Founding Founded in 1996 by
Philip Anschutz, Qwest began in an unconventional way. Anschutz, who owned the
Southern Pacific Transportation Company at the time, established the subsidiary
Southern Pacific Telecommunications Company and began installing the first all-digital, fiber-optic infrastructure along his railroad lines and connecting them into central junctions in strategic locations to serve businesses with high-speed data and T1 services. In 1997, the Southern Pacific Transportation Company merged with
Union Pacific, but the telecom assets were kept separate from the railroad merger with Union Pacific. The telecom company was renamed Qwest and became a publicly traded company in June 1997. Qwest Communications grew aggressively, acquiring internet service provider SuperNet in 1997, followed by the acquisition of
LCI, a low cost long-distance carrier (located in
Dublin, Ohio and
McLean, Virginia) in 1998, and followed again by the acquisition of Icon CMT, a web hosting provider and European-based
EUnet International Ltd., also in 1998. This launched Qwest as not only a provider of high speed data to the niche market of corporate customers, but also a quick-growing residential and business long-distance customer base that it quickly merged into its data service.
US West acquisition Qwest merged with "
Baby Bell"
US West on June 30, 2000 through an apparent
hostile takeover for $48 billion. Philip Anschutz owned 17.5% of the resulting company. Unlike prior merger transactions between the Baby Bells, US West ceased to exist when it was immediately absorbed into Qwest with all subsidiaries of US West becoming directly owned by Qwest. As a condition of the merger, Qwest was required to sell off its long-distance operations in the 14-state boundary in which it provided local telephone services. They were eventually sold to
Touch America. In 2003, Qwest acquired Touch America from
360networks after Touch America filed for bankruptcy. The acquisition ended ongoing disputes between the two companies in which Touch America alleged Qwest continued to illegally sell long-distance services within the former US West region.
Directory operations sale In 2002, Qwest agreed to sell its directory operations, QwestDex, to private equity firms
The Carlyle Group and
Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe for $7 billion. The sale allowed Qwest to generate cash to fend off a bankruptcy filing to which it may have had to resort due to significant amounts of debt it had incurred since the collapse of the
dot-com bubble. The resulting company was named
Dex Media, when the sale was completed in 2004.
Alliances Qwest Communications has partnered with other major communications companies during its history. In Europe, Qwest partnered with the Dutch national telecom operator
KPN to create the pan-European data communications and hosting company
KPNQwest. KPNQwest was formed in November 1998 and went on to launch an initial public offering on the Nasdaq and Amsterdam stock Exchanges in November 1999. KPNQwest collapsed in bankruptcy in 2002. In the US, Qwest partnered with AT&T and Verizon to form Movearoo.com. Created on July 9, 2008, the website is a program designed to help customers in the process of moving find home service providers available in their area. ==Problems==