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Sprint plans to skip upcoming spectrum auction

Nov 13 (Reuters) - Sprint Corp said on Wednesday it would not take part in an upcoming government auction of so-called H-Block airwaves, potentially leaving the field clear for Dish Network Corp (NasdaqGS: DISH - news) to buy the spectrum.

Sprint (Berlin: 2S7.BE - news) announced the decision a day after No. 4 U.S. mobile provider T-Mobile US Inc, said it too had decided against participating in the auction, which is slated to take place in January.

While Sprint already bought a huge amount of spectrum in July through its take over of Clearwire Corp, analysts had still expected Sprint to bid for the H-Block spectrum because it is adjacent to other Sprint spectrum holdings. The U.S. government had set a Nov. 15 deadline for applications for the auction.

Shares in satellite TV provider Dish rose 1.6 percent to $51.19 on Nasdaq after the news. Its shares had traded above $50 for the first time since 2000 on Tuesday after its earnings report.

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BTIG analyst Walter Piecyk said Sprint's decision was good news for Dish because it may not face any rival bidders. He does not expect AT&T Inc (NYSE: T - news) or Verizon Wireless to bid for the spectrum. AT&T declined to comment.

Verizon (NYSE: VZ - news) representatives did not respond to several requests for comment.

Dish has already told the Federal Communications Commission that it would bid a base price of about $1.5 billion in the auction if the FCC (Madrid: FCC.MC - news) grants it waivers of conditions related to its existing spectrum licenses.

If Dish wins the spectrum without having to pay any more than the reserve price, Piecyk said ift implies a price that is half that of recent transactions in the industry.

Dish investors have been waiting for almost a year for the company to decide how it will use its existing wireless airwaves. One of its options could be to forge a network partnership with a rival such as Sprint or T-Mobile US.