By Ben Dutton
Tuesday 3rd October 2000 |
Text too small? |
The "Relationship Package" as it has been coined is described as "a commercially pragmatic agreement between competitors who have decided to put their differences aside and to adopt a better working relationship." It is for a term of twelve months.
Major highlights of the package include an interconnection agreement that will see Clear paying Telecom $35 million over the next year; origination and termination by Telecom of 1,828 million minutes of long-distance calls by Clear customers; a data package giving Clear wholesale and resale access to Telecom's Jetstream service and a confidential settlement of ongoing litigation in which both parties will withdraw from the court proceedings currently between them.
Theresa Gattung, Telecom's CEO, said the approach to interconnection is innovative, setting a single price for a 12-month package of long-distance and mobile interconnection minutes.
The package also clears up the long-running 0867 number connection argument between the two companies. Clear had claimed that by implementing the 0867 number, Telecom had breached their 1996 interconnection agreement.
Clear's incoming CEO, Peter Kaliaropoulos said the 12 month term of the Relationship Package acknowledged the potential for change to the telecommunications environment as a result of the Ministerial Inquiry and left both parties free to negotiate more enduring agreements once the Inquiry's recommendations had been implemented.
Indeed, the timing of this announcement has not been lost on many industry watchers. The Ministerial Inquiry is due to report its findings tomorrow - and just how this new agreement between old rivals will affect the Inquiry's findings will remain to be seen.
Industry commentator Bruce Simpson, who publishes a daily "new economy" news and commentary website called Aardvark, said that the resolution of the outstanding issues was not unexpected in many quarters. "The telecommunications industry has become so competitive in some areas that I suspect both companies realise there's little value in wasting their resources on protracted legal battles," he said.
He also said that free ISP's would be affected by the package. "The fact that Clear won't be receiving payment for terminating Internet calls from the Telecom network must surely cast doubt on the continued viability of the future of those "free Internet" providers which are highly reliant on a share of those revenues."
Telecom's share price certainly wasn't buoyed by the news. The company was once again hit by a further wave of selling this morning, dropping at one stage to $5.70.
No comments yet
Telecom Corporation of New Zealand (TEL)
Telecom in drive to latch on to growing data usage with 4G mobile launch next month
Telecom lines up to buy 700MHz spectrum to extend reach of 4G network
Telecom backs setting copper prices until 2020, warns against getting too far away from input cost
Telecom puts $60M price tag on new Auckland data centre, Hawkins, AECOM win build
Telecom ends jobs purge, looks for ‘more sophisticated’ ways to save money
Telecom FY earnings fall to bottom of guidance range, sees unchanged dividend in 2014
Telecom takes spat with Vodafone to regulator after dropping court action
Telecom unbundling key to regulator's copper conundrum
Telecom lures customers to faster services in EPL deal