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Sprint Nextel hurting itself at the hands of prepaid wireless companies?

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When Sprint Nextel Corp. (NYSE: S) launched the $50 all-you-can-eat wireless plan with its Boost Mobile prepaid brand back in January, it was a shock to the wireless industry. Indeed, prepaid wireless generally is more expensive and less feature-laden than contract wireless in the U.S. But not even contract wireless plans that featured unlimited talking/texting/web access could be found for $50. What was Sprint Nextel trying to do? Cannibalize itself?


That's just what Verizon Communications Inc (NYSE: VZ) CEO Ivan Seidenberg said: that Sprint Nextel would self-destruct due to its Boost Mobile prepaid brashness. Just this month, Sprint Nextel prepaid partner and reseller Virgin Mobile also launched a $50 unlimited talking plan. Should AT&T, Inc. (NYSE: T) be afraid? Nah -- it's doing just fine with the iPhone 3G business these days.

But Sprint Nextel, which is hemorrhaging customers every single quarter, has to do something. That something: compete solely on price with its own contract wireless plans and with its prepaid partners as well. But the question stands: will Sprint Nextel hurt itself as customers realize what a cheap deal they can get without any contract at all?

The funny thing here is that a war is brewing in the prepaid wireless business similar to how a war was waged years ago as national wireless carriers bought each other out and lowered prices to attract customers from each other. But with this war, the big carriers could see some of their precious contract customers switch to these cheap prepaid plans when those contracts are up. After all, do you really need rollover minutes when you have unlimited talk time?

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Last updated: November 27, 2009: 08:33 PM

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