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Christian von der Ropp

According to p. 31, chapter 5 of the conditions for the frequency auctions (http://www.arcep.fr/uploads/tx_gsavis/11-0600.pdf) an operator who wins more than one frequency block in the 800MHz-auction will be subject to the obligation of letting roam any other operator, who (a) did not win an 800MHz block but (b) owns 2600MHz spectrum and (c) was qualified for the 800MHz auction and has unsuccessfully bid for an 800Mhz block. Further the demanding operator must have covered 25% of the population on the 2600MHz band before he can ask for such a roaming agreement.
However the four 800MHz blocks auctioned were not of equal size, but block B and C (which SFR won) had only 5 MHz each while A and D had 10 MHz each. So allthough SFR now own the same amount of 800MHz spectrum like their competitors they are subject to the roaming rule. What's even more surprising is the fact SFR have paid € 1065m for these 10 MHz while Bouygues have paid just € 683m and Orange € 891m for the same amount of spectrum.
I must confess that my French is far from perfect so maybe I'm missing some important point in the document, but it seems like SFR hasn't struck a bargain in this auction.
Regarding the term "full MVNO" on p.16 the auction conditions refer to a document published by "l'Autorité de la concurrence" (http://www.autoritedelaconcurrence.fr/pdf/avis/10a17.pdf) which on p.7 basicly defines a full MVNO as such who terminates calls himself. According to p.46 of the auction conditions admitting full MVNOs resulted in the bid amount being assessed as up to the double value depending on at how much spectrum each bid aimed for. If any MVNO-friendly bidder had bid for 5 MHz only his bid amount would have been considered as double the actual value. Bids for 10 MHz were considered being 1.5 times the actual value and if there had been a bid for 15 MHz it would have been multiplied by 1.33 if the bidder had accepted full MVNOs.
In times of significantly sinking interconnection fees (and further EU-regulation-driven declines impending) and low margins this strong preference of "full"-MVNO-friendly bidders doesn't make much sense since the "full"-MVNO business is on the downturn. The industry tends to merge network infrastructure (even among MNOs) rather than creating costly redundancy. Further the focus on "full" MVNOs with own termination capabilities is also questionable as LTE networks will be primarily data-driven and termination fees will be forced down by Mrs Kroes anyway thus having rather little impact on cost structure and competition. So it would have been sufficient to require bidders to accept "light" MVNOs.
While doing research on the frequency spectrums of French operators I created some charts on French Wikipedia, which give an overview of frequency distribution in France:
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_System_for_Mobile_Communications#GSM_900_actuel_.28R-GSM_et_E-GSM_inclus.29
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Mobile_Telecommunications_System#fr.C3.A9quences_FDD
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/LTE_(r%C3%A9seaux_mobiles)#Attribution_des_fr.C3.A9quences_en_France
Apparently frequencies in the GSM and UMTS bands are more or less equally distributed - at least there's no reason to affect SFR from that point of view.

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