The 26th round finished yesterday (Friday - Feb. 1, 2008) afternoon - here's a quick update from the FCC auction site:
- Bidding Rounds to Date: 26
- Bid totals to Date: $18,554,080,600
- The A and B-Blocks have been getting most of the attention lately:
- The Los Angeles A-Block leads the A's with a current bid of $580,268,000.
- The Chicago B-Block leads the B's with a current bid of $892,400,000.
- There has not been a C-Block 50 state package bid since it passed the FCC reserve price on Thursday. The current C-Block 50 state package bid is $4,713,823,000.
- The public safety D-Block has not had a bid in 25 consecutive rounds and is stuck at $472,042,000, well below the $1.3 Billion reserve price set by the FCC.
- E-Block bidding has been slow with the New York City E-Block leading at $178,897,000.
- 23 licenses had not registered a bid at the end of round 26, 19 of these 23 are in the E-Block.
- It looks (to me anyways) like the C-Block bidding may be done. Since the FCC reserve price of $4.6 Billion has been passed, the open-access that Google wanted is assured. We won't know who the winning bidders are until after the auctions have closed but I'd say Google is the current leading C-Block bidder.
- Right now it does not look like the D-Block will meet the $1.3 Billion reserve price and will end up being re-auctioned by the FCC.
- A number of E-Block licenses will not meet minimum bids and will also be re-auctioned.
- The FCC had set an original goal of $10 Billion for the auction. With current bids totaling over $18 Billion, it appears the auction (from the FCC's perspective) will be a success.
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Read Show Notes and listen to Mike Q and my latest Podcast titled The FCC 700 MHz Spectrum Auction linked here.
Listen directly in your web browser by clicking here.
Podcasts also free on iTunes.
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