The Secret Broadband, Internet, Cable, Wireless and Phone Networks
Forget about the NSA
and the phone networks. There’s another secret network you should know
about. I call it “special excess,” though it’s known in the telecom
industry as “special access.” You won’t hear about these secret wires.
For example, when AT&T and Verizon tell us they are losing lines,
the special access wires are not part of the accounting, even though
they represent the majority of access lines in America. Or when you hear
that local service is losing money, the secret is that much of the
revenues from these “special” networks are not being added to that
calculation and are hidden from sight. Some analysts estimate that they
are overcharging the competitors and businesses that use these networks
by more than
$12 billion annually. Or worse, this network has obscene profit margins of over 100 percent last time there was any data available, which was 2007.
And yet there’s
nothing special about special access lines. They are just more wires and
services that are part of the network, as this diagram shows.
And of course you
are paying for this excess. When you make a wireless call, it ends up
going to a cell tower and then takes a ride on a wire. Or when you
download or upload using your broadband connection, these bits are all
traveling over these monopoly wires.
In fact,
Nearly every American uses high-capacity broadband lines each day. These lines connect our cell phones, workplaces, banks, factories, data centers, universities, and hospitals to enable communications among customers, employees, suppliers, government, and each one of us.
And according to
most sources, these wires are monopoly products, as the incumbent phone
companies — AT&T, Verizon and Centurylink — control an estimated 80
to 90 percent of the market in their own territories.
This is one of the
reasons that America’s broadband is expensive or your cellphone service
has data caps. Think of it like the gas in your car. They keep raising
the price. Special excess is the gas of the Internet; the more expensive
it gets, the less you get to travel, and at slower speeds, and the more
you have to pay.
And at this time
there is a war going on about these services and wires, even though this
has long been simmering, in part because the FCC has been kicking the
ball down court since 2005 and letting the incumbent companies —
AT&T, Verizon, and Centurylink — reap the benefits.
But this is only a small brushfire compared to the host of hidden secrets no one is talking about — until now. I’ll get to that.
AT&T Says “Go Eat Some Cake” to Competitors and Businesses
Why now? In October
2013 AT&T decided that because “special access” is a monopoly
service, and because the company is closing down the “old networks” and
going to Internet protocols (IP), where there are no regulations or
requirements, the company can simply raise rates or start phasing out
long-term contracts to competitors.
And at some point in the future,
since they control special access (the price of gas) as well as the use
of the wireline broadband, Internet, phone cable and even the wireless
networks, they’ll just get rid of those other pesky companies —
wireline, broadband or wireless.
To demonstrate the
arrogance, AT&T sent this letter (excerpt) to their business
customers and competitors using these networks:
AT&T Announces the elimination of Term Plans Exceeding 3 Years for Multiple Digital Services. Date: October 10, 2013Effective November 9, 2013, AT&T 13-State no longer will offer new term plans longer than 36 months for Tariffed TDM services. ... AT&T 13-State is modifying its ordering systems to reflect these tariff changes. Upon completion of those modifications, if a customer submits an order for a term plan longer than 36 months, the order will be rejected automatically.
After an outcry by companies whose business depends on these services, from Sprint to Earthlink (the link includes the AT&T letter), the FCC stepped in to halt AT&T’s plans and started an investigation at the end of 2013. And it’s about time, since the last data collected by the FCC was in 2007.
America has been
held hostage by three companies — AT&T, Verizon and Centurylink —
who control monopoly wires in their territories and don’t compete, and
the government has been asleep (or worse).
Obscene Profits: Overcharging on Special Access Is Really the Overcharging of You
As of 2007, the
profit margins for these services would make a Wall Street analyst
drool. As this next chart shows, at one point the profits were regulated
at 11.25 percent by the FCC — that’s the gray portion all the way at
the bottom of the chart that says the “last FCC authorized rate of
return.”
And then wham!
Let the good times roll. According to a few sources, as of 2007 the
profit margins ballooned to an average of 101 percent for the incumbents
AT&T, Verizon and Centurylink. (See presentation.)
How much is that in extra dollars collected? According to a report by Economics & Technology:
Over the combined four year period of 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006 the Regional Bell Companies (now Verizon AT&T and Centurylink) overcharged purchasers of special access service almost $28-billion.
And in 2007 they estimated that it was $9 to $9.5 billion.
Simply projecting
special access overcharging forward using the whopping $9 billion a
year, about $91 billion extra was overcharged by the end of 2013.
However, according to some, revenues have been increasing, and they
estimate it to be around $12 billion, bringing the total to over $100 billion — and counting.
And this should all
be thought of as a “pass through” — because someone has to pay it, and
it might as well be you. So the cellphone companies’ costs for data, the
data caps, or the costs of broadband or even the speed of America’s
broadband connections are all tied up in this.
And other reports have been published, such as one by Economists Incorporated (EI), which claimed that new jobs and economic grow would accrue if these fees were reduced:
[Using] mid-range assumptions, a 50% reduction in special access prices would result in a $20-$22 billion increase in U.S. output, a $4.4-$4.8 billion increase in employee earnings, an increase of between 94,000 and 101,000 jobs and an increase in value added to the U.S. economy of between $11.8 - $12.4 billion.
Now for the Secret: That’s Not All of the Overcharging or Hanky Panky
Of course, the phone
companies claim that these numbers are inflated, that the markets have
changed since 2007, especially since everything is going IP. But no one
is talking about the other secret money and more customer overcharging.
The real “special
access” kicker is the collusion between the wired state-based utility
and all the separate entities that offer wireless or broadband or
Internet or long distance, among others services.
In our report on Verizon New York’s affiliate transactions
with the other Verizon affiliate companies, it was clear that Verizon
Wireless is getting serious financial perks on special access fees and
even the “special access” wires, such as the wires that run to the cell
towers, and these add expenses to the cost of local phone service.
Fran Shammo,
Verizon’s EVP and CFO, stated that the wireline construction budgets
have been diverted to charge customers for the wireless companies’
construction needs:
The fact of the matter is Wireline capital — and I won’t get the number but it’s pretty substantial — is being spent on the Wireline side of the house to support the Wireless growth. So the IP backbone, the data transmission, fiber to the cell, that is all on the Wireline books but it’s all being built for the Wireless Company.
And it gets worse. In our analysis of the “special access” services sold to wireless competitors, it appears that Verizon could be paying one third of what other competitors are paying, based on Verizon’s own SEC-filed state reports.
And this is just
scratching the surface of these collusive ties of the special access
networks with the rest of the wireline and wireless networks owned by
the same company.
The Double Whammy on Customers
The telcos have us
coming and going. Because the competitors are being squeezed, the other
wireless or broadband companies can’t simply lower their prices, and
worse, AT&T and Verizon, the incumbent phone companies, have given
their own affiliates financial advantages. And so the special access
costs are then passed through to the customers. But it gets worse.
Verizon is dumping expenses into the utility and not paying their fair
share back, and there’s a vicious circle as the “losses” are being used
as an excuse to raise rates — and save money on taxes. So these fees end
up impacting all services in varying degrees, and we pay for it
multiple times and in multiple ways.
And this collusion
appears to pay off. Verizon’s current profit margin for wireless
services was about 50 percent at the end of 2013, and that’s in part
because they aren’t paying their fair share to use the wired networks —
more profits for wireless.
Of course there have
been no audits of the affiliate transactions for at least a decade or
two, either by the FCC or by the state commissions. Worse, the
companies no longer have to give the FCC data for public inspection, nor
are they required to supply their financials to the state public
service commissions that are made public, or even supply any state-based
information to the SEC, such as filed quarterly or annual reports.
Ouija boards and
tarot cards are all we have left to cipher what the companies are really
doing with these affiliates behind the scenes.
Should Sprint and T-Mobile Merge?
I’m never for
eliminating competitors, but it is clear that there are no other
companies to add balance to this collusion of the wireline “special
excess” networks and the wireless companies.
Neither Sprint nor T-Mobile has the majority of market share today,
and combined, they aren’t as large as either AT&T or Verizon, who
own the wires and have the majority of the wireless markets.
In the end, even if
the FCC adjusts the profit margins on special access, besides a lawsuit
by AT&T and Verizon the next day, they probably won’t fix the
collusion of the company’s affiliates to harm competitors and thus harm
customers.
This is also tied to
the net neutrality issue, as competition is the preferred fix. If the
service provider or ISP blocks or degrades your service, you can just
take your business elsewhere. Today, there are few places to go, and
that also depends on where you live.
Without strong
competitors with deep pockets who want to take on the incumbents on all
levels of services — wireline, wireless, broadband, or cable, etc. —
these issues won’t be resolved in the public’s favor. Worse, depending
on the FCC to fix this is problematic, especially if there is a
Republican president and therefore a Republican FCC after the next
election, which could undo any changes that were made.
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