Clearwire gains subscribers, remains in the red

18.02.2011
Clearwire gained 1.5 million subscribers in the fourth quarter of 2010 and more than doubled its revenue, but lost US$128 million, the mobile WiMax operator announced on Thursday.

The company ended the year with 4.4 million subscribers, up from 688,000 a year earlier. About 1.1 million of those were customers of Clearwire's own retail service, called Clear, while 3.3 million bought service on the WiMax network through partners such as Sprint Nextel and Comcast. The company collects far less revenue from wholesale than from retail subscribers and has previously disclosed disputes with Sprint over that revenue. In its financial press release Thursday, Clearwire said it believes a settlement of those issues with Sprint is imminent.

The quarterly report came amid indications that Sprint, the majority owner of Clearwire and the most important reseller of its 4G services, may be planning to build a 4G network of its own using LTE (Long Term Evolution). Clearwire has tested LTE itself and hinted it might deploy the technology in addition to WiMax, but .

Clearwire said its network now reaches 119 million potential subscribers around the U.S., nearly meeting the company's target of 120 million by the end of 2010. Clearwire has been struggling to continue the expansion of its network while losing money. After its third-quarter report, the company announced it would , delay the introduction of its first branded smartphone, and cut back marketing and advertising efforts, among other cost-cutting steps. Those moves came even after Clearwire had reported nearly a doubling in subscribers and a 114 percent gain in revenue.

Despite that third-quarter growth, Clearwire lost $139 million in the quarter. The company raised about $1.4 billion through a debt offering in early December but kept its austerity measures in place.

The financial report was the first for Clearwire under its new chairman, John Stanton, who was . He succeeded Craig McCaw, who founded the original Clearwire wireless broadband company.

The IDG News Service