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mmWave auction completes its clock phase, raising $7.56 billion

Bidding has closed in the first phase of the Federal Communications Commission’s millimeter wave spectrum auction, with the bid total at more than $7.56 billion.

Since December 10, 35 bidders have been vying for the licenses. After 104 rounds of the clock phase, prices settled for 14,142 spectrum licenses, and just two licenses are still held by the FCC.

Now that the clock phase is complete, the auction moves into an assignment phase for specific blocks of spectrum. During the clock phase, bidders set their sights on either the MN or P licenses in each of  416 geographic Partial Economic Areas that make up the U.S. The MN licenses consist of 24 100-MHz license blocks in the 37 (37.6-38.6 GHz) and 39 GHz frequency ranges, and the P licenses are ten 100-MHz licenses in the 47 GHz frequency range of 47.2-48.2 GHz.

Posted license prices as of the close of round 104 in the clock phase for the top five most expensive license-types were:

-$37.5 million for MN licenses in New York, New York

-$29.46 million for MN licenses in Los Angeles, California

-$13.96 million for MN licenses in Chicago, Illinois

-$11.2 million for MN licenses in Boston, Massachusetts

-$10.55 million for MN licenses in San Francisco, California

The MN licenses raised significantly more bids and interest than the P licenses. In New York City, for instance, the 24 available MN licenses were bid up to $37.5 million, while the 10 P-block licenses went for $4.6 million.

The FCC has authorized either fixed or mobile use in the bands, and the commission has emphasized the sheer amount of spectrum on offer: at 3,400 megahertz, Auction 103 made available the largest amount of spectrum ever offered in an auction.

Auction 103 has already far outstripped the other two millimeter wave auctions in total bids raised. Auction 101 raised only about $702.6 million, because most of the spectrum in the band was already licensed and held  by carriers such as Verizon (which beat out AT&T in a bidding war for Straight Path that was driven by its high-band spectrum holdings) and AT&T (which acquired Fibertower and its mmWave spectrum holdings). Last year’s Auction 102, meanwhile, raised about $2 billion.

Comparatively, the 2017 600 MHz incentive auction raised nearly $19.8 billion, and $19.4 billion was generated in the 700 MHz auction held in 2008; both of those were dwarfed by the more than $44 billion in gross proceeds from the AWS-3 auction that ended in early 2015.

 “We’re excited to see the clock phase of this auction come to a conclusion,” said Scott Bergmann, CTIA’s SVP for regulatory affairs, in a statement on the conclusion of the auction’s clock phase. “Now it’s time to focus on freeing up critical mid-band spectrum so we can secure our leadership in the emerging 5G economy.”

 

ABOUT AUTHOR

Kelly Hill
Kelly Hill
Kelly reports on network test and measurement, as well as the use of big data and analytics. She first covered the wireless industry for RCR Wireless News in 2005, focusing on carriers and mobile virtual network operators, then took a few years’ hiatus and returned to RCR Wireless News to write about heterogeneous networks and network infrastructure. Kelly is an Ohio native with a masters degree in journalism from the University of California, Berkeley, where she focused on science writing and multimedia. She has written for the San Francisco Chronicle, The Oregonian and The Canton Repository. Follow her on Twitter: @khillrcr