The deal is expected to be announced Monday, according to CNBC’s web
site, which cited anonymous sources ‘‘close to the situation.’’
The transaction could make Sprint, the third-largest U.S. mobile
phone company, a tougher competitor against its bigger rivals, Verizon
Wireless and AT&T. Sprint has 56 million subscribers, about half the
amount of Verizon Wireless, the leading U.S. mobile phone company.
Softbank will buy $8 billion in shares from Sprint and another $12
billion from current Sprint shareholders, the CNBC report said. Softbank
will offer $7.30 a share, CNBC said, about 27 percent above Friday’s
closing price of $5.73.
John Taylor, a spokesman for Sprint, declined to comment beyond the
company’s statement last week confirming that it was in talks with
Softbank.
Word of the talks pushed up Sprint’s stock more than 14 percent on Thursday.
Sprint has struggled in recent years to compete with Verizon and
AT&T. The company has $21 billion in long-term debt, and has
launched a costly network restructuring and signed a long-term contract
to buy $15.5 billion worth of iPhones from Apple over four years.
Tokyo-based Softbank, once the underdog in Japan’s telecom industry,
has seen its fortunes improve since it started selling the iPhone in
2008. It was initially the only Japanese phone company to offer it.
Rival KDDI Corp. started selling the iPhone late last year
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