The Federal Communications Commission’s 700 MHz auction took on a more heated feel today as the agency increased the number of rounds per day from 10 to 14. A similar move during the advanced wireless services auction in 2006 brought about an almost immediate end to the proceedings.
Today’s 700 MHz action remained mostly on B-Block licenses, with the block receiving all of the new bids in rounds 235, 236, 239, 240, 241 and 242. The block received a total of 33 bids focused on 8 licenses, including Stubenville, Ohio; Vieques, Culebra and Rincon, Puerto Rico; Dixie, Putnam and Walton, Fla.; and Garrett, Md. The most costly of the bunch was the Walton license that after round 242 was sitting at $409,000.
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Only the E-Block license covering America Samoa managed to break up the B Block party. The E Block license saw new bids in rounds 237 and 238 that pushed its total potential winning amount to $12,000.
The new bids were enough to push the auction’s total purse past the $19.592 billion mark, making the 700 MHz auction the FCC’s most lucrative ever.
There are six more rounds of bidding scheduled for today. The auction is set to conclude once a round does not receive any new bids. The FCC will then release the names of winners 10 days following the end of the auction.
700 MHz auction goes to 14 rounds per day: Move could speed auction end
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