Verizon — Auction
Verizon needed a miracle. It needed the C-Band. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Auction 107 was designed for bloodsport. It wasn't a simple auction where you raise a paddle. It was a complex, anonymous, computer-driven bidding war that lasted 34 days .
Verizon had won the lion’s share: 3,511 licenses. But the price tag—$45.4 billion just for the rights (excluding the billions needed to actually clear the satellites and build the towers)—was so massive that Verizon’s stock price immediately cratered. verizon auction
Did the bet pay off?
Financially, it’s still a heavy lift. Verizon is still paying down the debt from that auction. But strategically, it worked. Customer churn (people leaving the network) slowed dramatically. The "Verizon is slow" narrative vanished. The Verizon C-Band auction will be studied in business schools for decades. It is a case study in desperate offense . Verizon needed a miracle
It was the most expensive poker game ever played. There were no felt tables, no sunglasses, and no chips sliding across velvet. Instead, the bidding happened in silence, inside data centers, with billions of dollars loaded into algorithms. It wasn't a simple auction where you raise a paddle