AT&T's $85 billion Time Warner deal closes

AT&T's $85 billion Time Warner deal closes
AT&T has closed its $85 billion acquisition of Time Warner following a favorable court ruling.

The Trump Administration was opposed to the No. 2 Carrier in the United States acquiring Time Warner. In November 2017, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a lawsuit aimed at halting the proposed acquisition arguing that it would be harmful for consumers.



In the lawsuit, the DOJ argued that AT&T owning both DirecTV and Time Warner would provide it an unfair advantage over rival pay TV providers. U.S. District Judge Richard disagreed with the DOJ and ruled that the proposed takeover does not violate antitrust laws in the United States.

Despite the deal being closed, the DOJ still has sixty days to appeal if it should choose to do so.

Judge Leon's decision was predicted to prompt a wave of takeovers between tech and media companies in the United States. Within days, Comcast had offered to purchase 21st Century Fox' media assets in a $65 billion all-cash deal. Comcast sent a letter directly to the Fox board, attempting to sway it away from a deal with the Walt Disney Company.

Source: Reuters News Agency

Written by: James Delahunty @ 15 Jun 2018 6:32
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  • 2 comments
  • KillerBug

    So the judge who previously said that NSA mass surveillance was unconstitutional but that it could continue anyway now says that two companies that already have countless regional monopolies joining up is just fine. Great. At least we still get to pay extra on our bills to pay for the infrastructure updates that are so overdue and which won't be made because of a lack of competition.

    17.6.2018 09:44 #1

  • hearme0

    Originally posted by KillerBug: So the judge who previously said that NSA mass surveillance was unconstitutional but that it could continue anyway now says that two companies that already have countless regional monopolies joining up is just fine. Great. At least we still get to pay extra on our bills to pay for the infrastructure updates that are so overdue and which won't be made because of a lack of competition.

    Originally posted by KillerBug: So the judge who previously said that NSA mass surveillance was unconstitutional but that it could continue anyway now says that two companies that already have countless regional monopolies joining up is just fine. Great. At least we still get to pay extra on our bills to pay for the infrastructure updates that are so overdue and which won't be made because of a lack of competition.

    I so agree with this!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Anyone disagreeing is chemically imbalanced.

    17.6.2018 17:42 #2

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