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Globalive seeks cash to build new cellular network

Globalive seeks cash to build new cellular network

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 04 Sep 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

Having spent hundreds of millions in the recent wireless spectrum auction, the company is on the hunt for investors who will help finance his long-term plans. Anthony Lacavera talks to Network World Canada

However, yesterday he also launched a Website called www.wirelesssoapbox.com, ostensibly to find out what kind of service Canadians want from the new carrier. It also serves as a publicity machine for the yet to be born service.

Of the new entrants, Globalive didn’t spend the most on spectrum. Quebecor, which owns cableco Videotron, was the top bidder. But Globalive won the most spectrum across most of the country – except for coverage over Montreal.

Videotron and a numbered company, 6934579 Canada Inc., which had been headed by Montreal financial firm Novacap and includes U.S. venture capital firms, hold spectrum that would give Globalive true national coverage in major urban centres. The federal ban on auction participants has only just ended, meaning Lacavera is just starting to call what he hopes will be his allies. He want to see “if there’s common ground for a positive relationship and partnership,” including the sharing of tower or antenna locations to help defray each others costs.

The plans of 6934579 Canada Inc. are a particular mystery. One of its U.S. investors told IT World Canada before the auction that the group planned to buy enough spectrum for national coverage. However, before bidding started Novacap said there were problems finding Canadian partners and that after the auction finished the northern ownership would change. As a result, with its Canadian financing unsettled, the group was able to have high bids on only four licences totalling $52 million. For Globalive and other would-be newcomers who want a national presence, they are attractive: 10Mhz licences covering southern Quebec, eastern Quebec, southern Ontario and eastern Ontario.

The would-be new Canadian shareholders of this company, with just over 66 per cent ownership, include BMO Capital, the venture capital arm of the Bank of Montreal, Rho Canada Ventures and another numbered company. Each have 22 per cent of the shares, while U.S. venture investors would evenly split the rest.

It is unknown if those investors are satisifed with what the numbered company won and still want to participate, and whether Industry Canada has approved the new ownership. Calls to BMO Capital and several other of the numbered company’s Canadian investors in the past several days have not been returned.

This week was the deadline for new entrants to submit their ownership documents.

Industry Canada, which has set foreign ownership restrictions, still has to certify the bidders. Other spectrum winners are also being cagy. Spokesmen for Bragg Communications of Halifax, which won spectrum in the Maritimes and central Ontario, and Toronto’s Data and Audio-Visual Entertainment (DAVE), which won 10Mhz licences in southern Ontario, Vancouver, Calgary Edmonton and several smaller cities, also refused in the past few days to be interviewed.

Meanwhile Lacavera, with his wealthy backer behind him, is plowing ahead. Already he is looking at potential antenna sites. Orascom, which sent several advisors to Toronto to help Lacavera through the auction, is a valuable and experienced asset, he said, which has built some 40 wireless companies around the world. As such it can get “great vendor pricing,” he said.










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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon I'm assistant editor of ComputerWorld Canada covering network infrastructure, communications and government IT issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, I've written ... more

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by howard solomonsometimes silence is golden, but in the case of 6934579 canada inc. it's positively deafening. this is the numbered company that won some $52 million in interesting spectrum in the recent aws auction, including 10mhz covering southern quebec. globalive communications, which won spectrum across much of the nation except in southern quebec, must be coveting this licence. it wi
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