- DOJ, FTC overhaul guidelines in bid to limit more deals
- Agencies hope to avoid court losses like Microsoft-Activision
US antitrust agencies stepped up the Biden administration’s
The changes come on the heels of several bruising defeats for the government in blocking vertical mergers. Last week, the
The 13 new guidelines proposed Wednesday by the Justice Department and FTC are part of an effort to curb the rise of companies that seek to dominate their industries by buying up rivals. The agencies are asking for public comments on the proposal over the next 60 days.
US regulators developed the new guidelines to provide greater transparency to the public and companies about how antitrust enforcers are thinking about the law as markets and industries change,
“Markets today are very different than they were 50 years ago,” Kanter said. “Those economic shifts, those new realities are necessary to understand to apply the law effectively.”
Under President
Under the proposed guidelines, enforcers said they will examine multiple mergers if a deal is part of a series of acquisitions made by a company within the same market. Agencies also will focus on the impact on workers when a deal involves companies that formerly competed for labor.
Enforcers may assume a deal would harm competition if the company’s market share after the acquisition will be greater than 30%, according to the agencies.
When it challenged the Microsoft deal, the FTC claimed it would allow the company to withhold Activision’s key titles from rival consoles or game services. But a federal judge ruled the government hadn’t proved the acquisition would hurt competition. The agency is appealing, though a court declined to pause the merger while the FTC seeks to reverse Microsoft’s win. The companies on Wednesday extended their deal deadline to Oct. 18.
In an interview with CNBC, Khan said the updated guidelines will help ensure enforcers “fully addressing the realities of digital markets, the realities of how firms are pursuing M&A in the current environment.”
The White House
Senator
‘Chill Merger Activity’
The proposals are likely to draw criticism from House Republicans, many of whom have criticized Khan and Kanter for their more aggressive approach to antitrust enforcement.
The US Chamber of Commerce, the nation’s largest business lobby which has been highly critical of Biden’s antitrust enforcers, condemned the new proposal saying it upends decades of bipartisan consensus that mergers aid the US economy.
“These guidelines are designed to chill merger activity, which will deny smaller companies access to the capital and expertise they need to grow and place U.S. businesses at a disadvantage with their global competitors,” Chamber vice president
The agencies began the
The agencies last changed the guidelines for mergers between direct competitors in 2010. Separate guidelines for so-called vertical deals, which involve companies that operate in the same supply chain but don’t compete directly,
The new proposal includes rules related to both horizontal and vertical deals as well as ones that involve online platforms.
(Updates with additional comments beginning in eighth paragraph.)
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