Thursday, August 29, 2019

Carlos Aya Caro to assume as CEO and President of Telefónica México in replacement of Carlos Morales Paulín

The appointment is given in a framework of speculation about the possible sale of the Mexican subsidiary, as happened with the Central American divisions.

Carlos Aya Caro, 49, was appointed as the new CEO and President of Telefónica México, replacing Carlos Morales Paulín, who left the company after 17 years (during this period he held management positions in Mexico, Spain and Brazil).

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América Latina · Operators17/04/2024

América Móvil's earnings fell 55% due to peso strength

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Panamá · Regulation · Operators08/04/2024

Liberty and Millicom compete to conquer Digicel's 300,000 customers

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América Latina · Mobile · Operators · Equipment Providers and Network Solutions04/04/2024

Latin America already has 87 mobile private network deployments

According to the GSA, the mining industry is the one that most demands these technologies, totaling 30 cases to date. Behind it are the Oil & Gas and manufacturing sectors, with eight cases each. These deployments are favored by the presence of Advanced 4G networks, already well-established, and 5G, which is taking its first steps.

Paraguay · Operators26/03/2024

Government analyzes partial privatization of Copaco

The state operator is going through a delicate moment. Its income does not cover operating expenses and it must fulfil a debt obligation of US$110 million. Furthermore, the lack of investments led to the obsolescence of its infrastructure. Oscar Stark, president of the firm, states that alternatives are being evaluated to obtain the necessary funds, including the possibility of adding private partners. And he believes that in 18 months "the situation will be resolved."

América Latina · Mobile · Fixed Broadband · Internet & OTT07/03/2024

The challenge of the Caribbean islands is to expand coverage and reduce connectivity prices

A report from the International Telecommunication Union focuses on small island developing states. The data shows a significant gap between global averages and those of these economies, especially in fixed broadband and service values. The Caribbean's performance falls below that of African islands and above Pacific islands.

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