Monday, February 17, 2003

BCE Calls on Canadian Regulators to Lift Foreign Ownership Caps

Michael Sabia, CEO of BCE, Canada's largest communications company, called on Canadian regulatory authorities to raise foreign ownership restrictions from the current 33% to 49%. In a presentation to Canada's Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology, Sabia said greater flow of capital is always a positive move and the complete removal of ownership restrictions is likely inevitable given the globalization of the world's economies. He noted the regulatory focus on facilities-based competition has been instrumental in making Canada one of the few countries in the world which is "successfully managing the transition from a monopoly environment to a competitive one." BCE is against licensing and tiering proposals on the grounds that they are arbitrary, discriminatory and would diminish further investments in networks.
http://www.bce.ca/en/news/

  • Notes from Michael Sabia's Presentation


  • Canada has 5 national wireline networks and four national wireless networks


  • Canada has residential rates that are 25% lower than the U.S.; business rates are almost half


  • Canada has the second highest broadband penetration rate in the world; double the penetration rate in the U.S.


  • BCE, Canada's largest communications company, encompasses wireline, wireless, data/Internet and satellite network interests as well as content creation businesses, including CTV (Canada's leading private broadcaster), The Globe and Mail (newspaper), and Sympatico-Lycos (ISP/portal). In June 2002, SBC Communications agreed to sell its 20% stake in Bell Canada back to BCE Inc. for CDN$6.32 billion.