\ry’ii Ii
ira,
Tar,,
entra Amt’riea
CF
TE
tel
egatt’l
itlisitibti
010 Ii’
cuador
Ofl(’Ct21
‘A
racFone
AMX adds
7.0 million
subs in 4Q04
2.0 M new
subs in
Mexico
Brazil
obtained 1.7
Msubsin4Q
Argentina
gained 1.0
M subs in
quarter
4Q04 Subs
up 13 M in
Colombia
(I)Includes total suoscnbers n,t all companies in whichAminca Mdvii holds an economic interest:does not consider the date in which the companiesstartedboingconsolidated.
(2)Includes total snbscribers iveighted by the cconi,mic interest held to each company.
(3)Includes Enitel.
(
.CarlosGarcia-Moreno
ChiefFinancial Officer
cL’arciarn(n,aiLtelcel.com
ITS 1 I C Investor Relations Office
ri_i LeonelCh.Schofecker
leoneinaniericamovil.com
AMERICA MOVI L’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2003
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,February 2,2004 -America Móvil,S.A.de C.V.(“America Móvil”)
[BMV:AMX][NYSE:AMX][NASDAQ:AMOV][LATIBEX:XAMXL],announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2003.
America MOvil ended 2003 with 43.7 million wireless subscribers,12.1 million
more than it had at the close of 2002.The increase reflected both organic growthAMXreaches.....
43.7million (7.9 million)and the incorporation of subscribers through acquisitions (4.2
subscribers million).The impact of these can be seen in the number of equity subscribers,
which rose by 40%in the year,from 30.7 million to 42.9 million.In addition to
its wireless subscribers,America MOvil had 1.6 million fixed lines,bringing its
total number of lines (fixed and wireless)to 45.3 million.
Telceladds Its Mexican subsidiary Telcel registered 1.3 million net subscriber additions in
1.3 M subs in the fourth quarter,bringing the year’s total to 3.4 million.Brazilian Telecom
4Q03 Americas obtained 765 thousand new subscribers in the quarter.
AJ’lX Consolidated revenues for 2003 were 85.9 billion pesos,44%greater than the
revenuesup ones registered the previous year.These included 26.4 billion pesos in fourth
43.9%yoy quarter revenues,which were up 56%year-on-year.
At 37.2%of revenues,EBITDA for the year came in at 32.0 billion pesos.This
represented a 48.0%increase relative to 2002.Fourth quarter EBITDA was 9.2
billion pesos,52.8%higher than in the same period a year earlier.
Operating .Operating profits,which were up 39.8%in the year,totaled 18.1 billion pesos.profitsup
39.8°/ayoy They represented 21.1 h of revenues.
_____________
Netprofits America Móvil turned a net profit of 15.4 billion pesos in 2003,more than three
treble,to 15.4 times larger than the previous year’s.The net profit for the fourth quarter camebnMxPinat5.7 billion pesos.
In spite of having spent 18.2 billion pesos in acquisitions during 2003 (including
AMX’net the purchase of minority stakes in certain subsidiaries),13.7 billion pesos indebtnearly......
unchangedin capex and 1.7 billion pesos in share buy-backs and dividends,America Moval s
2003 net debt barely increased in 2003 to finish the year at 40.1 billion pesos,equivalent
to 1.2 times consolidated EBITDA (last twelve months).
The acquisitions of ownership interests in CTE in El Salvador,CTI in ArgentinaAcquisitions..completed and BCP in Brazil have all been completed.Irs addition,in January America
Móvil closed the purchase of a 49%stake in Enitel,in Nicaragua.
1
Highlights
Relevant
Events
Subscribers
mericaMóvil
Consolidated
Mexican
Operations
exico
elcel
nten,ational
Operations
entina
echtel
razil
Claro
entral Americacr
olombia
Comcel
dor
onecel
SA
racFone
i m Fr I r i
m’iI
with Brazilian telecom company Telemar by which the latter obtained an option to
purchase 28%of the equity of BCP once its acquistion by America MOvil had been
completed.America MOvil and Telemar have since entered into an agreement
whereby the latter will receive 35 million dollars in exchange for any and all rights
it may have had over the equity of BCP.The amount is payable in the second quarter
of 2004.
In December America Móvil agreed to acquire from the Government of Nicaragua
Purchaseof its 49%ownership interest in Empresa Nicaraguense de Telecomunicaciones (Enitel)
49%of Enitel for a purchase price of 49.6 million dollars.This firm is the sole provider of fixed
line services in Nicaragua,with nearly 200 thousand fixed lines.It also provides
wireless services to approximately 120 thousand subscribers.The transaction closed
in January 2004.
Also in that month,America MOvil sold its 49%interest in CompUSA to US
Commercial Corp,S.A.de C.V.[BMV:USCOM]for approximately 178 million
dollars.As part of the transaction,America Móvil used a portion of the proceeds
from the sale (approximately 160 million dollars)to purchase shares of US
Commercial Corp.representing approximately 29.9%of its capital stock.US
Commercial Corp.now owns 100%of the equity of CompUSA.America Móvil
registered a 279 million pesos loss on the sale of the CompUSA shares relative to
their book value.
Buy-backs of America Móvil purchased 66.9 million of its own shares in the fourth quarter for
lbnMxP approximately 1 billion pesos.
Total °Equity
Country 4Q03 3Q03 Var.%4Q02 Var.°s’o 4Q03 3Q03 var.%4Q02 Var.%
Mexico 23,444 22,125 6.0%20,067 16.8%23,444 22,125 6.0%20,067 16.8%
Argentina 1,411 1,280 10.2%1,194 18.2%1,298 0 n.m.0 n.m.
Brazil 9,521 8,756 8.7%7,882 20.8%9,135 6,440 41.8%4,673 95.5%
Colombia 3,674 3,664 0.3%2,822 30.2%3,516 3,506 0.3%2,700 30.2%
Ecuador 1,537 1,322 163%923 66.5%1,537 1,322 16.3%744 106.6%
El Salvador 216 157 37.6%151 43.4%110 0 n.m.0 n.m.
Guatemala 870 787 10.4%628 38.5%859 766 12.1%603 42.5%
Nicaragua 100 56 77.2%1 n.m.99 55 79.9%n.a.n.m.
U.S.A.2.952 2.578 14.5%1.968 50.0%2,899 2.531 14.5%1.925 50.6%
Total°43,72.5 40,726 7.4°!35,634 22.7W 42,898 36,745 16.7°!30,711 39.7%
Ownership
interestin
Us
Commercial
ghlights
elevant
vents
usbcribers
mericaMóvil
onsolidated
exican
perations
exico
elcel
irternational
)aerations
entina
echtel
razil
‘laro
entral America
cr
olombia
mcel
ador
onecel
SA
racFone
AMX equity
subscribers
increase 40%
Telcelgains
3.4 M subs in
2003
Subscribers
America Móvil finished 2003 with 43.7 million wireless subscribers,12.1 million
more than it had at the end of 2002.Most of the increase (7.9 million)resulted from
organic growth,the difference,approximately 4.2 million subscribers,from
acquisitions.The impact of acquisitions is more acutely reflected in the number of
equity subscribers,which rose by 39.7%in the year,from 30.7 million to 42.9 million.
The Mexican operation registered 3.4 million net additions in 2003,1.3 of those in
the fourth quarter,bringing its subscriber base to 23.4 million,a 16.8%increase
year-on-year.
as of Dece*erj$3.;;’’
America Mdoil started to consolidate BSEandBCP beginning in May and November 2003,respectively.
(1)Includes total snt,scnbcrs ofall companies in whidi America MOvil holds an economic interest;dem not consider the late in which the
companies started being consolidated.
(2)Includes total sul,scrihcrsweighted by the economic interestheld in roth connmany.
(3 Fixed tine subscribers ofTeigna and TE stand at 929,681 and688.941.respectively.Ifincluded in total suhscrshers,it adds up in
45,344 thousand customers.
3
—CarlosGarcia-Moreno
.\ChiefFinancial Officer
cuarciamca)mail.telcel.comrI1rs—-IcE3 1nvesrRelations Office
ii’ci N,I I LeonelCh.
Ieoschca(mailtelceI.com
AMERICA MÔVIL’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2002
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,January 29th,2003 -America Móvil,S.A.de C.V.(‘America Móvil’)
[BMV:AMX][NYSE:AMXJ [NASDAQ:AMOV][LATIBEX:XAMXL],announced
today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of 2002.
31.6 million •America MOvils subscriber base surpassed the 30 million mark in the fourth
subs at end quarter,to end 2002 with 31.6 million subscribers.This represented an increase
2002 of 21.5%in the year.
2002 •Total revenues for 2002 amounted to 57.5 billion pesos,31.4%more than in
revenuesup 2001;16.3 billion pesos were obtained in the fourth quarter,resulting in a 40.9%3l.4a/oyoy increase year-on-year.
Year’s •With EBITDA of 5.8 billion pesos in the fourth quarter,EBITDA for the yearEBITDArosetotaled20.8 billion pesos,up 57.6%from 2001.The EBITDA margin rose fromby57.6°/uyoy 30.2%in 2001 to 36.2%in 2002.
Operating Operating profits came in at 3.6 billion pesos in the fourth quarter,bringing the
years total to 12.5 billion pesos,a 47.4%year-on-year increase.Operating profits
2002 represented 22.2%of sales in the quarter.
An impairment charge in the amount of 2.1 billion pesos was taken in the fourthImpairment..
charges of 2.1 quarter of 2002,almost exclusively associated with a write-off of goodwill by
bnMxPin CompUSA which affected America MOvil through its equity participation in
4Q02 the results of CompUSA.Before this exceptional charge there was a net profit of
4.7 billion pesos in the quarter and 6.7 billion in the year.
Net Income •Net income came in at 2.6 billion pesos in the fourth quarter and 4.6 billion in
of4.6 bn MxP 2002 after the impairment charge.This compares to the net loss of 875 million
pesos registered in 2001 after extraordinary charges.
GSMin •The rollout of Telcel’s GSM network continued on track:it has established
coverage in 70 cities in Mexico.In addition,agreements were reached to deploy
Ecuador GSM networks in both Colombia and Ecuador.
Celcaribeto •In the fourth quarter America MOvil reached an agreement to acquire wireless
be acquired company Celcaribe,in Colombia.This transaction is expected to close in Februaryshortly2003.
1
Highlights
elevan
vents
Subscribers
érica Mévil
Consolidated
Wireless
ëxico
elcel
uatemala
elgua
razil
TL
ess
elet
ericel
Colombia
Comcel
Ecuador
Conecel
SA
racFone
roadband
enezuela
Genesis
LArentina
Techtel
Otherusinesses
USA
C0mpUSA
im.-Iu.i
miI
Also in December,America MOvil launched wireless services in Nicaragua through
its subsidiary Servicios de Comunicaciones de Nicaragua,S.A.,which operates under
the PCS Digital brand name.It has put in place a GSM network in the capital city of
Managua and will attain nationwide coverage in the first half of 2003.
America Móvil completed two financing transactions for nearly 500 million dollars
in December and January with a view to improving the maturity profile of its debt
and its overall liquidity position.The first of these transactions is a syndicated loan
facility arranged by Citibank and Bank of America in the amount of 400 million
dollars,in which 13 banks participated.The second one is a floating-rate note placed
in the Mexican market,for an amount of 1 billion pesos.America Móvil’s cash and
securities balance is now roughly equal to its short term debt.
Subscribers
America MOvils wireless subscriber base surpassed the 30 million mark,ending the
year with 31.6 million subscribers after net additions of 5.6 million in 2002 (a 21.5%
increase year-on-year).The company added 1.7 million new customers in the fourth
quarter,65%more than in the previous one.Equity subscribers reached almost 31
million,6%more than in the previous quarter and over a third higher than a year
earlier.It is noteworthy that this figure represents over 97%of the groups total
subscriber base.
Telcel gained 716 thousand new customers in the fourth quarter,to finish the year
with somewhat more than 20 million subscribers,up 18.3%relative to the prior
year.Net subscriber gains in 2002 totaled 3.1 million and accounted for over 55%of
America MOvils net additions in the period.
Brazilian subsidiary Telecom Americas came second to Telcel in terms of net
subscriber additions in the fourth quarter of the year,with 371 thousand,to reach a
TAreaches total of 5.2 million subscribers.Those additions represented over 40%of the net
5.2 M subs subscriber gains of Telecom Americas in 2002.Of the four companies that make up
Telecom Americas,Americel was the most dynamic one followed by Telet,both on
an annual and quarterly basis.
Tot,J Equity ‘
Country -Compony 4Q02 3Q02 4Q01 Var.°/”4Q02 3Q02 4Q01 Voo.’/,°
.Mexico Te(cel 20.067 19.311 3.7%16,965 18.31 20.067 19.751 3.7%16.965 18.3%
-Guatemxio Sercoo 616 991 137%470 49 4’603 911 197%394 92 0%
-Eco,do,Conecel ‘173 777 104%401 000’741 673 101’700 191 0%
.(‘oloechi,C,,,,,,-.,I 1 017 1 977 9%1 069 49 7%7 700 7 400 ‘1 020 0
ITO A I 0401011711’1 013 ‘1 0”1 010 1 701 7 4”1 177 ‘1 0”
26,407 25,046 5.3%21.667 21.91 26,039 24,754 5.2%19,528 33.3%
TelecomAnwric,s’
.Brazil AU 2,1(16 2.1511 5.2%1.917 9.9”2.033 1.931 5.3%1.300 56.4%
-Brozil ‘elet 1.043 971 7.5%783 33,20 822 713 15.4”271 203.1%
-B,,zil Americol 868 748 16.1%600 44.61’683 544 25.6”206 231,6%
E,o,1T 1 170 1101 600 1 037 1300 1 134 1 004 071’470 1410%
5,192 4,821 7,7%4,332 19.9%4.673 4.251 9.9%2,908 60,7%
Total1’31 604 29 9(17 97%29.999 21 9”30 711 79 009 9 9%22 436 36 9%
AMX
launches
Nicaraguan
operations
New
financings
improve
liquidity and
debtprofile
AMX adds
5.6million
subs in 2002
Telcel ends
yearwith
20.1 M subs
ghlights
elevant
vents
usbcribers
mérica Mdvii
onsolidated
ireless
éxico
elcel
uateniala
eLgua
;.ce1
Colombia
Comcel
uador
onecel
SA
tracFone
Broadlnmd
Venezuela
Genesis
Argentina
Techtel
OtherBusinesses
USA
CompUSA
S15,tioein Tolv21512.Telecom Ame,ocax ixearl ci AM)(’x xab,idia,iex.(I)l,,dxde1,1,1 ,broibe,,,fallcolo99 ice,,,rh,ch A,ohi,Mlxi(hold,a,,mAxIm,,iotcrmt.
(2)V,mhcos Oem 4072 oil),respco(t,tle olceiotqo,rtem
(3)196,4,,le%i ,xbmriior,,omigllcd ‘s th,co,xm,i,i,,k’,c,t 6,14,,coO
(4)F,ccd )i,o,,O,cAOrre cfTrlgx,el,xd 081(3.802.If,,,clod,d 0 1,1,1 ‘ol,,,xher,todd,op I,,32,404 ((,co’ocd o,,19,,rr’
(5)200lfigorc,do ,to,cl,,de CCI’l’,,,,l’.,r,ilmr’,ud ‘qxitV ,lxmilorxi,mlxdcCcxc,),xport,‘f (We,,,,,A,ooo,e,
Carlos Garcia-Moreno
ChiefFinancial Officer
cgarciam@mail.telcel.com
Investor Relations Office
Victor M.MartInez
vicmarag@mail.telcel.com
AMERICA MOVIL’S FOURTH QUARTER OF 2001
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING REPORT
Mexico City,January 31,2002 -America Móvil,S.A.de C.V.(‘America Mo
vii”)[BMV:AMX][NYSE:AMX][NASDAQ:AMOV][LATIBEX:XAMXL],
announced today its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter of
2001.
•America MOvil consolidated its position as the leading wireless company in
Latin America as it moved for the first time past the mark of 25 million
subscribers,ending the year with 26.6 million subscribers,a net gain of 9.5
million customers in the year.In the fourth quarter alone it registered 2.8
million new additions.
•Telcel experienced its strongest quarter ever,adding 2.0 million subscribers
to close the year with 17 million subscribers,6.5 million more than at the end
of 2000.
•Consolidated revenues of America MOvil came in at 10.9 billion Pesos in the
quarter and 41.4 billion Pesos in the year.
•AMX’s EBITDA,before exceptional items,totaled 3.6 billion Pesos in 4Q01
and 12.5 billion Pesos in 2001,resulting in EBITDA margins of 33%and 30%
respectively.
•Before exceptional items,AMX’s operating profits (EBIT)reached 2.5 billion
Pesos in the quarter and 8.0 billion Pesos in the year,and its net income came
in at 1.6 billion Pesos in the quarter and 2.3 billion Pesos in the year.
•In the fourth quarter exceptional operational and non-operational impairment
charges were taken in respect of investments in certain affiliates that are not
core assets of America MOvil.These charges totaled 3.1 billion Pesos.
•On January 28th,America Móvil sold its 50%stake in Cellular Communications
of Puerto Rico to SBC International.As part of the deal,an option agreement
was entered into that could lead to America Móvil buying SBC International’s
12.8%stake in Telecom Americas,anAmérica MOvil affiliate,within three years.
•The shareholder agreements providing for the reorganization of Telecom
Americas were executed inJanuary:as a result America Móvil will consolidate
Colombian wireless operator Comcel beginning in February 2002.From that
date Telecom Americas will hold investments only in wireless assets in Brazil.
Moody’s and Standard and Poor’s confirmed early in
credit ratings,in the process of rating a new 5 billion P1
Note Program.The ratings were Aaa.mx and mxAAA,rt
m E r I c
m rn/il
Highlights
Relevant
Events
An,érica MOvIl
Consolidated
Wireless
Mexico
elcel
uatemala
elgua
USA
r icI-one
Ecuador
Conecel
Brazil
ATI.
ess
elet
Americel
olombia
omcel
roadband
Venezuela
Genesis
Argentina
ethtel
Other Bustiit’sst,S
exico
Cablevision
peedy MOvil
SA
ompUSA
RBROS
26.6 million
subs atthe
end of 2001
Telcel picks up
2.OM in 4Qto
17M
Revenues of
41.4 bn MxP
EBITDA of 12.5
bn MxP before
one time items
Operating Profits
of 8.0 bn MxP
before one time
items
One-time
charges of 3.1
bn MxP
Sale of 50%of
CCPR to SBCI
Reorganization
of Telecom
Americas
AIvIX’s credit
ratings are
confirmed
m ci’i I
Subscribers
AM finishes In the fourth quarter of 2001,America MOvil’s wireless subscriber base surpassed
2001 with 26.6 the 25 million mark,ending the year at 26.6 million subscribers.Net additions of 2.8
M subs,after million subscribers in the fourth quarter brought the total in 2001 to 9.5 million net9.5 M net gains ..gams,an mcrease of 55.3 /o over the previous year.
Telcel added 6.5 million subscribers in the year,having gained 2.0 million subscribers
2001 is record in the last quarter alone.Telcel’s breakneck performance in 2001 followed those of
yearfor Telcel:the previous 3 years,in each of which the subscriber base virtually doubled relative17Msubsand...
6.5 M net gains to the previous year s.Whereas in 2001 its subscriber base did not quite double,
Telcel still managed to gain more customers than in the year 2000,when net gains
totaled 5.2 million subscribers.
In relative terms,subscriber growth was similar in both Ecuador and Colombia:
89.8%and 83.0%respectively,resulting in annual net additions of 229 and 855
thousand clients in the year.Guatemala’s Sercom also showed great dynamism,
adding 159 thousand subscribers in the period.Tracfone,in the US.,closed the
year with 1.9 million subscribers,up from 1.1 million subscribers a year before,a
68.4%increase.
4.3 million In Brazil,Telecom Americas’operations ended the year with 4.3 million subscribers,
Brazilian a 25%increase (862 thousand net additions)over year-end 2000.Telet and Americelsubscnbersexhibitedthebestgrowthrates,but ATL generated the largest absolute net garns.
Adjusted by its equity participation,America MOvil’s subscriber base increased from
20.3 to 22.8 million subscribers in the last quarter,an increase of 76%with respect to
year-end 2000.
In addition to the wireless subscribers mentioned above,America MOvil ended 2001
with 715 thousand fixed lines in Guatemala,68 thousand more than a year before.
Wireless Subscribers as of December 2001
Thousands
Highs
Relevant
Events
America Movil
Consolidated
Vihrele cc
Mexico
Telcel
Guatemala
Telgua
USA
Trac Fone
Ecuador
Conecel
Brazil
ATL
Tess
Telet
Americel
Colombia
Comcel
Broadband
Venezuela
Genesis
Argentina
Techtel
Other Businesses
Mexico
Cablevision
Speedy Móvil
USA
CompUSA
ARBROS
Total Equity
4Q01 3Q01 Var.%4QOi Var.%0t 4Q01 3Q01 Var.%4Q00 Var.%5’
16,965 14,976 133%10,462 62.2%16,965 14,976 13.3%10,462 62.2%
420 357 17.6%261 61.0%394 329 19.7%219 79.7%
484 402 20.5%255 89.8%296 251 18.1%156 89.8%
1.913 1.852 3.3%1.136 68.4%1.872 1.812 3.3%1.106 69.1%
Country
I)Subsidiaries
-Mexico
-Guaicmala
Ecuador
-U.S.A.
Z)Affiliates
li)Telecom Americas
Brazil
Brazil
-Brazil
Brazil
Colombia
l.2)Puerto Rico
Company
relcel
Sercomt
Conecel
rracfone
ATh
relet
Americel
rexs
Comcel
CCPR
39,782 17,587 12.5%32,114 63.3%19,528 17,368 12.4%11,944 63.5%
1,917 1,831 4.7%3,631 17.5%1,300 1,242 4.7%361 259.9%
783 680 15.2%525 49.2%271 235 15.2%38 615.4%
600 524 14.7%396 51.6%206 180 14.7%29 620,4%
1,032 1,005 2.7%918 12.4%470 457 2.7%-n.a
1,885 1,603 17.5%1,030 83.0%661 577 14.6%322 1053%
6,217 5,643 10.2%4,500 38.1%2,908 2,691 8.0%750 287.8%
595 575 3.4%510 16.6%297 288 3.4%255 16.6%
fotal 26,594 23,805 11.7%17,124 55.3%22,733 20,347 11.7%12,949 75.6%
(I)Includes total sst,scribcrs ofall coinpanies in rotiicliAmEricaMErit hoSts on economicinterest.
(2)Variationsfrom 4Q01with respect to the relevant quarters
(3)Includes total subscribers xcightedby theeconomic interesttwirl in cacti company
(4)Fined line sst,scribv,s of Telgira stands at 715,088.Ifincludcol in total sst,scrit,crs,it odds up 1027,309 thousand customers.
4
z
II II
0
C,
Lx
i
C,
I-
I
9.
3
Cl
)
Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-103
provides a free cell phone and credit for a limited amount of free monthly wireless service to eligible low-
income familes.
276
97. Since the release of the Fourteenth Report, TracFone is facing a new challenger in the
low-end prepaid segment. In May 2010, S~rint announced the introduction of a new low-end prepaid
brand that it calls Common Cents Mobile.2 7 Sprint's new prepaid option is a pay-by-the-miute wireless
plan that the company sells through Wal-Mar. The new service charges seven cents per minute for calls
and the same amount per text message - about half as much as TracFone.278
98. The unlimited prepaid segment includes the earliest unlimited prepaid providers, Leap
and MetroPCS, and more recent unlimited prepaid players such as Sprint Nextel's Virgin Mobile and
Boost Mobile prepaid brands. As noted in the Fourteenth Report,279 one of the latest entrants to the
unlimited prepaid segment is TracFone's "Straight Talk" service, which became nationally available in
October 2009 after a limited tral servce that began the previous summer.280 As with other TracFone
prepaid brands, the Wal-Mar store chain distrbutes Straight Talk handsets and service.
281 Unlike
TracFone's other prepaid brands, however, Straight Talk runs on Verizon Wireless's network and was
initially marketed with Verizon Wireless's name and logo on the box.28 In addition, whereas other
TracFone brands are targeted at low-usage customers in the traditional pay-as-you-go prepaid segment,
Straight Talk's unlimited prepaid offerngs are tageted at customers with higher usage and ARU.
99. As detailed in the Fourteenth Report, analysts singled out Sprit Nextel's Boost Mobile
prepaid brand and TracFone's Straight Talk prepaid service as being the most aggressive in cuttng the
price of unlimited nationwide service offerings in 2009.283 Both Boost Mobile and Straight Talk are par
of a broader movement by the nationwide mobile operators into the prepaid segment either through the
sale of their own prepaid brands, as in the case of Sprint Nextel, or through resale arangements, as with
Verizon's agreement to sell network servces for TracFone's Straight Talk offering.284 In addition to
Boost Mobile's unlimited prepaid offerings, Sprint Nextel's push into the prepaid segment is reflected in
other recent developments such as its acquisition of Virgin Mobile USA in the fourh quarter of 2009285
and its aforementioned introduction of a new low-end prepaid brand, Common Cents Mobile, in May
2010. Similarly, the launch of TracFone's Straight Talk service represented a shift in business strategy
for Verizon Wireless, which previously had "largely avoided the prepaid market.,,286
100. The more aggressive push by the nationwide network operators into the prepaid segment
continued to pressure traditional regional prepaid providers such as Leap and MetroPCS to lower their
276 The Haves and the Have-Nots Diverge, at 10; Slumdog Millonaires, at 25; TracFone's Prepaid Niche.
27 Niraj Sheth and Roger Cheng, Phone Rivals Dial Up Prepaid Services, Wall Street Joural, May 14,2010
(Phone Rivals Dial Up Prepaid Services).
278 Phone Rivals Dial Up Prepaid Services.
279 Fourteenth Report, 25 FCC Rcd at 11475, ,\101.
280 Roger Cheng, Wal-Mart Wireless Expands, Wall Street Joural, Oct. 15,2009 (Wal-Mart Wireless Expands).
281 Wal-Mart Wireless Expands.
282 Wal-Mart Wireless Expands; Craig Moffett et aI., Weekend Media Blast: Tilt, Bernstein Research, JuI. 10,2009,
at 1 (Weekend Media Blast: Tit).
283 Fourteenth Report, 25 FCC Rcd at 11475-76, ,\102; Recipefor Disaster, at 14, 16; Slumdog Millonaires, at 5,
16.
284 Phone Rivals Dial Up Prepaid Services.
285 Fourteenth Report, 25 FCC Rcd at 11443, ,\34.
286 Phone Rivals Dial Up Prepaid Services.
68
Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-103
Table C-2: FCC's Semi-Annual Local Telephone Competition Data Collection:
Mobile Telephone Subscribership, in Thousands
Dec 2009
State 2006 2007 2008 2009Carriers% Resold Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec
Alabama 13 9 %3,276 3,375 3,605 3,765 3,887 3,960 4,003 4,228
Alaska 11 6 397 412 432 460 480 383 544 586
American Samoa **********
Arzona 11 5 4,153 4,405 4,637 4,800 4,936 4,983 5,005 5,101
Arkansas 8 10 1,924 2,044 2,149 2,288 2,446 2,530 2,576 2,519
California 15 7 27,497 29,717 30,204 32,247 31,946 32,177 32,215 32,938
Colorao 11 8 3,428 3,608 3,756 3,968 4,066 4,311 4,357 4,503
Connectcut 7 6 2,582 2,705 2,787 2,884 2,959 3,030 3,047 3,123
Delaware 8 6 650 683 724 751 775 778 779 803
Distrct of Columbia 8 7 879 880 966 936 1,047 1,096 1,116 1,183
Florida 11 10 14,177 14,762 15,255 15,605 15,809 16,158 16,425 16,744
Georgia 14 7 6,865 7,282 7,598 7,941 8,142 8,322 8,562 8,863
Guam **********
Hawaii 7 3 1,010 1,035 1,067 1,096 1,115 1,184 1,196 1,216
Idao 14 5 901 973 1,019 1,086 1,125 1,167 1,180 1,221
llinois 14 7 9,148 9,589 9,949 10,330 10,634 10,919 11,070 11,523
Indiana 12 8 3,973 4,271 4,448 4,675 4,824 4,956 4,983 5,205
Iowa 71 7 1,867 2,010 2,058 2,166 2,245 2,319 2,336 2,432
Kansas 15 11 1,905 2,047 2,133 2,261 2,326 2,421 2,430 2,466
Kentucky 12 10 2,821 2,966 3,101 3,291 3,343 3,445 3,439 3,631
Louisiana 10 7 3,356 3,492 3,612 3,765 3,896 4,012 4,053 3,993
Maine 8 17 787 845 882 941 972 1,012 1,006 1,065
Marland 10 5 4,471 4,691 4,818 5,024 5,124 5,234 5,260 5,338
Massachusett 8 9 4,917 5,129 5,289 5,470 5,624 5,749 6,027 6,171
Michigan 12 12 6,863 7,094 7,333 7,608 7,821 8,027 8,171 8,576
Minesota 11 6 3,543 3,702 3,834 4,048 4,164 4,345 4,254 4,439
Mississippi 10 7 1,923 2,030 2,070 2,196 2,252 2,312 2,361 2,345
Missour 12 8 4,068 4,322 4,480 4,674 4,835 4,940 4,985 5,129
Montan 9 8 575 620 650 694 723 748 707 802
Nebraska 11 5 1,199 1,272 1,325 1,387 1,451 1,496 1,508 1,515
Nevada 12 8 1,883 1,990 2,093 2,167 2,249 2,268 2,325 2,393
New Hamshire 8 10 897 943 973 1,022 1,045 1,080 1,075 1,125
New Jersey 8 5 6,954 7,207 7,419 7,654 7,834 8,008 8,036 8,158
New Mexico 10 5 1,253 1,333 1,416 1,489 1,555 1,536 1,550 1,624
New York 11 10 14,574 15,262 15,901 16,395 17,260 16,702 18,193 18,882
Nort Carlina 12 9 6,209 6,627 6,962 7,306 7,428 8,024 8,193 8,108
Nort Dakota 9 6 457 473 492 513 541 581 562 618
Nortern Marana lsI.**********
Ohio 12 10 7,939 8,380 8,723 9,099 9,357 9,565 9,456 10,059
Oklahoma 17 6 2,317 2,480 2,572 2,723 2,808 2,889 2,988 3,077
Oregon 11 6 2,484 2,656 2,781 2,923 3,007 3,084 3,112 3,235
Pensylvania 14 10 8,349 8,831 9,201 9,615 9,895 10,214 10,455 10,867
Puero Rico 6 2 2,171 2,301 2,323 2,411 2,502 2,624 2,706 2,807
Rhode Island 7 6 765 798 829 848 874 888 880 893
South Carolina 13 8 3,001 3,209 3,340 3,500 3,573 3,323 3,374 3,896
South Dakota 8 7 514 548 570 596 611 631 613 681
Tenessee 13 10 4,731 5,127 4,971 5,246 5,791 5,518 5,676 5,914
Texas 26 6 16,928 17,822 18,792 19,677 20,390 21,008 21,403 21,849
Utah 13 5 1,649 1,775 1,874 1,971 2,046 2,095 2,109 2,166
Vermont 7 15 334 358 375 402 421 435 398 463
Virgin Islands **********
248
Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-103-
Virgina 10 8 5,325 5,607 6,148 6,416 6,242 6,856 6,596 7,250
Washington 11 6 4,495 4,799 5,035 5,292 5,461 5,624 5,671 5,816
West Virginia 11 16 965 1,040 1,095 1,173 1,236 1,295 1,315 1,386
Wisconsin 13 9 3,517 3,510 3,641 3,842 3,966 4,265 4,317 4,546
Wyoming 13 9 359 387 410 441 457 484 429 517
Nationwide 180 8 %217,418 229,619 238,316 249,332 255,729 261,284 265,332 274,283
Source: FCC Form 477.
* = Data withheld to maintain firm confdentiality. Some data for June 2008 have been revised.
% Resold reflects the percentage of mobile telephony subscrbers purchaing their service subscriptions from a
mobile wireless reseller.
249
Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-103
Table C-3: Economic Area Penetration Rates
2009 2009
Subscrber Estimated Penetration 2009 2008 EAEAEANameEAHHIHHIDenity
Population Rate
57 Detroit-An Aror-Flint, MI 7,882,122 6,915,601 114%2815 3049 364.1
78 Birmingham, AL 1,862,516 1,679,665 111%2568 2542 137.1
155 Fargton, NM-CO 233,710 215,888 108%4008 6536 16.0
13 Washington-Baltimore, DC-MD- V A- WV -P A 9,888,125 9,367,024 106%2683 2731 402.8
22 Fayetteville, NC 579,042 558,549 104%2826 2980 164.6
87 Beaumont-Port Arur, TX 459,993 447,070 103%3303 3184 89.2
83 New Orlean, LA-MS (see note i)1,666,503 1,636,225 102%3188 3261 171.9
10 New York-Nort New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-CT-PA 27,018,157 26,752,421 101%2556 2640 890.6
20 Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Newport News, VA-NC 1,859,299 1,835,017 101%2760 2775 289.9
37 Albany,GA 504,963 500,752 101%2985 4165 62.7
71 Nashvile, TN-KY 2,877,422 2,835,094 101%2562 2679 105.1
79 Montgomery, AL 501,498 494,140 101%2654 3006 66.9
82 Biloxi-Gulfport-Pascagoula, MS 398,813 394,375 101%2545 2465 143.5
85 Lafayette, LA 636,775 632,979 101%4703 6497 100.0
122 Wichita KS-OK 1,202,862 1,190,209 101%2943 3011 20.5
161 San Diego, CA 3071,856 3,053,793 101%2543 2574 660.5
31 Miam-Fort Lauderdale, FL 6,253,316 6,252,464 100%2238 2250 483.2
81 Pensacola, FL 690,312 688,680 100%2732 2657 154.1
97 Sprigfield, IL-MO 514,352 513,449 100%3824 3910 58.2
44 Knoxville, TN 1,089,348 1,100,819 99%2713 2816 165.6
80 Mobile,AL 710,187 719,848 99%3148 3106 74.8
90 Little Rock-North Little Rock, AR 1,677,439 1,700,495 99%4174 4210 46.1
121 Nort Platte, NE-CO 58,221 59,033 99%5304 5577 5.0
12 Philadelphia-Wilmington-Atlantic City, PA-NJ-DE-MD 7,522,039 7,713,384 98%2498 2614 778.8
29 Jacksonville, FL-GA 2,122,948 2,175,495 98%2342 2540 112.5
132 Corpus Chrsti, TX 548,067 559,067 98%2144 2471 46.5
135 Odessa-Midland, TX 405,305 412,858 98%3521 3671 10.1
141 Denver-Boulder-Greeley, CO-KS-NE 4,545,023 4,623277 98%2387 2370 52.0
172 Honolulu, HI 1,268,715 1 295,178 98%2372 2365 187.2
15 Richmond-Petersburg, VA 1,558,242 1,608,573 97%3216 3366 124.0
73 Memphis, TN-AR-MS-KY 1,923,617 1,977,533 97%2585 2709 103.0
86 Lake Charles, LA 526,662 543,482 97%3397 5327 52.4
3 Boston- Worcester-Lawrence-Lowewell-Brockton, MA-NH 7,923,813 8,278,493 96%2752 2800 421.8
35 Tallahassee, FL-GA 758,243 791,953 96%3116 3772 63.5
45 Johnson City-Kingsport-Bristol, TN-VA 578,094 601,030 96%3801 3936 144.5
51 Columbus,OH 2,443,296 2,545,136 96%3157 3135 19ü.
55 Cleveland-Akon,OH-PA 4,411,646 4,592,908 96%3763 3959 427.8
89 Monroe, LA 318,653 330,757 96%4386 4364 56.1
131 Houston-Galveston-Brazori, TX 6,572,649 6,840,330 96%2268 2281 169.3
133 McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, TX 1,168451 1,220,589 96%2758 3025 222.0
34 Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearater, FL 2,607865 2,747,272 95%2257 2291 891.0
36 Dothan, AL-FL-GA 332,880 351,564 95%2709 4613 53.7
38 Macon,GA 782385 821,390 95%3884 4197 62.9
39 Columbus, GA-AL 496,486 522,421 95%3063 2911 84.1
250
Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-103
2009 2009Estimated 2009 2008 EAEAEANameSubscbesEAPenetrtionHHIHHDensity
Population Rate
50 Dayton-Sprigfield, OH 1,059,551 1,115,251 95%2607 2615 318.5
93 Joplin, MO-KS-OK 265,187 278,248 95%3464 3584 74.7
127 Dallas-Fort Worth, TX-AR-OK 8,609,409 9,107,967 95%2614 2623 119.0
143 Casper, WY-ID-UT 429,532 449,779 95%5350 7653 5.2
170 Seattle- Tacoma-Bremerton, WA 4,409,480 4,643,110 95%2702 2615 190.5
27 Augusta-Aiken, GA-SC 597,328 638,707 94%3249 3960 89.8
28 Savanah, GA-SC 731,409 777,504 94%2450 3312 92.0
40 Atlanta, GA-AL-NC 6,459,664 6,886,313 94%2452 2409 246.
42 Asheville, NC 463,902 493,170 94%4273 4132 128.6
64 Chicago-Gar-Kenosha, IL-IN-WI 10,268,875 10,875,669 94%2070 2146 556.5
70 Louisville, KY-IN 1,426,145 1,525,268 94%2471 2520 180.9
84 Baton Rouge, LA-MS 766,799 819,964 94%4896 5007 140.3
ILL Minot,ND 101,445 107,605 94%4360 7745 7.0
128 Abilene, TX 205,186 217,433 94%3539 3457 20.4
23 Chalotte-Gastonia-Rock Hil, NC-SC 2,353,511 2,524,998 93%3044 3097 240.5
24 Columbia, SC 959,242 1,030,810 93%3218 3692 126.0
30 Orlando,FL 4,146,283 4,464,397 93%2426 2486 265.8
53 Pittsburgh, PA-WV 2,681,258 2,898,241 93%3185 3157 284.8
99 Kansas City, MO-KS 2,531,126 2,719,973 93%2289 2290 88.7
125 Oklahoma City, OK 1,707,641 1,838,406 93%3100 3444 65.0
142 Scottbluff, NE-WY 83,114 88,945 93%6572 6973 7.8
153 La Vegas, NV-AZ-UT 2,189,513 2,347,051 93%2137 2341 23.7
8 Buffalo-Niagara Falls, NY-PA 1,324,113 1,446,063 92%3240 3324 212.9
88 Shreveprt-Bossier City, LA-AR 533,512 581,587 92%3871 3957 58.0
130 Austin-San Marcos, TX 1,669,505 1,818,555 92%2633 2640 156.1
134 San Antonio, TX 2,372,703 2,566,061 92%2162 2220 83.0
5 Albany-Schenectady- Troy, NY 1,091,428 1,205,523 91%3435 3352 134.7
17 Roanoke, VA-NC-WV 781,545 862,958 91%2384 2439 97.8
25 Wilmington, NC-SC 941,677 1,032,795 91%2837 2760 107.4
26 Charleston-Nort Chaleston, SC 639,035 698,437 91%3011 2969 149.8
43 Chattooga, TN-GA 722,276 792,821 91%3719 3494 145.3
49 Cincinnti-Hamlton,OH-KY-IN 2,134,182 2,353,401 91%2287 2247 294.1
69 Evansville-Henderson, IN-KY-IL 788,971 862,384 91%4380 4590 75.3
95 Jonesboro, AR-MO 280,812 307,391 91%5041 5032 51.
96 St. Louis, MO-IL 3,358,878 3,691,421 91%2669 2733 127.0
124 Tulsa, OK-KS 1,339,303 1,466,450 91%3080 3222 72.4
137 Lubbock, TX 356,776 392,653 91%2750 2832 27.2
163 San Francisco-Oakand-San Jose, CA 8,812,967 9,683,498 91%2662 2610 271.
41 Grenvile-Sparnburg-Anderson, SC-NC 1,250,088 1,389,094 90%3367 4097 183.6
77 Jackson, MS-AL-LA 1,332,856 1,485,097 90%3451 3534 49.7
103 Ceda Rapids, IA 381,493 424,398 90%2588 2561 101.
107 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN-WI-IA 4,387,117 4,867,600 90%2689 2735 83.0
171 Anchorage, AK 614,485 683,946 90010 3604 3865 1.
6 Syrcuse, NY-PA 1,669,807 1,885,052 89%4033 3986 104.7
7 Rochester, NY-PA 1,310,404 1,480,252 89%4368 4389 167.2
18 Greensboro- Winston-Salem-High Point, NC- VA 1,812,660 2,025,527 89%2751 3155 189.1
19 Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hil, NC 2,038,630 2,286,793 89%2859 2965 188.4
251
Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-103
2009 2009Estimated 2009 2008 EAEAEANameSubscrberEAPenetrtionHHIHHDensity
Population Rate
67 Indianapolis, IN-IL 2,934,533 3,296,788 89%3135 3118 171.4
98 Columbia, MO 353,160 397,345 89%3991 4082 58.0
101 Peoria-Pekin, IL 468350 529,129 89%3512 3424 91.0
126 Western Oklahoma, OK 122,783 137,861 89%2306 3170 12.0
160 Los Angeles-Riverside-Orange County, CA-AZ 17,471,704 19,686,186 89%2365 2488 286.1
9 State College, P A 700,119 798,328 88%4116 4204 92.4
21 Greenvile, NC 776,939 887,786 88%2599 2641 87.7
56 Toledo,OH 1,135,873 1,295,678 88%4739 5360 163.9
118 Omaa, NE-IA-MO 981,985 1,111,783 88%2950 3537 62.4
136 Hobbs, NM-TX 176,578 199,640 88%3144 3896 11.2
138 Amllo, TX-NM 434,607 493,283 88%2681 2668 11.8
156 Albuquerque, NM-AZ 923994 1,047578 88%2943 2845 20.9
157 EI Paso, TX-NM 928,888 1,060,233 88%2278 2433 33.0
167 Portland-Salem, OR-WA 2,932,146 3,328,126 88%2546 2469 76.0
2 Portland, ME 685,209 784,721 87%2852 2812 98.6
32 Fort Myers-Cape Coral, FL 787,851 905,445 87%2403 2429 234.3
63 Milwaukee-Raine, WI 2,042,368 2,342,714 87%2100 2123 366.9
66 Fort Wayne, IN 648,222 745,537 87%3563 3543 158.5
72 Paducah, KY-IL 200,125 230,246 87%5457 5945 70.0
102 Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, IA-IL 488,549 559,146 87%2640 2585 108.3
110 Grd Forks, ND-MN 191,816 219,646 87%4824 *10.2
115 Rapid City, SD-MT-ND-NE 196,370 226,418 87%4954 9658 5.0
119 Lincoln,NE 349,974 404,463 87%4825 4909 50.2
154 Flagstaf, AZ-UT 417,045 480,160 87%4202 3893 8.2
11 Harsburg-Lebanon-Carlisle, PA 1,053,716 1,221,803 86%3297 3235 292.4
75 Tupelo, MS-AL- TN 541,245 628,046 86%5319 5403 49.8
91 Fort Smith, AR-OK 298,891 349,542 86%4084 4121 46.5
106 Rochester, MN-IA-WI 291,097 337,571 86%3528 3267 55.7
120 Grnd Island, NE 245,267 284,811 86%6209 6672 11.6
144 Billngs, MT - WY 383,959 446,354 86%5408 8486 4.9
148 Idao Falls, ID-WY 308,716 358,114 86%4512 4472 10.9
16 Staunton, VA-WV 300,630 352,381 85%2886 2881 51.0
68 Chaaign-Urbana, IL 535,129 629,446 85%3546 3434 73.5
94 Springfield, MO 815,858 957,072 85%3662 3690 48.1
100 Des Moines, IA-IL-MO 1,465,413 1,727,660 85%2998 2967 47.3
123 Topeka,KS 398302 468,159 85%2665 2623 35.6
129 San Angelo, TX 175,256 207355 85%2049 2237 10.1
140 Pueblo, CO-NM 247,638 290,867 85%3202 3850 8.7
149 Twin Falls, ID 152,964 179,994 85%4400 4175 14.1
151 Reno,NV-CA 655,836 774,965 85%2624 2910 7.6
33 Sarasota-Bradenton, FL 740,325 880,375 84%2676 2733 273.6
52 Wheeling, WV-OH 255,721 304,530 84%446 4538 124.5
62 Grnd Rapids-Muskegon-Holland, MI 1,655,384 1,966,438 84%2817 3384 206.8
139 Santa Fe, NM 232,137 275,290 84%4258 4676 13.1
159 Tucson,AZ 1,004,865 1,193,489 84%2732 2622 60.0
166 Eugene-Springfeld,OR-CA 717,806 849,683 84%2454 2322 43.1
169 Richland-Kennewick-Pasco, WA 658,922 780,554 84%2757 2723 27.7
252
Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-103
2009 2009
Subscrber Estimated Penetrtion 2009 2008 EA
EA EAName EA HHI HHI Density
Population Rate
48 Chaleston, WV-KY-OH 976,545 1,180,068 83%3575 3442 85.4
61 Traverse City, MI 249,511 299,280 83%2951 4365 50.7
112 Bismack, ND-MT-SD 148,846 180,389 83%5047 *6.3
116 Sioux Falls, SD-IA-MN-NE 467,241 560,434 83%5160 8893 15.1
117 Sioux City, IA-NE-SD 207,352 249,101 83%4209 5777 39.5
146 Missoula, MT 367,196 439,819 83%6359 *10.8
147 Spokae, WA-ID 767,173 926,112 83%3553 3356 23.6
150 Boise City, ID-OR 594,114 718,161 83%3050 2912 13.7
I Bangor, ME 439,606 533,580 82%4015 4250 20.9
46 Hickory-Morganton, NC-TN 451,236 550,763 82%2795 4160 131.9
59 Green Bay, WI-MI 560,681 681,951 82%2476 2837 34.2
113 Fargo-Moorhead, ND-MN 318,935 387,284 82%4470 6536 16.4
152 Salt Lae City-Ogden, UT-ID 2,126,109 2,581,642 82%2333 2408 35.7
158 Phoenix-Mesa, AZ-NM 3,709,196 4,523,383 82%2792 2734 93.9
14 Salisbur, MD-DE-VA 334,084 414,004 81%5769 5507 111.2
65 Elkar-Goshen, IN-MI 779,351 958,250 81%3022 3158 185.7
104 Madison, WI-IA-IL 818,458 1,009,469 81%3316 3442 71.
108 Wausau, WI 395,982 488,995 81%1903 2477 34.1
109 Duluth-Superior, MN- WI 285,429 350,305 81%4179 *18.5
60 Appleton-Oshkosh-Neenah, WI 370,326 461,535 80%2545 2618 143.6
165 Redding, CA-OR 290,625 362,225 80%3036 2888 14.4
47 Lexington, KY-TN-VA-WV 1,538,900 1,943,408 79%3406 3869 80.4
54 Erie,PA 403,388 509,887 79%4196 4241 116.
58 Nortern Michigan, MI 206,918 265,214 78%4229 *28.5
145 Great Falls, MT 127,452 163,968 78%5104 8303 4.2
162 Fresno, CA 1,279,408 1,642,331 78%2926 2962 98.6
76 Greenville, MS 170,285 222,248 77%3941 3575 41.0
92 Fayetteville-Sprigdale-Rogers, AR-MO-OK 404,378 527,035 77%4654 4729 88.4
114 Aberdeen, SD 59,321 77,157 77%4914 *5.4
168 Pendleton,OR-WA 153,760 205,791 75%3068 2894 8.7
4 Burlington, VT-NY 450,191 619,614 73%5443 8263 57.6
105 La Crosse, WI-MN 185,357 253,647 73%3863 3823 53.7
164 Sacramento-Yolo, CA 1,927,296 2,698,718 71%2831 2621 188.1
74 Huntsvile, AL- TN (see note 2)*1,082,680 ***119.1
* = Data witheld to maintain firm confidentiality.
Source: Federal Communcations Commssion internal analysis based on year-end 2009 filings for Numberig
Resource Utilization in the United States, adjusted for porting. Density is persons per square mile. EA populations
are based on Census estimates as of July i, 2009.
Note i: As discussed in the Twelfh Report, the penetration rate in EA83 (New Orleans) appears to be an aberration.
That EA lost over 260,000 people between 2000 and 2006, while its subscriber count remained relatively
unchaged, creating a large increase in its penetration rate. One explantion for ths may be that, aftr the flooding,
people leaving the area took their cell phones (and cell phone numbers) with them. Thus, those numbers may stil
be associated with New Orleans rate centers, even though the people actully no longer live anywhere near there.
Note 2: We believe there was a discrepancy in the data for ths EA, mag the subscriber data and HHI for this
market uneliable.
253
Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-103
Table C-6: Mobile Wireless Resellers and Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MNOs)
Name Number of Subscribers
7-11 Speak Out Not Available
Advanced Communications Technology (ACT)Not Available
Airvoice Wireless Not Available
AirLink Mobile Not Available
Albany Mutul Telephone Not Available
Beaver Creek Cooperative Telephone Companv Not Available
Cbeyond/eyondMobile 50,203 total customers as of 12/31/09*
Bratz Mobile Not Available
Camella Communcations Not Available
Circle K Stores Inc Not Available
Consolidated Communcations Network, Inc.More than 20,000*
Consumer Cellular, Inc Not Available
Credo Mobile, Inc.Not Available
eCall Plus Not Available
Firefly Communcations, Inc.Not Available
Garden Valley Telephone Co.Not Available
Hawaiian Telcom Services Companv, Inc.Not Available
Havnevile Telephone Company, Inc.Not Available
Hood Canal Not Available
HTC Not Available
IdeaOne Not Available
Jitterbug Not Available
Kennebec Telephone Co.Not Available
KMTelecom;Not Available
Lakedale Telephone Company Not Available
Libert Wireless Not Available
Liiztvear Network Solutions, LLC More than 60,000*
Locus Telecommuncations More than 300,000
Movida Not Available
Nehalem TeleCommuncations, Inc.Not Available
New Ulm Telecom Not Available
One Communications Corp.More than 160,000 businesses*
Otter Tail Telcom Not Available
Page Plus Cellular Not Available
PemTel Wireless Not Available
Pend Oreile Telephone Company Not Available
PlatinumTel Wireless Not Available
Randolph Telephone Company Not Available
Red River Rural Telephone Association Not Available
Silverado Not Available
Sleepy Eye Telephone Company Not Available
STIMobile Not Available
Total Call Mobile Not Available
TouchTone Not Available
Tracfone 14.4 million as of Dec. 2009
TuyoMobile Not Available
Ventue Communications CooP.Not Available
Warick Not Available
Winn Telephone Company Not Available
Yadkin Valley Telephone Not Available
Zapp Unlimted LLC Not Available
262
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31,2010
Industr Analysis and Technology Division
Wire line Competition Bureau
October 2011
Ths report is available for reference in the FCC's Reference Information Center, Courard Level, 445 12th
Street, SW, Washigton, DC. Copies may be purchased by contacting Best Copy and Priting, Inc., 445
12th Street, SW, Room CY-B402, Washingtn, DC 20554, telephone (800) 378-3160, or via their website at
ww.bcpiweb.com. The report can also be downloaded from the Wire line Competition Bureau Statistical
Reports Internet site at www.fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
Dec 2010 Subscribers (In Thousands)
State Carriers %2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Resold 1 Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec
Alabam 11 13 %3,276 3,375 3,605 3,765 3,887 3,960 4,003 4,228 4,211 4,328
Alaska 12 5 397 412 432 460 480 383 544 586 590 608
American Samoa 2 ***********
Arzona 11 6 4,153 4,405 4,637 4,800 4,936 4,983 5,005 5,101 5,268 5,285Arkas8171,924 2,044 2,149 2,288 2,446 2,530 2,576 2,519 2,485 2,673
Californa 12 5 27,497 29,717 30,204 32,247 31,946 32,177 32,215 32,938 33,548 33,839
Colorado 13 9 3,428 3,608 3,756 3,968 4,066 4,311 4,357 4,503 4,647 4,687
Connecticut 8 7 2,582 2,705 2,787 2,884 2,959 3,030 3,047 3,123 3,192 3,230
Delaware 9 8 650 683 724 751 775 778 779 803 859 851
Distrct of Columbia 8 8 879 880 966 936 1,047 1,096 1,116 1,183 1,227 1,249
Florida 11 9 14,177 14,762 15,255 15,605 15,809 16,158 16,425 16,744 16,895 17,251
Georgia 13 11 6,865 7,282 7,598 7,941 8,142 8,322 8,562 8,863 8,869 9,063
Guam 2 ***********
Hawaii 7 4 1,010 1,035 1,067 1,096 1,115 1,184 1,196 1,216 1,248 1,252
Idao 15 6 901 973 1,019 1,086 1,125 1,167 1,180 1,221 1,269 1,277
Ilinois 15 9 9,148 9,589 9,949 10,330 10,634 10,919 11,070 11,523 11,604 12,057
Indiana 12 10 3,973 4,271 4,448 4,675 4,824 4,956 4,983 5,205 5,289 5,410
Iowa 72 8 1,867 2,010 2,058 2,166 2,245 2,319 2,336 2,432 2,466 2,535
Kasas 15 13 1,905 2,047 2,133 2,261 2,326 2,421 2,430 2,466 2,491 2,560
Kentucky 12 11 2,821 2,966 3,101 3,291 3,343 3,445 3,439 3,631 3,654 3,726
Louisiana 12 13 3,356 3,492 3,612 3,765 3,896 4,012 4,053 3,993 3,953 4,340
Maine 8 21 787 845 882 941 972 1,012 1,006 1,065 1,040 1,124
Marland 10 7 4,471 4,691 4,818 5,024 5,124 5,234 5,260 5,323 5,500 5,560
Massachusetts 8 9 4,917 5,129 5,289 5,470 5,624 5,749 6,027 6,171 6,367 6,316
Michiga 11 13 6,863 7,094 7,333 7,608 7,821 8,027 8,171 8,576 8,690 8,861
Minesota 11 9 3,543 3,702 3,834 4,048 4,164 4,345 4,254 4,439 4,611 4,704
Mississippi 10 11 1,923 2,030 2,070 2,196 2,252 2,312 2,361 2,345 2,322 2,440
Missour 13 10 4,068 4,322 4,480 4,674 4,835 4,940 4,985 5,129 5,141 5,309
Montaa 11 11 575 620 650 694 723 748 707 802 783 846
Nebraka 11 7 1,199 1,272 1,325 1,387 1,451 1,496 1,508 1,515 1,566 1,523
Nevada 12 9 1,883 1,990 2,093 2,167 2,249 2,268 2,325 2,393 2,417 2,453
New Hampshire 9 12 897 943 973 1,022 1,045 1,080 1,075 1,125 1,141 1,170
New Jersey 9 6 6,954 7,207 7,419 7,654 7,834 8,008 8,036 8,158 8,624 8,601
New Mexico 10 6 1,253 1,333 1,416 1,489 1,555 1,536 1,550 1,624 1,668 1,689
New York 11 9 14,574 15,262 15,901 16,395 17,260 16,702 18,193 18,882 19,303 19,504
Nort Carolina 13 11 6,209 6,627 6,962 7,306 7,428 8,024 8,193 8,108 8,259 8,526
Nort Dakota 11 7 457 473 492 513 541 581 562 618 590 623
Nortern Mariana lsI.2 ***********
Ohio 12 12 7,939 8,380 8,723 9,099 9,357 9,565 9,456 10,059 10,236 10,511
Oklahoma 17 7 2,317 2,480 2,572 2,723 2,808 2,889 2,988 3,077 3,109 3,188
Oregon 11 8 2,484 2,656 2,781 2,923 3,007 3,084 3,112 3,235 3,297 3,340
Pennsylvania 14 11 8,349 8,831 9,201 9,615 9,895 10,214 10,455 10,867 11,00 11,424
Puerto Rico 6 6 2,171 2,301 2,323 2,411 2,502 2,624 2,706 2,807 2,879 3,014
Rhode Island 7 7 765 798 829 848 874 888 880 893 906 920
South Carolina 15 11 3,001 3,209 3,340 3,500 3,573 3,323 3,374 3,896 3,848 3,960
South Dakota 9 9 514 548 570 596 611 631 613 681 681 728
Tenessee 13 11 4,731 5,127 4,971 5,246 5,791 5,518 5,676 5,914 6,041 6,193
Texas 25 7 16,928 17,822 18,792 19,677 20,390 21,008 21,403 21,849 22,201 23,037
Uta 13 5 1,649 1,775 1,874 1,971 2,046 2,095 2,109 2,166 2,220 2,251
Veront 6 16 334 358 375 402 421 435 398 463 431 485
Virgin Islands 3 ***********
Virginia 11 9 5,325 5,607 6,148 6,416 6,242 6,856 6,596 7,250 7,440 7,595
Washington 11 7 4,495 4,799 5,035 5,292 5,461 5,624 5,671 5,816 5,965 6,022
West Virginia 11 20 965 1,040 1,095 1,173 1,236 1,295 1,315 1,401 1,406 1,500
Wisconsin 13 11 3,517 3,510 3,641 3,842 3,966 4,265 4,317 4,546 4,599 4,704
Wyoming 12 9 359 387 410 441 457 484 429 517 501 526
Nationwide 181 9 %217418 229619 238,316 249332 255,729 261284 265332 274283 278918 285 125
. .
Table 17
Mobile Telephone Facilties-based Carriers and Mobile Telephony Subscribers
* - Data witheld to maintan firm confidentiality. Some data for June 2009, December 2009, and June 2010 have been revised.
i Percentage of mobile telephony subscriber purchasing their serice subscrptions from a mobile wireless reseller.
u.s. Federal Communcations Commission Local Telephone Competition: Statu as of December 31,2010 28
ll
i
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31, 2009
Industr Analysis and Technology Division
Wireline Competition Bureau
January 2011
Ths report is available for reference in the FCC's Reference Inormation Center, Courard Level, 445 12th
Street, SW, Washigton, DC. Copies may be purchased by contacting Best Copy and Pritig, Inc., 445
12th Street, SW, Room CY-B402, Washington, DC 20554, telephone (800) 378-3160, or via their website at
ww.bcpiweb.com. The report can also be downloaded from the Wireline Competition Bureau Statistical
Reports Internet site at www.fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
~.
-;
Dec 2009 Subscribers (In Thousands)
State Carriers %2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Resold 1 Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec
Alabama 13 9%2,874 3,105 3,276 3,375 3,605 3,765 3,887 3,960 4,003 4,228
Alaska 11 6 341 377 397 412 432 460 480 383 544 586
American Samoa ************
Ariona 11 5 3,543 3,844 4,153 4,405 4,637 4,800 4,936 4,983 5,005 5,101
Arkasas 8 10 1,681 1,781 1,924 2,044 2,149 2,288 2,446 2,530 2,576 2,519
Californa 15 7 24,572 25,537 27,497 29,717 30,204 32,247 31,946 32,177 32,215 32,938
Colorado 11 8 3,041 3,247 3,428 3,608 3,756 3,968 4,066 4,311 4,357 4,503
Connecticut 7 6 2,329 2,463 2,582 2,705 2,787 2,884 2,959 3,030 3,047 3,123
Delaware 8 6 585 618 650 683 724 751 775 778 779 803
Ioistrct of Columbia 8 7 753 825 879 880 966 936 1,047 1,096 1,116 1,183
Florida 11 10 12,620 12,568 14,177 14,762 15,255 15,605 15,809 16,158 16,425 16,744
Georgia 14 7 6,01 6,079 6,865 7,282 7,598 7,941 8,142 8,322 8,562 8,863Gua************
Hawaii 7 3 934 983 1,010 1,035 1,067 1,096 1,115 1,184 1,196 1,216
Idao 14 5 774 834 901 973 1,019 1,086 1,125 1,167 1,180 1,221
Ilinois 14 7 8,227 8,655 9,148 9,589 9,949 10,330 10,634 10,919 11,070 11,523
Indiana 12 8 3,443 3,716 3,973 4,271 4,448 4,675 4,824 4,956 4,983 5,205
Iowa 71 7 1,634 1,811 1,867 2,010 2,058 2,166 2,245 2,319 2,336 2,432
Kansas 15 11 1,660 1,794 1,905 2,047 2,133 2,261 2,326 2,421 2,430 2,466
Kentuckv 12 10 2,508 2,662 2,821 2,966 3,101 3,291 3,343 3,445 3,439 3,631
Louisiana 10 7 2,942 3,192 3,356 3,492 3,612 3,765 3,896 4,012 4,053 3,993
Maine 8 17 711 746 787 845 882 941 972 1,012 1,006 1,065
Marland 10 5 3,968 4,239 4,471 4,691 4,818 5,024 5,124 5,234 5,260 5,338
Massachusett 8 9 4,488 4,728 4,917 5,129 5,289 5,470 5,624 5,749 6,027 6,171
Michigan 12 12 6,230 6,604 6,863 7,094 7,333 7,608 7,821 8,027 8,171 8,576
Minesota 11 6 3,132 3,380 3,543 3,702 3,834 4,048 4,164 4,345 4,254 4,439
Mississippi 10 7 1,631 1,821 1,923 2,030 2,070 2,196 2,252 2,312 2,361 2,345
Missour 12 8 3,595 3,853 4,068 4,322 4,480 4,674 4,835 4,940 4,985 5,129
Montaa 9 8 466 525 575 620 650 694 723 748 707 802
lNebraska 11 5 1,071 1,160 1,199 1,272 1,325 1,387 1,451 1,496 1,508 1,515
lNevada 12 8 1,605 1,777 1,883 1,990 2,093 2,167 2,249 2,268 2,325 2,393
lNew Hampshire 8 10 791 849 897 943 973 1,022 1,045 1,080 1,075 1,125
lNew Jersey 8 5 6,234 6,617 6,954 7,207 7,419 7,654 7,834 8,008 8,036 8,158
New Mexico 10 5 1,025 1,170 1,253 1,333 1,416 1,489 1,555 1,536 1,550 1,624
New York 11 10 12,996 13,805 14,574 15,262 15,901 16,395 17,260 16,702 18,193 18,882
lNorth Carolina 12 9 5,503 5,792 6,209 6,627 6,962 7,306 7,428 8,024 8,193 8,108
Nort Dakota 9 6 368 432 457 473 492 513 541 581 562 618
Norter Marana lsI.************
Ohio 12 10 6,994 7,504 7,939 8,380 8,723 9,099 9,357 9,565 9,456 10,059
Oklahoma 17 6 2,002 2,189 2,317 2,480 2,572 2,723 2,808 2,889 2,988 3,077
Oregon 11 6 2,056 2,339 2,484 2,656 2,781 2,923 3,007 3,084 3,112 3,235
Pennylvana 14 10 7,397 7,942 8,349 8,831 9,201 9,615 9,895 10,214 10,455 10,867
Puerto Rico 6 2 2,003 2,111 2,171 2,301 2,323 2,411 2,502 2,624 2,706 2,807
Rhode Island 7 6 689 749 765 798 829 848 874 888 880 893
South Carolina 13 8 2,607 2,784 3,001 3,209 3,340 3,500 3,573 3,323 3,374 3,896
South Dakota 8 7 434 481 514 548 570 596 611 631 613 681
Tenessee 13 10 4,066 4,417 4,731 5,127 4,971 5,246 5,791 5,518 5,676 5,914
Texas 26 6 14,424 15,644 16,928 17,822 18,792 i9,677 20,390 21,008 21,403 21,849
luta 13 5 1,414 1,530 1,649 1,775 1,874 1,971 2,046 2,095 2,109 2,166
Vermont 7 15 295 314 334 358 375 402 421 435 398 463
Virgin Islands ************
Virgina 10 8 4,851 5,073 5,325 5,607 6,148 6,416 6,242 6,856 6,596 7,250
Washington 11 6 4,062 4,249 4,495 4,799 5,035 5,292 5,461 5,624 5,671 5,816
West Virginia 11 16 821 858 965 1,040 1,095 1,173 1,236 1,295 1,315 1,386
Wisconsin 13 9 3,200 3,366 3,517 3,510 3,641 3,842 3,966 4,265 4,317 4,546
Wyomig 13 9 315 342 359 387 410 441 457 484 429 517
Nationwide 180 8 %192,053 203667 217,418 229619 238,316 249332 255729 261,284 265332 274.283
. .
Table 17
Mobile Telephone Facilties-based Carriers and Mobile Telephony Subscribers
* = Data withheld to maintan firm confidentiality. Some data for December 2008 and June 2009 have ben revised.i Percentage of mobile telephony subscrber purchasing their serice subscrptions from a mobile wireless reseller.
U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31,2009 29
\
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31,2008
Industr Analysis and Technology Division
Wireline Competition Bureau
June 2010
This report is available for reference in the FCC's Reference Information Center, Courard Level, 445 12th
Street, SW, Washigton, DC. Copies may be purchased by contacting Best Copy and Prtig, Inc., 445
12th Street, SW, Room CY-B402, Washington, DC 20554, telephone (800) 378-3160, or via their website at
ww.bcpiweb.com. The report can also be downloaded from the Wirelie Competition Bureau Statistical
Report Internet site at ww.fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
~Table 17
Mobile Telephone Facilties-based Carriers and Mobile Telephony Subscribers
Dec 2008 Subscribers (In Thousands)
State Carriers %2005 2006 2007 2008
Resold 1 Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec
Alabam 15 7 %2,874 3,105 3,276 3,375 3,605 3,765 3,887 3,960
Alaska 12 13 341 377 397 412 432 460 480 383
America Samoa **********
Arzona 13 8 3,543 3,844 4,153 4,405 4,637 4,800 4,936 4,983
Arkaas 9 9 1,681 1,781 1,924 2,044 2,149 2,288 2,446 2,530
Californa 18 7 24,572 25,537 27,497 29,717 30,204 32,247 31,946 32,177
Colorado 12 11 3,041 3,247 3,428 3,608 3,756 3,968 4,066 4,311
Connecticut 8 7 2,329 2,463 2,582 2,705 2,787 2,884 2,959 3,030
Delaware 7 8 585 618 650 683 724 751 775 778
Distrct of Columbia 7 9 753 825 879 880 966 936 1,047 1,096
Florida 13 9 12,620 12,568 14,177 14,762 15,255 15,605 15,809 16,158
Georgia 14 5 6,001 6,079 6,865 7,282 7,598 7,941 8,142 8,322
Gua **********
Hawaii 7 4 934 983 1,010 1,035 1,067 1,096 1,115 1,184
Idao 18 7 774 834 901 973 1,019 1,086 1,125 1,167
Ilinois 15 7 8,227 8,655 9,148 9,589 9,949 10,330 10,634 10,919
Indiana 12 11 3,443 3,716 3,973 4,271 4,448 4,675 4,824 4,956
Iowa 67 8 1,634 1,811 1,867 2,010 2,058 2,166 2,245 2,319
Kaas 15 11 1,660 1,794 1,905 2,047 2,133 2,261 2,326 2,421
Kentucky 13 10 2,508 2,662 2,821 2,966 3,101 3,291 3,343 3,445
Louisiana 11 7 2,942 3,192 3,356 3,492 3,612 3,765 3,896 4,012
Maie 8 17 711 746 787 845 882 941 972 1,012
Marland 9 8 3,968 4,239 4,471 4,691 4,818 5,024 5,124 5,234
Massachusett 7 7 4,488 4,728 4,917 5,129 5,289 5,470 5,624 5,749
Michigan 13 8 6,230 6,604 6,863 7,094 7,333 7,608 7,821 8,027
Minesota 9 11 3,132 3,380 3,543 3,702 3,834 4,048 4,164 4,345
Mississippi 12 8 1,631 1,821 1,923 2,030 2,070 2,196 2,252 2,312
Missour 14 9 3,595 3,853 4,068 4,322 4,480 4,674 4,835 4,940
Montana 8 7 466 525 575 620 650 694 723 748
Nebrska 13 5 1,071 1,160 1,199 1,272 1,325 1,387 1,451 1,496
Nevad 13 7 1,605 1,777 1,883 1,990 2,093 2,167 2,249 2,268
New Hampshire 8 11 791 849 897 943 973 1,022 1,045 1,080
New Jersey 7 6 6,234 6,617 6,954 7,207 7,419 7,654 7,834 8,008
New Mexico 11 9 1,025 1,170 1,253 1,333 1,416 1,489 1,555 1,536
New York 11 10 12,996 13,805 14,574 15,262 15,901 16,395 17,260 16,702
North Carolina 14 8 5,503 5,792 6,209 6,627 6,962 7,306 7,428 8,024
Nort Dakota 9 6 368 432 457 473 492 513 541 581
Northern Marana lsI.**********
Ohio 14 9 6,994 7,504 7,939 8,380 8,723 9,099 9,357 9,565
Oklahoma 19 8 2,002 2,189 2,317 2,480 2,572 2,723 2,808 2,889
Oregon 10 9 2,056 2,339 2,484 2,656 2,781 2,923 3,007 3,084
Pennylvania 14 10 7,397 7,942 8,349 8,831 9,201 9,615 9,895 10,214
Puero Rico 7 2 2,003 2,111 2,171 2,301 2,323 2,411 2,502 2,624
Rhode Island 7 9 689 749 765 798 829 848 874 888
South Carlina 15 9 2,607 2,784 3,001 3,209 3,340 3,500 3,573 3,323
South Dakota 10 6 434 481 514 548 570 596 611 631
Tennessee 14 8 4,066 4,417 4,731 5,127 4,971 5,246 5,791 5,518
Texas 28 6 14,424 15,64 16,928 17,822 18,792 19,677 20,390 21,008
Uta 15 7 1,414 1,530 1,649 1,775 1,874 1,971 2,046 2,095
Vermont 7 16 295 314 334 358 375 402 421 435
Virgin Islands **********
Virginia 11 9 4,851 5,073 5,325 5,607 6,148 6,416 6,242 6,856
Washington 11 9 4,062 4,249 4,495 4,799 5,035 5,292 5,461 5,624
West Virginia 11 17 821 858 965 1,040 1,095 1,173 1,236 1,295
Wisconsin 12 10 3,200 3,366 3,517 3,510 3,641 3,842 3,966 4,265
Wyoming 13 9 315 342 359 387 410 441 457 484
Nationwide 175 8 %192053 203,667 217418 229619 238316 249332 255729 261284
* Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality. Some data for June 2008 have been revised.1 Percentage of mobile telephony subscribers purchasing their service subscriptions from a mobile wireless reseller.
U.S. Federa Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2008 28
')~
4
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31, 2007
Industry Analysis and Technology Division
Wire line Competition Bureau
September 2008
-
I~~" 8.Si~.
Ths report is available for reference in the FCC's Reference Informtion Center, Courard Level, 445 12th
Street, SW, Washigton, DC. Copies may be purchased by contacting Best Copy and Pritig, Inc., 445
12th Street, SW, Room CY -B402, Washigton, DC 20554, telephone (800) 378-3160, or via their website at
ww.bcpiweb.com. The report can also be downloaded from the Wireline Competition Bureau Statistical
Report Internet site at www.fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
!'
,
Dec 2007 Subscribers
State Percent 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Carriers i
Resold 2 Dec Dec Dec Dec Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec
Alabaa 12 6%1,979,075 1,987,254 2,242,108 2,580,810 3,104,664 3,275,933 3,374,701 3,605,490 3,765,194
Alaska 8 12 240,216 267,630 303,184 321,152 376,695 397,429 412,112 431,653 459,703
Amencan Samoa .*0 0 0 ..*.**
Amona 9 10 2,17,021 2,520,058 2,843,061 3,299,222 3,844,357 4,153,491 4,405,032 4,637,471 4,799,648Arkas67970,127 1,156,345 1,296,901 1,458,673 1,780,621 1,924,313 2,044,217 2,149,312 2,288,049
Califomia 12 5 15,052,203 17,575,105 20,360,454 23,457,761 25,537,232 27,4%,682 29,717,334 30,203,842 32,247,015
Colomdo 10 10 2,145,816 2,358,748 2,554,731 2,808,195 3,246,994 3,428,381 3,608,209 3,756,215 3,967,902
Connecticut 4 6 1,639,914 1,694,110 1,928,988 2,181,133 2,463,249 2,582,367 2,705,023 2,786,594 2,883,780
Delawae 4 8 412,611 438,196 543,526 646,064 618,165 650,328 682,636 724,342 750,793
Dist. of Columbia 4 7 404,489 472,832 513,102 657,774 825,195 878,846 880,077 965,816 935,808
Flonda 10 7 8,937,063 9,482,349 10,855,430 13,169,278 12,568,133 14,176,756 14,761,666 15,255,433 15,604,856
Georgia 10 6 4,149,717 4,497,576 4,940,091 5,730,223 6,079,022 6,865,466 7,281,724 7,598,387 7,940,514
Guam .*...*.***.
Hawaii 4 5 595,721 689,857 771,023 880,965 983,227 1,010,341 1,034,788 1,066,608 1,096,181
Idao 17 8 44,864 536,064 605,488 705,948 834,219 901,455 972,825 1,018,617 1,078,387
llinois 9 7 5,631,172 6,476,683 7,183,989 8,075,938 8,654,888 9,147,657 9,588,517 9,949,126 10,330,274
Indiana 10 II 1,921,356 2,390,567 2,642,810 3,158,002 3,715,504 3,972,560 4,271,412 4,448,186 4,675,372
Iowa 61 9 1,087,608 1,239,384 1,342,931 1,557,542 1,811,400 1,867,015 2,009,826 2,058,022 2,165,772
Kanas II 12 956,050 1,11,277 1,261,242 1,454,087 1,794,268 1,905,342 2,046,542 2,133,399 2,261,455
Kentucky 10 10 1,405,043 1,456,705 1,812,657 2,189,345 2,662,278 2,820,938 2,966,195 3,101,267 3,241,920
Louisian 8 7 1,920,740 2,190,613 2,470,146 2,834,716 3,191,583 3,355,503 3,492,358 3,611,553 3,764,592
Maine 6 16 427,313 466,896 568,159 662,623 746,141 786,811 844,537 882,039 940,914
Marland 5 6 2,614,216 2,913,943 3,319,605 3,900,172 4,239,259 4,470,542 4,691,026 4,818,275 5,023,573
Massachusetts 5 6 2,9%,816 3,375,726 3,741,975 4,042,592 4,727,742 4,916,500 5,128,860 5,289,432 5,469,503
Michigan II 8 4,238,399 4,674,980 5,114,259 5,766,616 6,603,942 6,862,582 7,093,721 7,333,242 7,608,420
Minnesota 8 II 2,153,857 2,415,033 2,677,472 2,973,126 3,379,832 3,542,865 3,701,515 3,833,826 4,048,413
Mississippi 9 8 1,048,061 1,112,765 1,324,160 1,517,702 1,821,087 1,923,365 2,029,916 2,069,897 2,196,392
Missoun 11 8 2,106,599 2,289,831 2,691,255 3,109,167 3,853,072 4,067,585 4,322,458 4,480,384 4,673,889
Montaa 7 7 279,349 315,512 373,947 *525,003 575,034 619,620 650,381 693,507
Nebraka 10 5 791,799 867,810 937,184 1,045,810 1,160,062 1,198,714 1,272,067 1,325,131 1,387,022
Nevada 8 8 842,155 984,486 1,216,838 1,463,370 1,777,387 1,883,273 1,990,215 2,092,872 2,166,680
New Hampshire 6 II 492,390 525,689 648,788 727,985 849,344 8%,661 943,330 973,105 1,022,406
New Jersey 4 5 4,283,643 4,587,640 5,799,417 7,388,722 6,616,560 6,953,528 7,207,018 7,419,289 7,654,173
New Mexico 9 10 660,849 780,855 859,408 987,813 1,170,186 1,252,770 1,333,210 1,415,726 1,489,120
New York 8 7 7,429,249 8,937,683 9,453,613 10,834,741 13,804,502 14,573,548 15,261,760 15,901,378 16,395,371
Nort Carlin 13 8 3,767,598 4,094,715 4,554,723 5,363,630 5,791,947 6,209,483 6,626,582 6,961,656 7,305,964
Nort Dakota 7 6 ..**431,675 456,806 472,799 492,101 513,238
Nortern Mañana lsI.*.....***.
Ohio 10 8 4,739,795 5,212,204 5,817,211 6,627,910 7,503,673 7,939,126 8,380,138 8,722,523 9,098,920
Oklahoma 14 9 1,288,357 1,440,970 1,614,191 1,760,122 2,188,590 2,317,197 2,479,877 2,571,878 2,706,620
Oregon II 9 1,399,279 1,682,343 1,778,936 2,029,224 2,339,414 2,484,176 2,655,905 2,781,196 2,931,472
Pennsylvania 9 9 4,849,085 5,258,844 6,073,573 7,037,2%7,942,340 8,348,713 8,831,238 9,200,793 9,615,349
Puerto Rico 5 7 1,128,736 1,516,808 1,631,266 2,076,698 2,110,798 2,170,540 2,301,275 2,322,737 2,410,503
Rhode Island 4 8 456,059 515,547 567,331 607,489 749,091 765,355 797,603 828,969 848,249
South Carlina 12 8 1,752,457 1,8%,369 2,149,480 2,369,252 2,783,511 3,000,861 3,208,504 3,339,733 3,500,297
South Dakota 9 6 278,646 325,114 365,211 428,513 481,404 513,850 547,812 569,513 596,562
Tennessee 10 8 2,510,978 2,674,566 2,974,512 3,531,286 4,417,140 4,730,704 5,126,510 4,970,756 5,245,513
Texas 27 6 9,156,187 10,133,280 11,327,700 13,092,007 15,644,066 16,927,880 17,822,230 18,792,225 19,646,758
Utah II 8 919,002 1,052,522 1,154,992 1,345,205 1,529,501 1,649,265 1,774,755 1,874,345 1,970,501
Vermont 4 16 *.*.314,325 333,551 358,052 374,984 402,173
Vir Islands ..*...*.*..
Virina 8 7 3,270,165 3,753,106 4,147,182 4,240,462 5,072,921 5,325,173 5,607,350 6,148,261 6,415,881
Washigton 11 10 2,706,030 2,869,784 3,377,193 3,770,602 4,249,357 4,494,964 4,799,143 5,034,885 5,291,131
West Virginia 8 15 498,811 576,503 675,257 761,658 858,310 %4,649 1,040,224 1,095,038 1,172,699
Wisconsin 10 9 2,229,389 2,396,562 2,723,985 2,997,029 3,366,332 3,517,283 3,509,528 3,641,432 3,841,745
Wyoming 10 9 194,665 191,939 295,706 302,203 342,008 358,668 387,164 410,464 441,161
Nationwide 177 7%123,990,857 138,878,293 157,042,082 181,105,135 203,667,474 217,418,404 229,619,397 238,315,850 249,235,715
Table 14
Mobile Wireless Telephone Subscribers i
· Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality.
i For data though December 2004, only facilties-based wieless carers with at least 10,000 mobile telephony subscnbers per state were required to report data, and they were
instrctd to use biling addresses to detene subscnber counts by state. Stag with the June 2005 data, all failties-based wireless carer are required to reprt and to use the
area codes of telephone numbers provided to subscnbers to deterine subscnber counts by stte.
2 Percentage of mobile wireless subscnbers receiving their service frm a mobile wireless reseUer.
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31,2006
Industr Analysis and Technology Division
Wire line Competition Bureau
December 2007
Ths report is available for reference in the FCC's Reference Information Center, Courard Level, 445 12th
Street, SW, Washigton, DC. Copies may be purchased by contating Best Copy and Prting, Inc., 445
12th Street, SW, Room CY-B402, Washigton, DC 20554, telephone (800) 378-3160, or via their website at
ww.bcpiweb.com. The report can also be downoaded from the Wireline Competition Bureau Statistical
Reports Internet site at www.fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
Dec 2006 Subscribers
State Percent 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006Carriers!Resld i Dec Dec Dec Dec Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec
Alaba 12 5%1,386,294 1,979,075 1,987,254 2,242,108 2,580,810 2,874,367 3,104,664 3,275,933 3,374,701
Alaska 9 1 .240,216 267,630 303,184 321,152 340,507 376,695 397,429 412,112
American Samoa ..0 0 0 0 *.**.
Arona 10 9 1,855,115 2,171,021 2,520,058 2,843,061 3,299,222 3,542,844 3,844,357 4,153,491 4,405,032
Arkasas 6 7 743,928 970,127 1,156,345 1,296,901 1,458,673 1,680,975 1,780,621 1,924,313 2,04,217
Californa 12 5 12,710,520 15,052,203 17,575,105 20,360,454 23,457,761 24,572,034 25,537,232 27,496,682 29,717,334
Colomdo 10 10 1,856,075 2,145,816 2,358,748 2,554,731 2,808,195 3,040,589 3,246,994 3,428,381 3,608,209
Connecticut 5 6 1,277,123 1,639,914 1,694,110 1,928,988 2,181,133 2,328,966 2,463,249 2,582,367 2,705,023
Delawae 4 8 371,014 412,611 438,196 543,526 646,064 585,113 618,165 650,328 682,636
Dist. ofColwnbia 4 6 354,735 404,489 472,832 513,102 657,774 752,548 825,195 878,846 880,077
Florida 9 6 6,369,985 8,937,063 9,482,349 10,855,430 13,169,278 12,619,929 12,568,133 14,176,756 14,761,666
Georgia 10 6 2,754,784 4,149,717 4,497,576 4,940,091 5,730,223 6,001,411 6,079,022 6,865,466 7,281,724
Guam **0 *...*.**
Hawaii 4 4 524,291 595,721 689,857 771,023 880,965 934,405 983,227 1,010,341 1,034,788
Idao 15 7 344,564 444,864 536,064 605,488 705,948 773,893 834,219 901,455 972,825
Ilinois 9 7 5,143,767 5,631,172 6,476,683 7,183,989 8,075,938 8,227,185 8,654,888 9,147,657 9,588,517
Indian 8 11 1,715,074 1,921,356 2,390,567 2,642,810 3,158,002 3,442,612 3,715,504 3,972,560 4,271,412
Iowa 51 8 832,106 1,087,608 1,239,384 1,342,931 1,557,542 1,633,697 1,811,400 1,867,015 2,009,826
Kasa 12 11 801,293 956,050 1,117,277 1,261,242 1,454,087 1,659,662 1,794,268 1,905,342 2,046,542
Kentucky 12 9 1,026,334 1,405,043 1,456,705 1,812,657 2,189,345 2,507,816 2,662,278 2,820,938 2,966,195
Louisiana 9 8 1,306,457 1,920,740 2,190,613 2,470,146 2,834,716 2,942,463 3,191,583 3,355,503 3,492,358
Maine 6 14 359,786 427,313 466,896 568,159 662,623 710,985 746,141 786,811 844,537
Maland 6 6 2,298,651 2,614,216 2,913,943 3,319,605 3,900,172 3,967,969 4,239,259 4,470,542 4,691,026
Massachusetts 5 6 2,649,130 2,996,816 3,375,726 3,741,975 4,042,592 4,487,601 4,727,742 4,916,500 5,128,860
Michigan 11 8 3,551,719 4,238,399 4,674,980 5,114,259 5,766,616 6,229,949 6,603,942 6,862,582 7,093,721
Minesota 8 10 1,851,430 2,153,857 2,415,033 2,677,472 2,973,126 3,132,453 3,379,832 3,542,865 3,701,515
Mississippi 9 9 786,577 1,048,061 1,112,765 1,324,160 1,517,702 1,631,331 1,821,087 1,923,365 2,029,916
Missour 12 9 1,767,411 2,106,599 2,289,831 2,691,255 3,109,167 3,595,157 3,853,072 4,067,585 4,322,458
Monta 7 5 *279,349 315,512 373,947 .466,022 525,003 575,034 619,620
Nebraka 9 5 659,380 791,799 867,810 937,184 1,045,810 1,070,550 1,160,062 1,198,714 1,272,067
Nevada 8 8 684,752 842,155 984,486 1,216,838 1,463,370 1,604,713 1,777,387 1,883,273 1,990,215
New Hampshir 6 10 387,264 492,390 525,689 648,788 727,985 790,639 849,344 896,661 943,330
New Jersey 4 5 3,575,130 4,283,643 4,587,640 5,799,417 7,388,722 6,233,984 6,616,560 6,953,528 7,207,018
New Mexico 10 9 443,343 660,849 780,855 859,408 987,813 1,024,852 1,170,186 1,252,770 1,333,210
New York 10 7 5,918,136 7,429,249 8,937,683 9,453,613 10,834,741 12,995,534 13,804,502 14,573,548 15,261,760
Nort Carlina 14 7 3,105,811 3,767,598 4,094,715 4,554,723 5,363,630 5,503,202 5,791,947 6,209,483 6,626,582
Nort Dakota 6 4 *..**367,850 431,675 456,806 472,799
Nortern Maran Isl...**..****
Ohio 12 9 4,150,498 4,739,795 5,212,204 5,817,211 6,627,910 6,993,803 7,503,673 7,939,126 8,380,138
Oklahoma 15 8 1,124,214 1,288,357 1,440,970 1,614,191 1,760,122 2,001,835 2,188,590 2,317,197 2,479,877
Oregon 11 9 1,201,207 1,399,279 1,682,343 1,778,936 2,029,224 2,055,890 2,339,414 2,484,176 2,655,905
Pensylvana 10 9 4,129,186 4,849,085 5,258,844 6,073,573 7,037,296 7,397,397 7,942,340 8,348,713 8,831,238
Puerto Rico 6 1 757,613 1,128,736 1,516,808 1,631,266 2,076,698 2,002,851 2,110,798 2,170,540 2,301,275
Rhode Island 4 9 355,889 456,059 515,547 567,331 607,489 689,209 749,091 765,355 797,603
South Carolina 12 8 1,392,586 1,752,457 1,896,369 2,149,480 2,369,252 2,606,827 2,783,511 3,000,861 3,208,504
South Dakota 7 4 *278,646 325,114 365,211 428,513 433,927 481,404 513,850 547,812
Tennessee 12 8 1,985,851 2,510,978 2,674,566 2,974,512 3,531,286 4,065,964 4,417,140 4,730,704 5,126,510
Texas 30 6 7,548,537 9,156,187 10,13,280 11,327,700 13,092,007 14,424,253 15,644,066 16,927,880 17,822,230
Utah 10 7 750,244 919,002 1,052,522 1,154,992 1,345,205 1,413,756 1,529,501 1,649,265 1,774,755
Vermont 4 15 ...*.294,984 314,325 333,551 358,052
Virgin Islands ..0 ..*.***.
Virginia 8 7 2,708,342 3,270,165 3,753,106 4,147,182 4,240,462 4,851,206 5,072,921 5,325,173 5,607,350
Washington 10 9 2,286,082 2,706,030 2,869,784 3,377,193 3,770,602 4,062,372 4,249,357 4,494,964 4,799,143
West Virginia 9 14 392,384 498,811 576,503 675,257 761,658 820,838 858,310 964,649 1,040,224
Wisconsin 11 8 1,698,520 2,229,389 2,396,562 2,723,985 2,997,029 3,200,301 3,366,332 3,517,283 3,509,528
Wyoming 8 7 *194,665 191,939 295,706 302,203 315,347 342,008 358,668 387,164
Nationwide 166 7%101,043,219 123,990,857 138,878,293 157,042,082 181,105,135 192,053,067 203,667,474 217,418,404 229,619,397
Table 14
Mobile Wireless Telephone Subscribers i
· Data witheld to maintai firm confidentiality. Some data bave been revised.
i For data though December 2004, only facilties-baed wireless carer with at least 10,000 mobile telephony subscnòe per state were require to reprt data, and
they were instctd to use billig adesses to determine subscriber counts by state. Staing with the June 2005 data, all facilties-based wieless carer ar required
to report, and to use the area codes of telephone nwnbers provided to subscribers to deermine subscriber counts by state.
2 Percentage of mobile wireless subscriber receiving their service from a mobile wireless reseller.
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31,2005
Industr Analysis and Technology Division
Wire line Competition Bureau
July 2006
This report is available for reference in the FCC's Reference Inormtion Center, Courard Level, 445 12th
Street, SW, Washigton, DC. Copies may be purchased by contactig Best Copy and Priting, Inc., 445
12th Street, SW, Room CY-B402, Washigton, DC 20554, telephone (800) 378-3160, or via their website at
ww.bcpiweb.com. The report can also be downoaded from the Wire1ine Competition Bureau Statistical
Reports Internet site at www.fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
Dec 2005 Subscribers
State Perceut 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
Carrers 1 Resld 2 Dec Dec Dec Dec Dec Dec Juu Dec
Alabama 13 6%1,080,410 1,386,294 1,979,075 1,987,254 2,242,108 2,580,810 2,843,385 3,071,359
Alaska 10 2 165,221 .240,216 267,630 303,184 321,152 340,507 376,695
Amercan Samoa .*0 0 0 0 0 ***
Arzona 10 9 1,125,321 1,855,115 2,17,021 2,520,058 2,843,061 3,299,222 3,547,280 3,849,152
Arkansas 6 5 719,919 743,928 970,127 1,156,345 1,296,901 1,458,673 1,681,404 1,781,266
Californa 11 4 8,544,941 12,710,520 15,052,203 17,575,105 20,360,454 23,457,761 24,598,429 25,564,483
Colorado 8 10 1,552,718 1,856,075 2,145,816 2,358,748 2,554,731 2,808,195 3,053,186 3,260,286
Connectcut 5 5 1,077,089 1,277,123 1,639,914 1,694,110 1,928,988 2,181,133 2,332,045 2,466,372
Delawar 4 6 270,848 371,014 412,611 438,196 543,526 646,064 710,853 751,02
Dist. of Columbia 4 5 346,681 354,735 404,489 472,832 513,102 657,774 746,529 819,061
Florida 7 6 5,158,079 6,369,985 8,937,063 9,482,349 10,855,430 13,169,278 12,577,898 12,521,686
Georgia 9 6 2,538,983 2,754,784 4,149,717 4,497,576 4,940,091 5,730,223 6,023,302 6,103,234
Guam .*.0 *****61,670
Hawaii 4 3 288,425 524,291 595,721 689,857 771,023 880,965 935,189 983,998
Idaho 14 6 271,436 344,564 44,864 536,064 605,488 705,948 777,445 838,095
Illinois 9 6 3,922,482 5,143,767 5,631,172 6,476,683 7,183,989 8,075,938 8,575,211 9,026,588
Indiana 7 10 1,318,975 1,715,074 1,921,356 2,390,567 2,642,810 3,158,002 3,276,910 3,540,375
Iowa 39 7 774,773 832,106 1,087,608 1,239,384 1,342,931 1,557,542 1,593,673 1,767,830
Kansas 11 9 669,472 801,293 956,050 1,117,277 1,261,242 1,454,087 1,538,945 1,666,340
Kentucky 10 10 911,700 1,026,334 1,405,043 1,456,705 1,812,657 2,189,345 2,495,494 2,657,782
Louisiana 8 6 1,227,106 1,306,457 1,920,740 2,190,613 2,470,146 2,834,716 2,997,513 3,258,336
Maine 6 12 187,003 359,786 427,313 466,896 568,159 662,623 785,814 823,242
Marland 6 5 1,634,625 2,298,651 2,614,216 2,913,943 3,319,605 3,900,172 4,177,782 4,470,611
Massachuset 5 6 1,892,014 2,649,130 2,996,816 3,375,726 3,741,975 4,042,592 4,316,120 4,544,572
Michigan 10 8 3,512,813 3,551,719 4,238,399 4,674,980 5,114,259 5,766,616 6,238,846 6,613,341
Minnesota 9 10 1,550,411 1,851,430 2,153,857 2,415,033 2,677,472 2,973,126 3,124,214 3,370,196
Mississippi 9 7 673,355 786,577 1,048,061 1,112,765 1,324,160 1,517,702 1,627,762 1,817,099
Missour 12 8 1,855,452 1,767,411 2,106,599 2,289,831 2,691,255 3,109,167 3,482,839 3,732,549
Montaa 7 4 .*279,349 315,512 373,947 *467,795 526,954
Nebraka 10 4 576,296 659,380 791,799 867,810 937,184 1,045,810 1,078,955 1,169,068
Nevad 8 7 750,335 684,752 842,155 984,486 1,216,838 1,463,370 1,605,708 1,778,411
New Hampshire 6 8 280,508 387,264 492,390 525,689 648,788 727,985 916,833 989,443
New Jery 4 4 2,289,181 3,575,130 4,283,643 4,587,640 5,799,417 7,388,722 7,269,330 7,723,622
New Mexico 9 7 363,827 443,343 660,849 780,855 859,408 987,813 1,025,143 1,170,436
New York 11 6 4,833,816 5,918,136 7,429,249 8,937,683 9,453,613 10,834,741 11,901,311 12,634,420
Nort Carolina 14 6 2,536,068 3,105,811 3,767,598 4,094,715 4,554,723 5,363,630 5,496,422 5,784,334
Nort Dakota 6 3 *..*..388,609 454,456
Nortern Marana Is!.***.**.**
Ohio 11 8 3,237,786 4,150,498 4,739,795 5,212,204 5,817,211 6,627,910 7,056,675 7,559,975
Oklahoma 14 7 826,637 1,124,214 1,288,357 1,440,970 1,614,191 1,760,122 2,000,787 2,187,424
Orgon 9 8 914,848 1,201,207 1,399,279 1,682,343 1,778,936 2,029,224 2,128,710 2,417,992
Pennsylvania 11 8 2,767,474 4,129,186 4,849,085 5,258,844 6,073,573 7,037,296 7,340,862 7,881,534
Puerto Rico 6 1 *757,613 1,128,736 1,516,808 1,631,266 2,076,698 2,002,851 2,110,798
Rhode Island 4 7 279,304 355,889 456,059 515,547 567,331 607,489 653,900 709,525
South Carolina 12 5 1,137,232 1,392,586 1,752,457 1,896,369 2,149,480 2,369,252 2,593,000 2,768,481
South Dakota 6 2 **278,646 325,114 365,211 428,513 435,063 482,623
Tennessee 12 7 1,529,054 1,985,851 2,510,978 2,674,566 2,974,512 3,531,286 3,791,154 4,114,401
Texas 28 6 5,792,453 7,548,537 9,156,187 10,133,280 11,327,700 13,092,007 14,402,814 15,620,248
Uta 7 6 643,824 750,244 919,002 1,052,522 1,154,992 1,345,205 1,415,896 1,531,763
Vermont 4 14 .*..**295,971 315,382
Virn Islands *..0 ..**.*
Virgiia 8 6 2,262,567 2,708,342 3,270,165 3,753,106 4,147,182 4,240,462 4,900,018 5,126,651
Washington 9 9 1,873,475 2,286,082 2,706,030 2,869,784 3,377,193 3,770,602 3,995,325 4,177,196
West Virginia 9 13 241,265 392,384 498,811 576,503 675,257 761,658 821,103 858,599
Wisconsin 12 6 1,525,818 1,698,520 2,229,389 2,396,562 2,723,985 2,997,029 3,191,190 3,355,951
Wyoming 8 5 127,634 *194,665 191,939 295,706 302,203 330,567 358,593
Nationwide 155 6%79,696,083 101,043,219 123,990,857 138,878,293 157,042,082 181,105,135 192,053,067 203,669,128
Table 14
Mobile Wireless Telephone Subscribers 1
* Data witheld to mainta firm confdentiality. Some data have been revised.
i For data though December 2004, only facilties-based wireless carers with at least 10,000 mobile telephony subscriber per state were required to report data and they
were instrcted to use biling addresses to deterine subscriber counts by state. Starng with the June 2005 data, all facilties-based wireless caer ar required to
report, and to use the ara codes of telephone number provided to subscrber to determne subscriber counts by state.
2 Percentae of mobile wireless subscriber receivig their servce from a mobile wirless reseller.
. "'"
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31,2004
Industr Analysis and Technology Division
Wireline Competition Bureau
July 2005
Ths report is available for reference in the FCC's Reference Informtion Center, Courard Level, 445 12th
Street, SW, Washigton, DC. Copies may be purchased by contactig Best Copy and Priting, Inc., 445
12th Street, SW, Room CY -B402, Washington, DC 20554, telephone (800) 378-3160, or via their website at
ww.bcpiweb.com. The report can also be downloaded from the FCC-State Link Internet site at
ww.fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
December 2004 Subscnöers Percent
State Carrers 1 Percnt 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Change
Resld i Dec03-
Dec Jun Dec Jun De Jun Dec Jun De Jun Dec Dec 04
Alabam 10 9%1,080,410 1,253,084 1,386,294 1,930,631 1,979,075 2,027,845 1,987,254 2,100,557 2,242,108 2,301,847 2,580,810 15%
Alaska 4 6 165,221 169,892 .218,424 240,216 242,13 267,630 .303,184 307,323 321,152 6
Amerca Samoa ..0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ..NA
Arzon 12 11 1,125,321 1,624,668 1,855,115 2,018,410 2,171,021 2,412,998 2,520,058 2,643,952 2,843,061 3,079,657 3,299,222 16
Arkasas 6 5 719,919 715,467 743,928 891,275 970,127 1,130,302 1,156,345 1,351,291 1,296,901 1,376,564 1,458,673 12
Californa 13 8 8,544,941 12,283,369 12,710,520 14,184,625 15,052,203 16,007,376 17,575,105 18,892,619 20,360,454 21,575,797 23,457,761 15
Colorado 9 7 1,552,718 1,654,989 1,856,075 1,983,405 2,145,816 2,247,166 2,358,748 2,426,929 2,554,731 2,727,910 2,808,195 10
Connecticut 5 4 1,077,089 1,136,618 1,277,123 1,418,367 1,639,914 1,577,873 1,694,110 1,791,94 1,928,988 2,064,204 2,181,133 13
Delawar 5 5 270,848 275,219 371,014 389,284 412,611 433,059 438,196 503,353 543,526 593,452 646,06 19
Dist. of Columbia 5 9 346,681 333,815 354,735 382,457 40,489 415,399 472,832 520,182 513,102 555,958 657,774 28
Florda 8 15 5,158,079 4,983,478 6,369,985 7,536,670 8,937,063 8,607,715 9,482,349 10,252,348 10,855,430 11,916,615 13,169,278 21
Geoia 12 8 2,538,983 2,687,238 2,754,784 4,076,119 4,149,717 4,300,831 4,497,576 4,709,288 4,940,091 5,332,517 5,730,223 16
Guam ....0 ........NA
Hawaii 5 1 288,425 454,364 524,291 543,283 595,721 640,247 689,857 732,262 771,023 819,262 880,%5 14
Idao 9 14 271,436 296,066 344,564 398,781 44,864 500,693 536,06 572,406 605,488 653,779 705,948 17
Ilinois 9 7 3,922,482 4,309,660 5,143,767 5,621,04 5,631,172 5,409,370 6,476,683 6,834,217 7,183,989 7,529,966 8,075,938 12
Indian 7 13 1,318,975 1,717,378 1,715,074 1,781,247 1,921,356 2,032,290 2,390,567 2,456,509 2,642,810 2,84,568 3,158,002 19
Iowa 10 10 774,773 975,629 832,106 861,382 1,087,608 1,157,580 1,239,384 1,250,305 1,342,931 1,445,711 1,557,542 16
Kanas 11 6 669,472 724,024 801,293 901,225 956,050 1,061,171 1,117,277 1,195,230 1,261,242 1,345,160 1,454,087 15
Kentuckv 10 10 911,700 999,544 1,026,334 1,176,756 1,405,043 1,505,982 1,456,705 1,595,290 1,812,657 2,000,459 2,189,345 21
Louisiana 8 14 1,227,106 1,294,693 1,306,457 1,677,292 1,920,740 2,187,811 2,190,613 2,365,224 2,470,146 2,547,153 2,834,716 15
Maie 6 2 187,003 283,640 359,786 399,616 427,313 457,835 466,896 524,246 568,159 610,533 662,623 17
Marland 7 7 1,634,625 2,013,058 2,298,651 2,44,818 2,614,216 2,684,441 2,913,943 3,108,086 3,319,605 3,575,747 3,900,172 17
Massachusetts 5 5 1,892,014 2,228,169 2,649,130 2,753,685 2,9%,816 3,289,934 3,375,726 3,506,039 3,741,975 3,919,139 4,042,592 8
Michigan 11 8 3,512,813 3,423,535 3,551,719 4,071,091 4,238,399 4,758,538 4,674,980 4,889,269 5,114,259 5,430,637 5,766,616 13
Minesota 10 13 1,550,411 1,595,560 1,851,430 2,014,317 2,153,857 2,254,895 2,415,033 2,564,783 2,677,472 2,823,079 2,973,126 11
Mississipp 8 13 673,355 509,038 786,577 993,781 1,048,061 1,106,700 1,112,765 1,232,750 1,324,160 1,411,277 1,517,702 15
Missouri 10 8 1,855,452 1,848,775 1,767,411 1,937,684 2,106,599 2,246,430 2,289,831 2,515,325 2,691,255 2,859,953 3,109,167 16
Montana ......279,349 291,429 315,512 343,160 373,947 ..NA
Nebraska 8 5 576,296 600,885 659,380 712,685 791,799 838,568 867,810 900,744 937,184 984,355 1,045,810 12
Nevada 7 10 750,335 825,163 684,752 766,581 842,155 895,586 984,486 1,077,380 1,216,838 1,319,684 1,463,370 20
New Hampshire 7 11 280,508 309,263 387,264 445,181 492,390 529,795 525,689 598,504 648,788 686,746 727,985 12
New Jer 5 4 2,289,181 2,750,024 3,575,130 3,896,778 4,283,643 4,531,457 4,587,640 5,392,240 5,799,417 6,326,459 7,388,722 27
New Mexico 9 17 363,827 395,111 443,343 619,582 660,849 735,107 780,855 828,869 859,408 939,091 987,813 15
New York 9 7 4,833,816 5,016,524 5,918,136 6,749,096 7,429,249 7,915,526 8,937,683 8,829,070 9,453,613 9,939,759 10,834,741 15
Nor Carlin 11 9 2,536,068 2,730,178 3,105,811 3,377,331 3,767,598 4,610,120 4,094,715 4,305,521 4,554,723 4,875,916 5,363,630 18
Nor Dakota 4 15 .....245,578 ....373,445 NA
Ohio 12 7 3,237,786 3,278,%0 4,150,498 4,255,934 4,739,795 4,887,376 5,212,204 5,659,459 5,817,211 6,188,081 6,627,910 14
Oklaoma 12 6 826,37 979,513 1,124,214 1,200,234 1,288,357 1,366,475 1,440,970 1,574,588 1,614,191 1,724,505 1,760,122 9
0r2on 9 5 914,848 1,082,425 1,201,207 1,268,909 1,399,279 1,473,883 1,682,343 1,682,036 1,778,936 1,894,285 2,029,224 14
Pensylvaa 9 8 2,767,474 3,850,372 4,129,186 4,378,216 4,849,085 4,987,067 5,258,84 5,681,653 6,073,573 6,420,037 7,037,296 16
Puero Rico 6 7 .1,090,005 757,613 1,374,747 1,128,736 1,136,619 1,516,808 1,401,599 1,631,266 1,698,702 2,076,698 27
Rhode Island 5 5 279,304 313,550 355,889 401,805 456,059 463,636 515,547 527,366 567,331 615,398 607,489 7
South Carlina 11 15 1,137,232 1,236,338 1,392,586 1,502,345 1,752,457 1,830,516 1,896,369 2,041,541 2,149,480 2,337,367 2,369,252 10
South Dakota 5 11 ....278,646 292,210 325,114 344,825 365,211 382,90 428,513 17
Tenessee 12 9 1,529,054 1,876,44 1,985,851 2,251,208 2,510,978 2,660,068 2,674,566 2,800,735 2,974,512 3,171,487 3,531,286 19
Texas 18 9 5,792,453 6,705,423 7,548,537 8,294,338 9,156,187 9,650,715 10,133,280 10,776,234 11,327,700 12,091,134 13,092,007 16
Uta 8 9 643,824 692,00 750,244 833,492 919,00 970,854 1,052,522 1,094,563 1,154,992 1,229,029 1,345,205 16
Veront .............NA
Vir2in Islands ...0 0 ........NA
Virgin 9 4 2,262,567 2,447,687 2,708,342 3,059,420 3,270,165 3,429,450 3,753,106 3,879,582 4,147,182 4,392,319 4,240,462 2
Washingon 8 11 1,873,475 2,144,767 2,286,082 2,493,214 2,706,030 2,849,043 2,869,784 3,102,750 3,377,193 3,567,896 3,770,602 12
West Virginia 9 10 241,265 347,916 392,384 452,036 498,811 549,722 576,503 579,983 675,257 713,657 761,658 13
Wisconsin 11 8 1,525,818 1,342,908 1,698,520 2,008,679 2,229,389 2,523,956 2,396,562 2,533,215 2,723,985 2,831,645 2,997,029 10
Wyoming 4 5 127,634 ..173,939 194,665 168,232 191,939 276,344 295,706 277,658 302,203 2
Nationwide 76 9%79,696,083 90,643,058 101,043,219 114,028,928 123,990,857 130,751,459 138,878,293 147,623,734 157,042,082 167,313,001 181,105,135 15%
Table 13
Mobile Wireless Telephone Subscribers 1
NA - Not Applicable.
. Data witheld to matan fir confdentiait.i Caer wilh under 10,00 subscrber in a stae wer not requied to repor.
2 Percentage of mobile wirless subscrbe reeiving their serce frm a mobile wirless reseller.
l
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31,2003
Industr Analysis and Technology Division
Wire line Competition Bureau
June 2004
Ths report is available for reference in the FCC's Reference Inormtion Center, Courard Level, 445 12th
Street, SW, Washigton, DC. Copies may be purchased by contactig Best Copy and Prtig, Inc., 445
12th Street, SW, Room CY-B402, Washington, DC 20554, telephone (800) 378-3160 or via their website at
ww.bçpiweb.com. The report can also be downloaded from the FCC-State Link Interet site at
www.fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
Table 13
Mobile Wireless Telephone Subscribers i
Decmber 2003 Subscriers Percent
State Carers'199 2000 2001 2002 2003 ChangePercentDee02-
Resld 2 Dee Jun De Jun Dee Jun Dee Jun De De 03 Alaba 10 7%1,080,410 1,253,084 1,386,294 1,930,631 1,979,075 2,027,845 1,987,254 2,100,557 2,242,108 13 %
Alaska 4 4 165,221 169,892 *218,424 240,216 242,133 267,630 .303,184 13Arna1451,125,321 1,624,668 1,855,115 2,018,410 2,171,021 2,412,998 2,520,058 2,643,952 2,843,061 13Ars74719,919 715,467 743,928 891,275 970,127 1,130,302 1,156,345 1,351,291 1,296,901 12
Califor 15 6 8,544,941 12,283,369 12710,520 14,184,625 15,052,203 16,007,376 17,575105 18,892,619 20,360,454 16
Colorado 10 3 1,552,718 1,654,989 1,856,075 1,983,405 2,145,816 2,247,166 2,358,748 2,426,929 2,554,731 8
Conneccut 6 4 1,077,089 1,136,618 1,277,123 1,418,367 1,639,914 1,577,873 1,694,110 1,791,944 1,928,988 14
Delawa 6 4 270,848 275,219 371,014 389,284 412,611 433,059 438,196 503,353 543,526 24
Dist.ofColumbia 6 9 346,681 333,815 354,735 382,457 40,489 415,399 472,832 520,182 513,102 9
Florda 11 13 5,158079 4,983,478 6369,985 7,536,670 8,937,063 8,607,715 9,482,349 10,252,348 10,855,430 14
Georgia 13 6 2,538,983 2,687,238 2,754,784 4,076,119 4,149,717 4,300,831 4,497,576 4,709,288 4,94,091 10
Gua *.*.0 *****,NA
Hawa 5 1 288,425 454,364 524,291 543,283 595,721 640,247 689,857 732,262 771,023 12
Idao 10 10 271,436 296,066 344,564 398,781 44,864 500,693 536,064 572,406 605,488 13
minois 10 7 3,922,482 4,309,660 5,143,767 5,621,04 5,631,172 5,409,370 6,476,683 6,834,217 7,183,989 11
Indian 8 10 1,318,975 1,717,378 1,715,074 1,781,247 1,921,356 2,032,290 2,390,567 2,456,509 2,642,810 11
Iowa 12 9 774,773 975,629 832,106 861,382 1,087,608 1,157,580 1,239,384 1,250,305 1,342,931 8
Kasa 12 4 669,472 724,024 801,293 901,225 956,050 1,061,17 1,117,277 1,195,230 1,261,242 13
Kentuky 11 8 911,700 999,544 1,026,334 1,176,756 1,405,043 1,505,982 1,456,705 1,595,290 1,812,657 24
Louisiana 10 11 1,227,106 1,294,693 1,306,457 1,677,292 1,920,740 2,187,811 2,190,613 2,365,224 2,470,146 13
Maine 5 2 187,003 283,64 359,786 399,616 427,313 457,835 466,896 524,246 568,159 22
Marland 8 4 1,634,625 2,013,058 2,298,651 2,446,818 2,614,216 2,684,441 2,913,943 3,108,086 3,319,605 14
Massachuse 6 3 1,892,014 2,228,169 2,649,130 2,753,685 2,996,816 3,289,934 3,375,726 3,506,039 3,741,975 11
Michigan 14 7 3,512,813 3,423,535 3,551,719 4,071,091 4,238,399 4,758,538 4,674,980 4,889,269 5,114,259 9
Miesota 12 9 1,550,411 1,595,560 1,851,430 2,014,317 2,153,857 2,254,895 2,415,033 2,564,783 2,677,472 11
Mississippi 10 12 673,355 509,038 786,577 993,781 1,048,061 1,106,700 1,112,765 1,232,750 1,324,160 19
Missour 11 6 1,855,452 1,848,775 1,767,411 1,937,684 2,106,599 2,246,430 2,289,831 2,515,325 2,691,255 18
Montaa 4 2 *..*279,349 291,429 315,512 343,160 373,947 19
Nebrka 9 2 576,296 60,885 659,380 712,685 791,799 838,568 867,810 900,744 937,184 8
Nevada 8 6 750,335 825,163 684,752 766,581 842,155 895,586 984,486 1,077,380 1,216,838 24
New Hapshire 8 11 280,508 309,263 387,264 445,181 492,390 529,795 525,689 598,504 648,788 23
New Jery 6 3 2,289,181 2,750,024 3,575,130 3,896,778 4,283,643 4,531,457 4,587,64 5,392,240 5,799,417 26
New Mexico 10 12 363,827 395,111 443,343 619,582 660,849 735,107 780,855 828,869 859,408 10
New York 12 5 4,833,816 5,016,524 5,918,136 6,749,096 7,429,249 7,915,526 8,937,683 8,829,070 9,453,613 6
Nor Carlina 11 8 2,536,068 2,730,178 3,105,811 3,377,331 3,767,598 4,610,120 4,094,715 4,305,521 4,554,723 11
Nort Daota .*.**..245,578 **.NA
Ohio 14 5 3,237,786 3,278,960 4,150,498 4,255,934 4,739,795 4,887,376 5,212,204 5,659,459 5,817,211 12Oklma134826,37 979,513 1,124,214 1,200,234 1,288,357 1,366,475 1,440,970 1,574,588 1,614,191 12
Orgon 10 4 914,848 1,082,425 1,201,207 1,268,909 1,399,279 1,473,883 1,682,343 1,682,036 1,778,936 6
Penvlvaa 10 5 2,767,474 3,850,372 4,129,186 4,378,216 4,849,085 4,987,067 5,258,844 5,681,653 6,073,573 15
Purt Rico 6 11 .1,090,005 757,613 1,374,747 1,128,736 1,136,619 1,516,808 1,401,599 1,631,266 8
Rhode Island 6 3 279,304 313,550 355,889 401,805 456,059 463,636 515,547 527,366 567,331 10
Soth Calin 11 16 1,13,232 1,236,338 1,392,586 1,502,345 1,752,457 1,830,516 1,896,369 2,041,541 2,149,480 13
South Daota 5 7 *..*278,646 292,210 325,114 344,825 365,211 12
Tenessee 12 5 1,529,054 1,876,44 1,985,851 2,251,208 2,510,978 2,660,068 2,674,566 2,800,735 2,974,512 11
Texa 20 6 5,792,453 6,705,423 7,548,537 8,294,338 9,156,187 9,650,715 10,13,280 10,776,234 11,327,700 12
Uta 9 3 643,824 692,006 750,24 833,492 919,002 970,854 1,052,522 1,094,563 1,154,992 10
Veront ***.******NA
Virin Islands ***0 0 **.**.NA
Viiinia 11 4 2,262,567 2,447,687 2,708,342 3,059,420 3,270,165 3,429,450 3,753,106 3,879,582 4,147,182 10
Washington 10 5 1,873,475 2,144,767 2,286,082 2,493,214 2,706,030 2,849,043 2,869,784 3,102,750 3,377,193 18
West Virgina 10 10 241,265 347,916 392,384 452,036 498,811 549,722 576,503 579,983 675,257 17
Wiscnsin 11 8 1,525,818 1,342,908 1,698,520 2,008,679 2,229,389 2,523,956 2,396,562 2,533,215 2,723,985 14
Wvominl!4 2 127,634 ..173,939 194,665 168,232 191,939 276,344 295,706 54
Nationwide 86 6%79,696,083 90,643,058 101,043,219 114,028,928 123,990,857 130,751,459 138,878,293 147,623,734 157,042,082 13 %
NA - Not Applicable.
* Data witheld to mantan finn confidentiality.
i Carer with under 10,000 subscribers in a stte were not require to rert.
2 Perctage of mobile wirless subscbers reeiving their serce frm a mobile wirless reseUer.
:/
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31,2002
Industr Analysis and Technology Division
Wire line Competition Bureau
June 2003
Ths reort is available for referce in the FCC's Reference Inormation Center, Courar Level, 445
12th Street, SW, Washigt DC. Copies may be purchased by contag Qulex Interntional, 445 12th
Street, SW, Room CY-B402, Washigton, DC 20554, telephone 202-863-2893, facsimle 202-863-2898, or
via e-mail qualexin~aol.com. The reort can also be downoaded from the FCC-State Link Interet
site at ww.fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
f
Table 13
Mobile Wireless Telephone Subscribers 1
Dec 2002 Dec 2002 Subscriben
Reporting Percent Percent Change
Carren i Resold 2 Dec 1999 Jun200 Dec 200 Jun 2001 Dec 2001 Jun 2002 Dec 2002 De 01 - Dec 02
Alabaa 11 6%1,080,410 1,253,084 1,386,294 1,930,631 1,924,476 1,955,223 1,937,956 1 %
Alaska 4 8 165,221 169,892 *218,424 240,216 242,133 267,630 11Arna1331,125,321 1,624,668 1,855,115 2,018,410 2,171,021 2,412,998 2,520,058 16
Arkasas 7 3 719,919 715,467 743,928 891,275 970,127 1,130,302 1,148,493 18
California 16 4 8,544,941 12,283,369 12,710,520 14,184,625 14,997,358 15,875,264 17,406,588 16
Colorado 9 2 1,552,718 1,654,989 1,856,075 1,983,405 2,145,816 2,247,166 2,358,748 10
Connectcut 6 3 1,077,089 1,136,618 1,277,123 1,418,367 1,616,937 1,558,076 1,665,314 3
Delawar 5 2 270,848 275,219 371,014 389,284 412,611 433,049 437,149 6
Dist. of Columbia 3 6 7 346,681 333,815 354,735 382,457 404,489 415,393 471,508 17
Florida 11 8 5,158,079 4,983,478 6,369,985 7,536,670 8,521,734 8,139,321 8,64,145 1
Georga 14 6 2,538,983 2,687,238 2,754,784 4,076,119 4,020,010 4,171,843 4,390,786 9Gu****0 ****NA
Hawaii 6 1 288,425 454,364 524,291 543,283 595,721 640,246 689,573 16
Idao 10 8 271,436 296,066 344,564 398,781 44,864 500,693 536,064 21
llinois 10 5 3,922,482 4,309,660 5,143,767 5,621,04 5,631,172 5,406,664 6,401,620 14
Indiana 8 7 1,318,975 1,717,378 1,715,074 1,781,247 1,897,049 1,999,451 2,355,785 24
Iowa 12 9 774,773 975,629 832,106 861,382 1,087,608 1,157,580 1,239,384 14
Kasas 12 3 669,472 724,024 801,293 901,225 956,050 1,061,154 1,113,429 16
Ketucky 10 6 911,700 999,544 1,026,334 1,176,756 1,307,988 1,402,802 1,393,060 7
Louisiana 10 11 1,227,106 1,294,693 1,306,457 1,677,292 1,838,244 2,086,529 2,107,123 15
Maie 5 1 187,003 283,640 359,786 399,616 427,313 457,835 466,896 9
Maland 3 8 2 1,634,625 2,013,058 2,298,651 2,446,818 2,614,216 2,684,441 2,909,412 11
Massachusett 6 2 1,892,014 2,228,169 2,649,130 2,753,685 2,988,667 3,274,877 3,360,493 12
Michiga 14 7 3,512,813 3,423,535 3,551,719 4,071,091 4,238,399 4,710,370 4,517,129 7
Minnesota 12 5 1,550,411 1,595,560 1,851,430 2,014,317 2,153,857 2,254,895 2,415,033 12
Mississippi 11 12 673,355 509,038 786,577 993,781 980,918 1,039,739 1,053,049 7
Missour 11 5 1,855,452 1,848,775 1,767,411 1,937,684 2,106,599 2,246,299 2,275,473 8
Montana 4 1 ****279,349 291,429 315,512 13
Nebrka 8 2 576,296 600,885 659,380 712,685 791,799 838,568 867,810 10
Nevad 8 5 750,335 825,163 684,752 766,581 842,155 893,788 983,075 17
New Hapshire 8 11 280,508 309,263 387,264 445,181 492,112 529,498 525,450 7
New Jerey 6 2 2,289,181 2,750,024 3,575,130 3,896,778 4,283,643 4,530,663 4,582,403 7
New Mexico 10 10 363,827 395,111 443,343 619,582 660,849 735,107 780,855 18
New York 12 4 4,833,816 5,016,524 5,918,136 6,749,096 7,247,181 7,713,977 8,898,347 23
Nort Caolina 12 6 2,536,068 2,730,178 3,105,811 3,377,331 3,605,441 4,429,832 3,940,796 9
Nort Daota *******245,578 *NA
Ohio 14 4 3,237,786 3,278,960 4,150,498 4,255,934 4,739,795 4,887,335 5,179,806 9
Oklahoma 12 3 826,37 979,513 1,124,214 1,200,234 1,288,357 1,366,437 1,432,527 11
Oron 11 3 914,848 1,082,425 1,201,207 1,268,909 1,399,279 1,473,883 1,682;343 20
Penlvana 11 3 2,767,474 3,850,372 4,129,186 4,378,216 4,849,085 4,986,819 5,249,163 8
Purto Rico 6 12 *1,090,005 757,613 1,374,747 1,128,736 1,136,619 1,254,203 11
Rhode Islad 6 2 279,304 313,550 355,889 401,805 454,936 461,00 512,389 13
South Caolin 10 15 1,137,232 1,236,338 1,392,586 1,502,345 1,625,392 1,724,156 1,781,083 10
South Dakota 5 7 ****278,646 292,210 325,114 17
Tennessee 12 3 1,529,054 1,876,44 1,985,851 2,251,208 2,443,483 2,573,801 2,626,423 7
Texas 19 5 5,792,453 6,705,423 7,548,537 8,294,338 9,062,064 9,521,985 9,943,429 10
Uta 10 2 643,824 692,006 750,244 833,492 919,002 970,854 1,052,522 15
Veront *********NA
Virgi Islands ***0 0 ****NA
Virgina 3 12 3 2,262,567 2,447,687 2,708,342 3,059,420 3,270,165 3,429,450 3,749,893 15Wason1141,873,475 2,144,767 2,286,082 2,493,214 2,706,030 2,846,197 2,866,458 6
West Virnia 9 9 241,265 347,916 392,384 452,036 498,811 549,721 576,339 16
Wisconsin 10 7 1,525,818 1,342,908 1,698,520 2,008,679 2,229,389 2,522,479 2,384,977 7
Wyoming 4 2 127,634 **173,939 194,665 168,232 191,939 -i
Nationwide 85 5 %79,696,083 90,643,058 101,043,219 114,028,928 122,399,943 128,845,821 136,261,491 11 %
NA -- Not Applicable
* Data witheld to maintain fi confdentiality.1 Caer with under 10,000 subscrbers in a state wer not reuired to reort.
2 Perentage of mobile wiless subscrbers reiving their serice frm a mobile wiless reller.
3 Subsribers counts for the Distrct of Columbia, Marland, and Vira have bee resed for previous perods other th June 2000.
i
Local Telephone Competition:
Status as of December 31,2001
Industr Analysis and Technology Division
Wire line Competition Bureau
July 2002
Ths reort is available for reference in the FCC's Inmnation Center at 445 12th Street, S.W., Courar
LeveL. Copies may be purhased by calling Qulex International, Portls II, 445 12th Street S.W., Roo
CY -B402, Wasgtn, DC 20554, telephone 202-863-2893, facsime 202-863-2898, or vi e-ma
quaexit~aol.com. The report can also be downoaded from the FCC-State Link Internet site at
www,fcc.gov/wcb/stats.
Table 11
Mobile Wireless Telephone Subscribers 11
Dec 2001 Dec 2001
Reportng Percent Subscribers Subscribers Subsribers Subscribers Subscribers Percent Change
State Carrers 11 Resold 2/Dec 199 Jun2000 Dec 2000 Jun2001 Dec 2001 Dec 00 - De 01
Alabama 12 5 %1,080,410 1,253,084 1,386,294 1,930,631 1,924,476 39%
Alaska 5 14 165,221 169,892 *218,424 240,216 *
Aria 13 4 1,125,321 1,624,668 1,855,115 2,018,410 2,171,021 17
Arkaas 6 3 719,919 715,467 743,928 891,275 970,127 30
Californa 13 5 8,544,941 12,283,369 12,710,520 14,184,625 14,997,358 18
Colorao 10 3 1,552,718 1,654,989 1,856,075 1,983,405 2,145,816 16
Connecticut 6 5 1,077,089 1,136,618 1,277,123 1,418,367 1,616,937 27
Delawa 5 4 270,848 275,219 371,014 389,284 412,611 11
Distrct of Columbia 6 6 910,116 3/928,962 987,323 1,008,397 9
Florida 11 6 5,158,079 4,983,478 6,369,985 7,536,670 8,521,734 34
Georga 14 6 2,538,983 2,687,238 2,754,784 4,076,119 4,020,010 46
Guam ****0 **NM
Hawai 6 2 288,425 454,364 524,291 543,283 595,721 14
Idao 9 8 271,436 296,066 344,564 398,781 44,864 29
Ilinois 11 6 3,922,482 4,309,660 5,143,767 5,621,04 5,631,172 9
Indian 9 8 1,318,975 1,717,378 1,715,074 1,781,247 1,897,049 11
Iowa 12 8 774,773 975,629 832,106 861,382 1,087,608 31
Kansas Ii 3 669,472 724,024 801,293 901,225 956,050 19
Kentuky 10 8 911,700 999,544 1,026,334 1,176,756 1,307,988 27
Louisian 11 12 1,227,106 1,294,693 1,306,457 1,677,292 1,838,244 41
Maie 5 2 187,003 283,640 359,786 399,616 427,313 19
Maland 8 3 1,473,494 3/1,982,477 2,134,125 2,298,384 16
Massahusets 6 4 1,892,014 2,228,169 2,649,130 2,753,685 2,988,667 13
Michiga 12 4 3,512,813 3,423,535 3,551,719 4,071,091 4,238,399 19
Minesota 12 5 1,550,411 1,595,560 1,851,430 2,014,317 2,153,857 16
Mississippi 10 13 673,355 509,038 786,577 993,781 980,918 25
Missour 11 5 1,855,452 1,848,775 1,767,411 1,937,684 2,106,599 19
Monta 4 3 ****279,349 *
Nebraska 8 2 576,296 600,885 659,380 712,685 791,799 20
Nevada 6 5 750,335 825,163 684,752 766,581 842,155 23
New Hampshire 7 12 280,508 309,263 387,264 445,181 492,112 27
New Jersey 6 1 2,289,181 2,750,024 3,575,130 3,896,778 4,283,643 20
New Mexico 9 10 363,827 395,111 443,343 619,582 660,849 49
New York 11 9 4,833,816 5,016,524 5,918,136 6,749,096 7,247,181 22
Nor Calina 12 7 2,536,068 2,730,178 3,105,811 3,377,331 3,605,441 16
Nor Daota ********
Ohio 14 5 3,237,786 3,278,960 4,150,498 4,255,934 4,739,795 14
Oklahoma 12 3 826,637 979,513 1,124,214 1,200,234 1,288,357 15
Orgon 10 4 914,848 1,082,425 1,201,207 1,268,909 1,399,279 16
Pennsvlvana 13 6 2,767,474 3,850,372 4,129,186 4,378,216 4,849,085 17
Puer Rico 6 0 *1,090,005 757,613 1,374,747 1,128,736 49
Rhod Island 6 4 279,304 313,550 355,889 401,805 454,936 28
South Calina 8 16 1,137,232 1,236,338 1,392,586 1,502,345 1,625,392 17
South Dakota 4 4 ****278,646 *
Tenessee 11 4 1,529,054 1,876,44 1,985,851 2,251,208 2,443,483 23
Texa 19 5 5,792,453 6,705,423 7,548,537 8,294,338 9,062,064 20
Uta 9 4 643,824 692,006 750,244 833,492 919,002 22
Veront ********
Virgi Islands ***0 0 **NM
Virgia 12 4 1,860,262 3/2,450,289 2,767,247 2,982,089 22
Wasingtn 11 5 1,873,475 2,144,767 2,286,082 2,493,214 2,706,030 18
West Virgiia 10 8 241,265 347,916 392,384 452,036 498,811 27
Wisconsin 11 6 1,525,818 1,342,908 1,698,520 2,008,679 2,229,389 31
WvominlZ 4 3 127,634 **173,939 194,665 *
Nationwide 88 5 %79,696,083 90,643,058 101,043,219 114,028,928 122,399,943 21 %
NM - Not meagf.
* Dat witheld to maintan fi confidentiality.
11 Caer with uner 10,000 subscriber in a state were not reuire to reort.
2/ Percentage of mobile wireless subscribe reeivig their service from a mobile wiless reseller.
3/ At the end of June 2000, the Distrct of Columbia, Maland, and Virinia ha a total of 4.8 millon subscn1iers. The stateby-state totals for
thes individual state wer inconsistently reported at the end of June 2000 compar to the other filing perods.
I
~
LOCAL TELEPHONE COMPETIION:
STATUS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2000
Industr Analysis Division
Common Carrer Bureau
Federal Communications Commission
May 2001
-
1.1.~.-
Ths report is available for reference in the FCC's Reference Inormtion Center, Courard Level, 445
12th Street, S.W., Washigtn, D.C. Copies may be purchaed by calling Interational Trascrption
Servces, Inc. (ITS) at (202) 857-3800. The report can also be downoaded from the FCC-State Link
Inteet site at ..ww.fcc.gov/ccb/statp. For additional inormation, contact the Common Carer
Buru's Industr Anlysis Division at (202) 418-0940, or for user of TT eqpment, call (202) 418-
0484.
.
Table 9
Mobile Wireless Telephone Subscribers
Dec 2000 Dec 2000
Reporting Percent Subscribers Subscrbers Subscnbers Dec Percent Change
State Carners 11 Resld 2/Dec 1999 June 2000 2000 Dec 99 - Dec 00
Alaama 9 1%1,080,410 1,253,084 1,386,294 28%
Alaska **165,221 169,892 **
Arzona 11 7 1,125,321 1,624,668 1,829,695 63
Arkans 5 2 719,919 715,467 743,928 3
California 10 5 8,544,941 12,283,369 12,649,508 48
Colordo 8 4 1,552,718 1,654,989 1,856,075 20
Connecticut 6 7 1,077,089 1,136,618 1,277,123 19
Delawar 6 0 270,848 275,219 371,014 37
Distrct of Columbia 6 10 910,116 333,815 928,962 2
Florida 9 6 5,158,079 4,983,478 6,369,985 23
Geogia 11 6 2,538,983 2,687,238 2,739,000 8
Hawaii 7 0 288,425 454,364 524,291 82
Idao 4 23 271,436 296,066 344,564 27
Ilinois 10 10 3,922,482 4,309,660 5,143,767 31
Indiana 10 6 1,318,975 1,717,378 1,715,074 30
Iowa 7 62 774,773 975,629 832,106 7
Kasas 10 4 669,472 724,024 801,293 20
Kentucky 9 2 911,700 999,544 942,545 3
Louiiana 11 4 1,227,106 1,294,693 1,306,457 6
Maine 5 32 187,003 283,640 359,786 92
Marland 7 6 1,473,494 2,013,058 1,894,251 29
Massachusett 6 4 1,892,014 2,228,169 2,649,130 40
Michiga 11 9 3,512,813 3,423,535 3,488,826 .1
Minesota 12 2 1,550,411 1,595,560 1,740,654 12
Mississippi 7 0 673,355 509,038 786,577 17
Missour 8 8 1,855,452 1,848,775 1,767,411 -5
Montaa *12 ****
Nebraska 5 i 576,296 600,885 659,380 14
Nevada 6 3 750,335 825,163 684,752 .9
New Hamoshire 8 35 280,508 309,263 387,264 38
New Jerey 6 2 2,289,181 2,750,024 3,575,130 56
New Mexico 5 41 363,827 395,111 443,343 22
New York 6 11 4,833,816 5,016,524 5,736,660 19
Nor Carlina 11 13 2,536,068 2,730,178 3,105,811 22
Nort Dakota *2 ****
Ohio 11 6 3,237,786 3,278,960 3,987,192 23
Oklaoma 13 10 826,37 979,513 2,271,755 175
Oregon 8 11 914,848 1,082,425 1,201,207 31
Pensylvania 10 6 2,767,474 3,850,372 4,014,894 45
Puero Rico 4 27 *1,090,005 926,448 *
Rhode Island 6 39 279,304 313,550 355,889 27
South Carlin 9 7 1,137,232 1,236,338 1,392,586 22
South Dakota *3 ****
Tennessee 10 11 1,529,054 1,876,444 1,962,568 28
Texas 19 8 5,792,453 6,705,423 7,489,180 29
Uta 8 5 643,824 692,006 750,244 17
Veront *13 ****
Virgin Islands 0 NA *0 0 NA
Virginia 12 8 1,860,262 2,447,687 2,450,289 32
Wasinl!ton 9 8 1,873,475 2,144,767 2,286,082 22
West Virginia 6 25 241,265 347,916 355,989 48
Wisconsin 10 45 1,525,818 1,342,908 1,595,728 5
Wyoming 4 1 127,634 ***
Nationwide 77 9%79,696,083 90,643,058 101,212,054 27%
* Data witheld to maintain fi confidentiality.
11 Carrer with under 10,000 subscrbers in a state were not required to report.
2/ Percentae of mobile wirless subscribe receiving their serice from a mobile wieless reseller.
w
Local Telephone Competition at the New Milennium
(Sumaring December 31, 1999 data from Forms 477 and 499-A)
August 2000
0~\CATt0'k
~MOi~i~ kJ~.. ~o
, USA'
Industr Analysis Division
Common Carrer Bureau
Federal Communications Commission
Washington, DC 20554
Ths report is available for reference in the FCC's Inormtion Center at 445 12th Street, S.W., Courard
LeveL. Copies may be purchased by calling Interational Trascnption Service, Inc. at (202) 857-3800.
The reprt ca also be downoaded (file names: LCOM0800.ZIP, LCOM0800.PDF) from the FCC-State
Link internet site at htt://ww.fcc.gov/ccb/stats on the World Wide Web.
fÍ
Table 5
Mobile Telephone Subscribers Reported: Year-End 1999 **
Number of Percent of Subscribers
State Carriers Subscribers Nation Population **per Capita
Alabama 10 1,080,410 1.4 %4,369,862 0.25
Alaska 5 165,221 0.2 619,500 0.27
Arizona 9 1,125,321 1.4 4,778,332 0.24
Arkansas 5 719,919 0.9 2,551,373 0.28
California 11 8544,941 10.7 33145121 0.26
Colorado 8 1,552,718 1,9 4,056,133 0.38
Connecticut 6 1,077,089 1.4 3,282,031 0.33
Delaware 5 270,848 0.3 753,538 0.36
District of Columbia 5 910,116 1.1 519,000 1.75
Florida 14 5158079 6.5 15111,244 0.34
Georgia 13 2,538,983 3.2 7,788,240 0.33
Hawaii 8 288,425 0.4 1,185,497 0.24
Idaho 4 271,436 0.3 1,251,700 0.22
Illnois 10 3,922,482 4.9 12,128,370 0.32
Indiana 10 1,318,975 1.7 5942901 0.22
Iowa 9 774,773 1.0 2,869,413 0.27
Kansas 11 669,472 0.8 2,654,052 0.25
Kentucky 12 911,700 1.1 3,960,825 0.23
Louisiana 9 1,227,106 1.5 4,372,035 0,28
Maine 4 187003 0.2 1253040 0.15
Maryland 7 1,473,494 1.8 5,171,634 0,28
Massachusetts 6 1,892,014 2.4 6,175,169 0.31
Michigan 13 3,512,813 4.4 9,863,775 0.36
Minnesota 13 1,550,411 1.9 4,775,508 0.32
Mississiooi 6 673355 0.8 2768,619 0.24
Missouri 10 1,855,452 2.3 5,468,338 0.34
Montana ***882,779 *
Nebraska 4 576,296 0.7 1,666,028 0.35
Nevada 7 750,335 0.9 1,809,253 0.41
New Hamoshire 6 280508 0.4 1201,134 0.23
New Jersey 5 2,289,181 2.9 8,143,412 0.28
New Mexico 6 363,827 0.5 1,739,844 0.21
New York 7 4,833,816 6.1 18,196,601 0.27
North Carolina 11 2,536,068 3.2 7,650,789 0.33
North Dakota ***633666 *
Ohio 12 3,237,786 4.1 11,256,654 0.29
Oklahoma 9 826,637 1.0 3,358,044 0.25
Oregon 7 914,848 1.1 3,316,154 0.28
Pennsylvania 12 2,767,474 3.5 11,994,016 0.23
Puerto Rico ***3,889507 *
Rhode Island 6 279,304 0.4 990,819 0.28
South Carolina 7 1,137,232 1.4 3,885,736 0.29
South Dakota ***733,133 *
Tennessee 9 1,529,054 1.9 5,483,535 0.28
Texas 20 5,792,453 7.3 20,044 141 0.29
U.S. Virgin Islands ***120,917 *
Utah 8 643,824 0.8 2,129,836 0.30
Vermont ***593,740 *
Virginia 12 1,860,262 2.3 6,872,912 0.27
Washinaton 8 1873,475 2.4 5756361 0.33
West Virginia 7 241,265 0.3 1,806,928 0.13
Wisconsin 9 1,525,818 1.9 5,250,446 0.29
Wvomina 4 127,634 0.2 479602 0.27
Nationwide 76 79696083 100.0 276,701,237 0.29
Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality.
Carriers with under 10,000 subscribers in a state were not required to report.
*** Population as of July 1999.
.r
,
l
/'
TRENDS IN TELEPHONE SERVICE
Industr Analysis Division
Common Carrer Bureau
Federal Communications Commission
July 1998
Ths report is available for refernce in the Common Carer Bureau's Public Reference Room, 2000 M Street,
N.W., Room 575. Copies may be puhased by callig Intertiona Trancription Services, Inc, (ITS) at (202)
857-3800. The reprt can be downloaded (fie name TREND298.ZIPJ from the FCC-State Link internet site
at htt://ww.fcc,gov/ccb/stats on the World Wide Web. The report can also be downloaded from the FCC-
State Link computer bulletin board system at (202) 418-0241.
!
I,
.~
TRENDS IN TELEPHONE SERVICE
T ABLE OF CONTENTS
INRODUCTION ......................................................... 1
ACCESS CHAGES ....................................................... 1
Table 1.1 Interstate Per-Line Access Charges. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3
Table 1.2 Intertate Per-Minute Access Charges. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4
Table 1.3 Intertate Per-Line Access Charges by Carer ...................... 5
Table 1.4 Interstate Per-Minute Access Charges by Carer .................... 6
CELLULAR TELEPHONE SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 7
Table 2.1 Cellular Telephone Subscribers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 8
Table 2.2 Cellular Telephone Service: Surey Results .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 9
COMPLAINTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 10
Table 3.1 Carers Sered with More Than 50 Complaints in 1997 . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 12
Table 3.2 Local Exchange Carers Served with More Than 50 Complaints
in 1997 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 13
Table 3.3 Biling Agents Served with More Than 50 Complaints in 1997 ......... 13
Table 3.4 Other Companes Served with More Than 50 Complaints in 1997 . . . . . .. 14
CONS~ER E)(E~ITinS ............................................. 15
Table 4.1 Telephone Service Expenditues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 16
EMPLOYMENT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 17
Table 5.1 Anual Average Number of Employees in the Telephone
Connunkations Industr .................................... 18
Table 5.2 Labor Productivity Index for the Telephone Connunications
Industr Measured in Output per Hour .......................... 19
EQUAL ACCESS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 20
Table 6.1 Development of Equal Access. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 21
Table 6.2 Centrl Offces Converted to Equal Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 22
INTERNATIONAL TELEPHONE SERVICE ................................... 23
Table 7.1 International Service from United States to Foreign Points ............ 24
Table 7.2 International Telephone Service Settlements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 24
Table 7.3 International Message Telephone Service for 1996 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 25
Table 7.4 U.S. Biled Revenues of Facilities-Based and Facilties-Resale
Carers in 1996 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 26
Table 7.5 Providers of Pue Resale International MTS in 1996 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 27
TABLE 2.1
CELLULAR TELEPHONE SUBSCRIBERS
NUMBER SUBSCRIBERS
OF
SYSTEMS
1984 DECEMBER 32 91,600
1985 JUNE 65 203,600
DECEMBER 102 340,213
1986 JUNE 129 500,000
DECEMBER 166 681,825
1987 JUNE 206 883,778
DECEMBER 312 1,230,855
1988 JUNE 420 1,608,697
DECEMBER 517 2,069,441
1989 JUNE 559 2,691,793
DECEMBER 58 3,508,944
1990 JUNE 592 4,368,686
DECEMBER 751 5,283,055
1991 JUNE 1,029 6,390,053
DECEMBER 1,252 7,557,148
1992 JUNE 1,483 8,892,535
DECEMBER 1,506 11,032,753
1993 JUNE 1,523 13,067,318
DECEMBER 1,529 16,009,461
1994 JUNE 1,550 19,283,506
DECEMBER 1,581 24,134,421
1995 JUNE 1,581 28,154,415
DECEMBER 1,627 33,785,661
1996 JUNE 1,629 38,195,466
DECEMBER 1,740 44,042,992
1997 JUNE 2,005 48,705,553
DECEMBER 2,228 55,312,293
SOURCE: CELLULAR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION.
8
EXHIBIT A
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CELLULAR TELEPHONE SERVICE:
The Federal Communications Commssion licenses cellular telephone companes but does
not impose reporting requiements on the cellular industr. The Cellular Telecommuncations
Industr Association (CTIA) periodically publishes sumai information on the industr, a
selection of which is shown in Tables 2.1 and 2.2. CTIA can be found on the internet at
htt://ww.wow-com.comon the World Wide Web.
The cellular industr has grown dratically. Table 2.1 shows that there were 92,000
subscribers in 1984, as compared to 55 millon as of December 1997. As seen in Table 2.2, the
industr's anual revenues rose from less than $1 bilion in 1984 to over $27 billon in 1997. The
table also shows that the industr had over 100,000 employees as of December 1997, as
compared to about 1,000 in 1984, and that there was a significant drop in the average monthly bil
from $96.83 at the end of 1987 to $42.78 at the end of 1997.
7
TABLE 2.1
CELLULAR TELEPHONE SUBSCRIBERS
NUMBER SUBSCRIBERS
OF
SYSTEMS
1984 DECEMBER 32 91,600
1985 JUNE 65 203,600
DECEMBER 102 340,213
1986 JUNE 129 500,000
DECEMBER 166 681,825
1987 JUNE 206 883,778
DECEMBER 312 1,230,855
1988 JUNE 420 1,608,697
DECEMBER 517 2,069,441
1989 JUNE 559 2,691,793
DECEMBER 584 3,508,944
1990 JUNE 592 4,368,686
DECEMBER 751 5,283,055
1991 JUNE 1,029 6,390,053
DECEMBER 1,252 7,557,148
1992 JUNE 1,483 8,892,535
DECEMBER 1,506 11,032,753
1993 JUNE 1,523 13,067,318
DECEMBER 1,529 16,009,461
1994 JUNE 1,550 19,283,506
DECEMBER 1,581 24,134,421
1995 JUNE 1,581 28,154,415
DECEMBER 1,627 33,785,661
1996 JUNE 1,629 38,195,466
DECEMBER 1,740 44,042,992
~
~
1997 JUNE 2,005 48,705,553
DECEMBER 2,228 55,312,293
SOURCE: CELLULAR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION.
8