Claro Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico Telephone
Subsidiary of América Móvil
Traded as Claro Puerto Rico
Industry Telecommunications
Predecessor Puerto Rico Telephone Authority (Autoridad de Teléfonos),
Puerto Rico Communications Corporation (Autoridad de Comunicaciones)
Founded 1858[1]
Headquarters Flagship headquarters
Mexico
Local headquarters
Puerto Rico Guaynabo
Area served
1.8 million subscribers[2]
Key people
Enrique Ortiz de Montellano (President and CEO)
Daniel Hajj Aboumrad (CEO, AMX)
Carlos J. García Moreno (CFO, AMX)
Products Broadband
Mobile phone
Telephone
Television
(Quadruple Player)
UMTS/HSDPA, HSPA+ GSM, Wireless Data Services, Push to Talk, LTE, IPTV
Revenue $1.2 billion USD
Number of employees
4,649
Parent América Móvil
Subsidiaries CoquiNet Corporation, Puerto Rico Telephone Company, Inc.
Website Claro Puerto Rico

Claro Puerto Rico is the largest Puerto Rican telecommunications services company. It is headquartered in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, and has operated for almost a century offering voice, data, long distance, broadband, directory publishing and wireless services for the island residents and businesses. It was founded by the brothers Behn, Sosthenes and Hernan.[3] Originally, Puerto Rico Telephone Company eventually spawned ITT Corporation, which was founded by Sosthenes Behn. The company was a public corporation of the government of Puerto Rico for many years until the majority stakes were acquired by GTE in the mid-1990s. It was a subsidiary of Verizon Communications until it was fully acquired by América Móvil in 2007.

History

On April 3, 2006, Verizon Communications announced it had agreed to sell its stakes in Telecomunicaciones de Puerto Rico, Inc. (TELPRI) and their sole ownership of the main Dominican telephone company Verizon Dominicana, now Claro República Dominicana, to América Móvil of Mexico.[4][5]

On December 31, 2006, Verizon and América Móvil completed Verizon Dominicana ownership transfer into Mexican hands. After another three months and various litigations upon the Federal Communications Commission, which had advise from the Puerto Rico Telecommunications Board, on March 30, 2007 TELPRI assets were completely acquired by América Móvil. The purchase was closed after an agreement to purchase from Popular, Inc., the government of Puerto Rico and the telephone company employee stock ownership program, the remaining stocks of TELPRI at the same price as Verizon.

To present day, América Móvil is the 100% owner of the company[6] and has rebranded the wireless arm of the company -formerly Verizon Wireless- under their international Claro brand.[7]

As of February 2011 America Móvil has rebranded its wireline (fixed line), broadband DSL, television and dial-up services as Claro. The only services that, for now, remain branded as Claro - Puerto Rico Telephone are business, government or corporate.

Effective March 2013, all Claro Puerto Rico have been rebranded. Services to business, government and enterprises are now offered under the Claro Empresas brand.

Relationship with Verizon Wireless

Until 2014, Claro continued offer a CDMA network for Verizon Wireless customers as well as legacy Claro customers. The CDMA network appeared as "Extended Network" coverage on Verizon[8] - meaning the majority of Verizon customers were able use it at no extra charge. Prepaid providers like Page Plus Cellular however must pay roaming in Puerto Rico.

Data access for Verizon customers was at full speed, however Claro did not deploy EV-DO before launching its GSM/UMTS network. As a result, Claro had the slowest CDMA coverage on Verizon Wireless, at sub-3G 1xRTT speeds, peaking at 144-230 kbit/s.

Data, like voice, was Extended Network coverage, which had per-KB roaming charges on some older plans.

As of 2014, the former Verizon CDMA network has been shut down, with Claro now using GSM, UMTS, and LTE exclusively. Verizon has since signed a 2G and 3G CDMA roaming agreement with Open Mobile, where Verizon customers can use its network without charge.

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, April 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.