The connectivity sector is clearly entering a new phase — one where headline subscriber growth is still important, but where investments, efficiency, and strategic pivots are increasingly shaping the narrative. Take T Mobile US: Its Q3 2025 results underline that growth is alive and well (record net adds, raised guidance), but the company also flagged elevated capital expenditure. In short, growth is there, but so is cost.
Further down the stack, you’ll find reporting on Orange’s Q3, which was also boosted by strong fiber and mobile additions, and raised full-year EBITDAaL guidance to at least 3.5%. Then there’s Nokia — the vendor behind much of the infrastructure build-out. Nokia beat estimates for Q3, powered by surging optical and cloud demand linked to AI and data centers. But importantly, it also announced it is scaling down passive venture-fund investments, signaling a shift toward more direct infrastructure exposure and less speculative venture activity.
Put together, these three companies reflect the core themes you’ll be reading about in this edition: growth is now being balanced with cost discipline; network investment is accelerating and being re-shaped by AI and cloud; and consolidation or strategic repositioning (be it Orange’s fiber growth, Nokia’s investment shift, or T-Mobile’s capex ramp) is becoming the norm rather than the exception.
In other news, Telefónica Germany is reportedly revisiting its partnership with 1&1, signaling renewed openness to cooperation — or even future consolidation — in a fiercely competitive market; Omdia’s new forecast highlights the next major battleground: 5G Fixed Wireless Access; and GBI’s partnership with Nokia to upgrade subsea and terrestrial networks across the Middle East underscores a quieter but essential story — the physical backbone of AI.
Catherine Sbeglia Nin
Managing Editor
RCR Wireless News
RCR Top Stories
T-Mo US posts record growth: T-Mobile US has reported strong Q3 2025 results with record customer additions and higher full-year guidance, though increased capital expenditures and investment spending tempered investor sentiment.
Telefónica reconsiders 1&1 deal: Telefónica Germany is reportedly seeking to revive its partnership with 1&1 after past setbacks, exploring closer cooperation —and potentially a future merger.
5G FWA set to surge: Omdia projects global 5G Fixed Wireless Access subscriptions will more than double to 150 million by 2030, led by India and the U.S., as operators pivot toward experience-based broadband models.
Critical AI paths: GBI’s subsea and terrestrial fiber upgrade with Nokia in the Middle East tells us a lot about the anatomy of the internet – and how to keep it resilient and performant for enterprises in the AI era.
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Beyond the Headlines
AWS outage in Industry 4.0: Beyond high-profile global consumer and consumer-enterprise disruptions, the AWS and Vodafone outages this month show how Industry 4.0 can fail without proper cloud and network redundancy.
T-Mo’s “secret sauce”: T-Mobile Business CMO tells RCR that 5G-Advanced and network slicing are the “secret sauce” behind its recently announced Edge Control’s ability to route local traffic securely and efficiently
AT&T posts Q3 results: During the investor call, AT&T CEO John Stankey said the company has begun deploying 3.45 GHz spectrum from EchoStar and expects mid-band coverage to reach two-thirds of the U.S. population by mid-November.
Telecom’s strategic advantage: Once ignored as trivial, tail spend — about 20% of telecom budgets — now demands focus. Combining AI and human insight helps operators boost compliance, efficiency, and innovation.
What We're Reading
Orange posts Q3 profit beat: French telco Orange has posted a stronger-than-expected Q3 core profit and upgraded its full-year EBITDAaL growth target to at least 3.5% from just over 3%, underpinned by cost control and customer gains.
Nokia optical sales get boost: Strong AI and cloud-driven demand for optical networks have helped Nokia top estimates this quarter — shining light on a telecom comeback powered by data-centre momentum.
Euro space giant: Airbus, Leonardo, and Thales have signed an MOU to create a European space powerhouse that merges many of their space activities into a single company, under the working title Projecty Bromo.
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