Cingular Wireless Cingular Wireless was a
wireless telecommunications company that was founded in April 2000 as a joint venture of
SBC Communications and
BellSouth. The joint venture created the nation's second-largest carrier. Cingular grew out of a conglomeration of more than 100 companies, including 12 well-known regional companies with
Bell roots. The 12 companies included: • Three companies spun off from
Advanced Mobile Phone Service •
Ameritech Mobile Communications •
BellSouth Mobility •
Southwestern Bell Mobile Systems •
BellSouth Mobility DCS • BellSouth Wireless Data • CCPR Services d/b/a
Cellular One of
Puerto Rico and
U.S. Virgin Islands •
Pacific Bell Wireless • Pacific Bell Wireless Northwest • SBC Wireless • SNET Mobility • Southwestern Bell Wireless SBC Wireless had previously operated in several northeast markets under the "
Cellular One" brand, while BellSouth's wireless operations incorporated the former
Houston Cellular. Cingular's lineage can be traced back to
Advanced Mobile Phone Service, which was a subsidiary of AT&T created in 1978 to provide cellular service nationwide. AMPS was divided among the
Regional Bell Operating Companies as part of the
Bell System divestiture. With the exception of Pacific Bell and BellSouth Mobility DCS, the digital network consisted of
D-AMPS technology. The Pacific Bell and BellSouth Mobility DCS networks used GSM technology on the PCS frequency band (1900 MHz). In October 2007, AT&T's president and
chief executive officer Stan Sigman announced his retirement.
Ralph de la Vega, group president-Regional Telecom & Entertainment, was named as president and CEO of AT&T Mobility.
AT&T Wireless merger In February 2004, after a bidding war with Britain's
Vodafone Plc (at the time a part-owner of Verizon Wireless), Cingular announced that it would purchase its struggling competitor,
AT&T Wireless Services, for $41 billion. This was more than twice the company's trading value. The merger was completed on October 26, 2004. The combined company had a customer base of 46 million people at the time, making Cingular the largest wireless provider in the United States. AT&T Wireless was then legally renamed
New Cingular Wireless Services. Shortly after, new commercials were shown with the "AT&T" transforming into the Cingular logo, and with the Cingular logo's text turned blue to acknowledge the change. Some of the companies that comprised Cingular, such as
BellSouth Mobility, ceased to exist when they were legally merged into the operating company subsidiary
AT&T Wireless PCS, which was
New Cingular Wireless PCS. First announced on June 22, 2005, Cingular Wireless announced the intention to divest its
Caribbean and
Bermuda operations and licenses which it acquired from the acquisition of AT&T Wireless, to
Irish-owned and
Jamaica-based
Digicel Group under undisclosed financial terms. In 2006, one year following the deal, a high-ranking source allegedly close to the sale pointed the Barbados Daily Nation Newspaper towards some SEC filings made by Cingular which were said to establish an idea of the approximate sale price of the deal. According to the SEC filings Cingular was paid around $122 million, with much of that cost going towards the purchase of the former AT&T Wireless assets in Barbados by Digicel. At the time of the merger, there were two networks: the historic AT&T
Blue Network and the Cingular
Orange Network. Both networks contained a mix of both TDMA and GSM facilities. Approximately 50,000 cell sites had to be melded together. From a technical standpoint, the "blue" and "orange" networks were considered different networks until integration was completed in 2005. Enhanced Network Selection (ENS) was used to home cellular devices on either the "blue" or "orange" network during this process.
The New AT&T On November 21, 2005,
Ed Whitacre, then CEO of the newly merged SBC/AT&T, announced plans to market Cingular's service under the
AT&T brand. BellSouth spokesman Jeff Battcher countered that the terms of the joint venture allow either party to sell the service under another name, and that he believes they will be using the brand to market to business customers. Cingular president
Stan Sigman concurred with BellSouth's position, indicating that the Cingular brand would continue but be sold under the AT&T brand where offered in packages with other AT&T services, such as data and wireline telephony. However, AT&T announced on March 5, 2006, that AT&T would merge with BellSouth. The acquisition was finalized on December 29, 2006, when the FCC gave its final approval. The following month, AT&T announced that it would phase out the Cingular brand across all of its services and replace it with AT&T, with an accompanying advertising campaign branding the combined company as "The New AT&T." Commercials featured the orange Cingular "Jack" logo encircling the AT&T globe logo several times, dragging its blue bars behind it to form the globe's blue stripes, before finally disappearing behind it, being backed by the chorus of the
Oasis song "
All Around the World". AT&T added the color orange to its signage to reflect the change; AT&T would eventually remove orange in 2015 following another rebranding related to its acquisition of
DirecTV. In November 2007, AT&T merged with
Dobson Communications, who owned
Cellular One and was a roaming partner of AT&T, for $2.8 billion. The sale added 1.7 million subscribers and expanded AT&T coverage in various suburban and rural markets (including Alaska). On November 7, 2008, AT&T announced its intent to acquire
Centennial Wireless for $944 million, expanding its coverage in the Midwest, southern U.S., and Puerto Rico.
Failed acquisition of T-Mobile USA On March 20, 2011, AT&T and
Deutsche Telekom announced that AT&T had agreed to acquire
T-Mobile USA from Deutsche Telekom in a deal estimated to be worth $39 billion in cash and stock. AT&T said the deal was expected to close in 12 months and was subject to regulatory approval. As of June 2011, it was being examined by the FCC. On August 31, 2011, the United States Department of Justice formally announced that it had filed a lawsuit to block the merger. On November 22, 2011, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski recommended sending AT&T's proposed T-Mobile acquisition to an administrative law judge for review and a hearing. On November 23, 2011, AT&T withdrew its application with the FCC regarding the acquisition of T-Mobile USA. They also indicated that they would recognize a $4 billion accounting charge in the event of a deal collapse. That charge covers a $3 billion cash breakup fee and $1 billion as the market value for the spectrum they were required to transfer to T-Mobile if the deal failed to complete.
2012–present On August 2, 2012, AT&T announced its intent to acquire
NextWave Wireless. On January 22, 2013, AT&T announced its intent to acquire the U.S. retail wireless operations of
Atlantic Tele-Network, doing business as
Alltel, for $780 million. On June 24, 2014, Plateau Wireless announced the sale of assets and operations in eastern New Mexico and west Texas to AT&T, including wireless spectrum and 40,000 customers. In November 2014 and January 2015, AT&T acquired the Mexican wireless carriers Iusacell and Nextel Mexico to form
AT&T Mexico. On October 9, 2019,
Liberty Cablevision of Puerto Rico's parent company (Liberty Latin America), announced the acquisition of AT&T Wireless Services in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, in a $1.95 billion deal. The sale was completed on November 2, 2020. In May 2021, the company began promoting AT&T and Liberty as a unified brand. In September 2021, Liberty began phasing out the AT&T brand and introduced a new logo. On February 22, 2024,
a massive outage affected customers nationwide. ==Network==