Andreas Bierwirth, T-Mobile Austria Boss, Threatens To Quit Country: Paper

T-Mobile Boss Threatens To Quit Country
In this Feb. 25, 2011 file photo, a T-Mobile store is shown in Palo Alto, Calif. The parent company of T-Mobile USA says it is merging its cell phone business with MetroPCS Communications. Deutsche Telekom AG says its board of directors and the supervisory board have approved the merger Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2012. It says the board of MetroPCS has also accepted the deal. It says Deutsche Telekom will hold 74 percent of the new business. MetroPCS's shareholders will have the remaining stake and receive a payment of about US dollar 1.5 billion. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)
In this Feb. 25, 2011 file photo, a T-Mobile store is shown in Palo Alto, Calif. The parent company of T-Mobile USA says it is merging its cell phone business with MetroPCS Communications. Deutsche Telekom AG says its board of directors and the supervisory board have approved the merger Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2012. It says the board of MetroPCS has also accepted the deal. It says Deutsche Telekom will hold 74 percent of the new business. MetroPCS's shareholders will have the remaining stake and receive a payment of about US dollar 1.5 billion. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

VIENNA (Reuters) - T-Mobile Austria could slash investment or even withdraw from the country if it is not allowed to compete with rivals that get frequencies needed for fourth-generation LTE mobile products, CEO Andreas Bierwirth told a newspaper.

The Deutsche Telekom unit is Austria's second-biggest mobile provider after Telekom Austria. Two smaller rivals - France Telecom SA's Orange and Hutchison's H3G - are trying to merge in a deal that is under regulatory review.

Bierwirth told WirtschaftsBlatt in an interview printed on Wednesday he was worried what would happen if H3G got LTE spectrum at the same time as a merger came through.

H3G and Telekom Austria's A1 would then, for two years, have an advantage by owning frequencies needed for Apple's popular iPhone 5 to use LTE, he said.

"That would be a massive skewing of competition," he added.

In such a case T-Mobile would need to review its market positioning.

"We would scale back investment plans massively," he said.

Asked if that meant T-Mobile could quit Austria, he said: "I wouldn't want to rule out any options for this case."

Austrian regulators denied a website report on Tuesday that European Union and domestic officials had already agreed to approve H3G's takeover of Orange Austria. "There is nothing to this," a spokesman for the Austrian competition authority said.

Hutchison 3G this month made more concessions in a bid to get clearance for its planned 1.3 billion euro ($1.7 billion)purchase of Orange Austria. The European Commission is set to decide on the case by December 21.

(Reporting by Michael Shields; Editing by Mark Potter)

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