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T-Mobile Continues to Flounder, Loses 93,000 Customers

T-Mobile USA, the fourth-largest U.S. wireless carrier, said Thursday that it added crucial contract-signing customers even though it lost subscribers in the second quarter as prepaying subscribers fled to other carriers.

It’s a reversal of what the carrier had seen over the past year — a reduction in contract subscribers since last year’s second quarter, while adding prepaying ones.

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Now, tough competition in the prepaid market, where customers don’t sign contracts and usually pay much less per month, means T-Mobile subscribers are being siphoned off. It lost a net 199,000 prepaying customers, compared with a gain of 268,000 in the same quarter last year.

The rate of prepaying subscribers who cancel service every month rose from the already high 7 percent a year ago to 7.6 percent.

T-Mobile, the Bellevue, Wash.-based unit of German phone company Deutsche Telekom AG, added a net 106,000 contract customers, helped by a variety of promotional offers. That was up from 56,000 gains in the same quarter last year, and from a loss of 118,000 customers in the first quarter of 2010.

T-Mobile’s improvement in contracts contrasts with the two larger carriers, Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc., which have both posted large declines in contract additions this year. However, they’re still growing much faster than T-Mobile. Sprint Nextel Corp. is still posting net subscriber losses.

In total, T-Mobile lost 93,000 customers, ending the quarter with 33.6 million.

T-Mobile posted net income of $404 million, down from $425 million a year ago. Revenue was $5.36 billion, almost flat with $5.34 billion a year ago. Revenues were helped by higher sales of smart phones, balanced by lower monthly calling fees. T-Mobile is aggressively boosting its data network speeds to compete with the bigger players.

Parent company Deutsche Telekom delisted its shares from the New York Stock Exchange in June, a move it said was aimed at lowering administrative costs. The shares continue to trade on the Frankfurt exchange, where they fell 0.7 percent.

Ian Bell
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