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Verizon (VZ) and AT&T (T) have pulled a 180 on their 5G rollout, agreeing to delay the launch of new service following pressure from Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. The wireless firms previously declared that they would forge ahead with their plans despite a warning that it could interfere with aircraft electronics. The latest U-turn came after a flurry of calls from the White House, airlines that threatened legal action, and possible flight restrictions from the FAA that would have disrupted air travel and cargo shipments nationwide.
At issue: A new band of faster 5G wireless service, called the C-Band, is located near frequencies used by aircraft equipment to compute altitude. Aviation groups and the FAA fear it could put safety at risk, especially in low visibility conditions, but wireless companies and the FCC (which approved the service) have said there are no dangers. "We know aviation safety and 5G can co-exist and we are confident further collaboration and technical assessment will allay any issues," AT&T said in the statement.
Under a new deal inked last night, the wireless providers will postpone the debut of their ultrafast wireless networks by an additional two weeks. They also previously agreed not to deploy towers for six months near 50 airports identified as having the greatest impact to the U.S. aviation. In turn, the industry agreed not to escalate its campaign against the new service, and will look at ways of minimizing the potential impact of interference on flight operations over the next two weeks.
Lot at stake: Verizon has the most at stake in the standoff, spending more than $45B last year to acquire C-Band licenses. It also shelled out several more billion on payments to clear away satellite operators that could have created interference with cellphone towers on the ground. Telecom industry groups have further pointed to C-Band frequencies that have already been deployed worldwide, like in France, saying there have been no reported incidents involving 5G and aircraft.
In Europe, at midday, London +1.4%. Paris +1.3%. Frankfurt +0.7%.
Futures at 6:20, Dow +0.3%. S&P +0.4%. Nasdaq +0.3%. Crude +0.8% at $76.66. Gold +0.3% at $1805.90. Bitcoin -1.3% at $46683.
Ten-year Treasury Yield unchanged at 1.63%
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