AT&T/Time Warner antitrust hearing to focus on trial
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[December 07, 2017]
By Diane Bartz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Department
of Justice and AT&T Inc will meet in court for the first time on
Thursday as the antitrust regulator attempts to stop the U.S. No. 2
wireless company's $85 billion purchase of media company Time Warner
Inc.
The focus of the hearing is likely to be setting a court date for trial.
AT&T has asked the court to hear the case beginning Feb. 20. The
government is pressing for May 7.
AT&T and Time Warner announced their deal in October 2016, but it was
not until last month that the Justice Department sued AT&T to block the
deal, arguing it could raise prices for rivals and pay-TV subscribers
and hamper the development of online video.
Under their agreement, AT&T will have to pay Time Warner $500 million if
the deal does not close by April 22.
Merging companies facing a government challenge often push for a faster
trial than the government wants because of the cost of holding the deal
together and the difficulty in operating businesses during a lengthy
process, said Ethan Glass, a former Justice Department litigator now at
the law firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP.
"It's pretty common that the merging parties want the trial to happen
quickly," said Glass. "Mergers create a lot of uncertainty at both
companies."
TRUMP SPEAKS
The fate of the deal has been widely followed since U.S. President
Donald Trump criticized it on the campaign trail last year and his
repeated attacks on the reporting of Time Warner's CNN news network.
Trump renewed his opposition to the deal last month.
"I think your pricing's going to go up, I don't think it's a good deal
for the country," he said in November.
It is not clear that Trump's comments will have an effect on the trial.
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An AT&T logo is seen at a AT&T building in New York City, October
23, 2016. REUTERS/Stephanie Keith/File Photo
"I don’t think it is a great idea to get into all of this (allegations of White
House interference) because every deal raises different facts," said Andre
Barlow of Doyle, Barlow & Mazard PLLC. "The court is going to decide this case
based on the economic realities of the video distribution and content markets
and not on President Trump’s public battle with CNN."
Aside from interest generated by Trump, the case is being closely watched by
businesses as it is very rare for an antitrust agency to try to prevent a
company from buying a supplier, as is the case with AT&T's purchase of Time
Warner.
The government usually challenges companies that seek to merge only if they are
direct competitors in an already concentrated market.
Once in trial, AT&T will likely push a solution it hopes will be palatable to
Judge Richard Leon, who will decide whether the deal may go forward.
AT&T and Time Warner said in a court filing that Time Warner's Turner
Broadcasting unit had offered its distributors licensing terms that forbid
Turner from "going dark" on a distributor for seven years after the deal closes
if they reach an impasse in negotiations. Blackouts are a negotiating tool in
carriage disputes between distributors and programmers.
It is not unusual for companies facing a government challenge to respond with
such a fix.
In three cases since 2014 - Sysco buying U.S. Foods, Staples buying Office Depot
and Aetna buying Humana - the companies offered a fix but their deals were still
deemed illegal by the judge hearing their case and the mergers were scrapped.
(Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Bill Rigby)
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