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AT&T leaves competitors flat-footed as a carrier

DBS containersatellite TV and EchoStar wireless, pre-packaged Chapter 11 bankruptcy on June 30 in federal court in Houston.

The filing ends months of speculation about the future of the company’s potential fourth-generation wireless carrier.

More than 88% of Dish’s bonds support the filing, which was triggered when the company was unable to repay $2 billion in senior secured notes bearing 7.75% interest, due July 1.

There is a twist to this story, and it works AT&T’s grace

AT&T’s spectrum deal is at the center of the story

EchoStar took on about $25 billion in debt after merging with Dish in 2024. It relied on cash infusions from AT&T ( T ) to bridge the gap between its debt payments and cash flow.

  • Back in August 2025, AT&T agreed to buy about 50 megahertz of nationwide spectrum from EchoStar for $23 billion.

  • That includes 30 MHz of 3.45 GHz mid-band airwaves and 20 MHz of 600 MHz low-band spectrum, spread over more than 400 markets.

  • The deal was expected to close in mid-2026, but regulatory delays pushed back the timeline, leaving EchoStar without the cash it needed to make the July 1 payment.

Apparently, AT&T’s pending spectrum purchase is a deal whose delays helped push Dish DBS into bankruptcy court.

And when that sale finally closes, AT&T stands to gain from it twice.

John Stankey, Chairman and CEO of AT&T struck a spectrum deal with EchoStarBill Pugliano/Getty Images

AT&T’s network already relies on this strategy

AT&T CFO Pascal Desroches has repeatedly described the company’s approach as playing the long game rather than chasing quick wins.

Speaking at the Mizuho Technology Conference on June 9, Desroches said:

“So we’re building a network, not just for today, we’re building — a network for the future. And that network will be AI-ready for whatever work you’re producing.”

The CFO pointed to increased demand for bandwidth from AI, autonomous vehicles and smart devices.

More from AT&T:

Once the sale closes, AT&T adds significant amounts of low-band and mid-band capacity, the kind of spectrum that Verizon and T-Mobile have pursued in recent years.

Under the partnership agreement, EchoStar is relinquishing parts of Boost Mobile’s radio network and switching to a hybrid setup where AT&T’s network carries Boost’s traffic.

Boost, which has about 7.6 million subscribers today, down from more than nine million when EchoStar acquired it, is not part of the bankruptcy filing. And it’s not like its sister Gen Mobile.

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