- Regulators’ courtroom defeats may remove obstacles to deals
- The $69 billion deal poised to move ahead amid M&A drought
Stiffer enforcement by the FTC and Justice Department under the Biden administration has deterred a
“Deterrence is less effective if you don’t win your cases,” said Washington antitrust lawyer
A rise in M&A activity would be welcome news on Wall Street, where the major banks all reported drops in merger advisory revenue for the second quarter.
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To be sure, stepped-up antitrust enforcement is far from the only drag on M&A activity. Higher interest rates that make acquisitions more costly to finance are widely seen as the main brake on dealflow. And many expect antitrust enforcement to remain an obstacle. On
The Microsoft-Activision deal is the latest defeat for FTC Chair
Khan’s counterpart at the Justice Department,
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Lawyers say companies may now feel emboldened to move ahead with deals even in the face of regulatory challenges.
“The government has a poor track record,” said
There are a number of deals pending that will continue to test the power of US regulators, including
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Kroger Chief Executive Officer
If companies “have the stomach and readiness to fight their case in court, there is a pathway to clear deals,” said
Garza cautions that fighting regulators is still a tough — and expensive — proposition, and not every company has the resources of Microsoft or Activision. Legal experts said such a fight would cost anywhere from $20 million to $100 million in lawyers’ bills. “For some parties and some deals, that price tag may be too high,” Garza said.
Microsoft was mainly represented on the corporate side by New York’s
The government’s record has been particularly poor in cases involving so-called vertical mergers, which involve companies that operate in the same supply chain but don’t compete directly. That’s the category in which the Microsoft-Activision deal fell.
‘Litigate the Fix’
Garza said those cases are harder for the government to win at trial because they often rely on speculation that a deal will worsen competition in the future, rather than present market conditions.
US courts have shown themselves open to companies’ proposals to “fix” issues with vertical mergers, such as Microsoft’s promise to keep Activision’s popular “Call of Duty” franchise available on Sony PlayStation consoles rather than make it exclusive to its own Xbox.
Openness to fixes has also begun distinguishing US from EU and UK antitrust regulators. The British Competition and Markets Authority on Wednesday granted
Khan’s FTC is still weighing a legal challenge to the Broadcom-VMware deal.
“The agency’s turned them down, so the parties then said, ‘Well, we’ll ask the judge to permit it,’” said Salop.
--With assistance from
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Anthony Lin
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