Filed by Starry Holdings, Inc.
Pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933
and deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: FirstMark Horizon Acquisition Corp.
Commission File No.: 001-39585
Date: January 19, 2022
Boston
Globe
Wireless Internet firm Starry shows growth, looks to merger to go public
By Aaron Pressman, Boston Globe
January 19, 2022
Internet service company Starry, aiming to go public soon, steadily increased its base of paying subscribers last year, though it remains a pipsqueak
compared to rivals like Comcast, Verizon, and Charter.
In a meeting with investors on Tuesday ahead of its planned merger with a special purpose
acquisition company, or SPAC, Starry said it had 63,230 household subscribers at the end of 2021, an 83 percent gain from a year earlier. And the Boston-based company has deployed its wireless technology in areas covering a total of
5.3 million households, up 28 percent from the end of 2020.
The network is now available in parts of five cities, including Boston, with one
more Columbus, Ohio coming soon. The target customer for now is people living in multi-unit apartment buildings, though the Columbus service will be the companys first available to individual homes.
Unlike a cable or telephone company providing Internet service, Starry doesnt have to run wires to customers homes and apartments. Instead, it
puts its radio gear on rooftops and cellular towers and gives each customer a compatible wireless router.
That allows it to expand at a fraction of the
cost of wired services and offer cheaper rates to people living in places that typically havent had much competition for broadband, according to analyst Walt Piecyk at LightShed Partners, who watched Tuesdays presentation.
The tech delivers better speed at a lower price for a customer base that has not had many options to date, Piecyk said.
Starry claimed on Tuesday that its network cost 1 percent the cost of a fiber optic cable network for similar coverage.
The companys expansion last year came amid electronic-component supply shortages that have hampered others in the Internet service market. Starry
assembles its own wireless equipment, giving it more flexibility to swap components when a shortage hits. Still, it has had to deal with the pandemic and worker shortages like every other business.