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AT&T/Time-Warner merger

Because the last administration politicized the DOJ more so than its recent predecessors did.

Not true. There has been a consistency in how DOJ has handled mergers through Democratic and Republican administrations. Impartial analysts looking at this decision say it has nothing to do with increasing cost to consumers, any more than the merger of Entercom and CBS Radio. AT&T has deep pockets and they will fight this.
 
It's not like Nixon was the last Republican, or that he set the bar. There were several others after him, and they approved many huge mergers. GE bought RCA under Reagan. Bush 2 approved AOL's purchase of Time Warner in 2000.

If this goes to court, lawyers will demonstrate that this isn't much different from Comcast-Universal. They will also point out that Trump has prejudiced the decision.

Wasn't AOL-Time Warner merging in 1995 under Clinton?
 
No. You're the second person in this thread to say that.

Time Warner merged with Turner Broadcasting in 1996.

AOL merged with Time Warner in 2001

yeah, the AOL-Time Warner merger (aka the real reason why WCW died and got bought out by it's rival WWE, thus ending true competition in that industry in the US) happen under W.'s watch.
 
I guess I don't see why Time Warner merging with AOL caused WCW to die. If anything, it was Warner's poor management of Turner's assets that led to this, but more likely was the result of WWE simply doing a better job at promoting its brand. Warner has not been a well managed enterprise. The original merger with Time, Inc. was debt riddled and constrained both companies. Buying Turner held a lot of potential but was bungled by Warner's management. The merger with AOL was a disaster. Now, the AT&T merger isn't likely to happen.
 
Nope. The deal was announced in January 2000, just as he was leaving office, and approved by the DOJ in 2001, under George W. Bush.

He wouldn't leave office for a full year. Remember, the winner in the November presidential election doesn't become president until the following January. Even if the deal was finally OK'd in the first months of the Bush administration, most of the vetting of the deal by the DOJ had to have taken place under Clinton.
 
Warner has not been a well managed enterprise. The original merger with Time, Inc. was debt riddled and constrained both companies. Buying Turner held a lot of potential but was bungled by Warner's management. The merger with AOL was a disaster. Now, the AT&T merger isn't likely to happen.

Keep in mind that when Time & Warner merged, the combined company was managed by Time, not Warner. Gerald Levin, who came up through Time, became CEO of the combined company. The merger took place under the George Bush administration. The company under Levin grew and diversified. Adding Turner was another good move for both companies, and made Ted Turner a very wealthy man. The disaster was AOL. Turner Broadcasting has its own management, it's own CEO, and it's own Chairman. So if you don't like how it's managed, it's because of its own Chairman, not because of Time Warner.
 
Time Warner AOL was approved by the FTC 1-11-2001, Bush was sworn in on 1-20-2001 9 days later. So it was formed under Clinton.
But the Bush FTC was responsible for the SBC and AT&T merger, which in my opinion stifled competition and should have not taken place.
 
Time Warner AOL was approved by the FTC 1-11-2001, Bush was sworn in on 1-20-2001 9 days later. So it was formed under Clinton.
But the Bush FTC was responsible for the SBC and AT&T merger, which in my opinion stifled competition and should have not taken place.

When SBC bought AT&T, AT&T was but a shell of its former self. AT&T had already divested its cable assets by that point. It was just a long distance company merging with a local phone company that then took the name of the firm being taken over.

In any case, The merger now on the table isn't going to happen, and it has nothing to do with CNN.
 
In any case, The merger now on the table isn't going to happen, and it has nothing to do with CNN.

We'll see. AT&T can demonstrate by using the example of current assets that the combination will lead to LOWER prices, not higher prices. The government doesn't understand the content marketplace. The government is using 19th century metrics in a 21st century environment.
 
http://deadline.com/2017/12/judge-s...bid-to-block-att-time-warner-deal-1202222207/

Update the March 19th trial date is announced for the Time Warner/AT&T deal.

Splitting the difference between AT&T’s request for a trial date in February and the government’s interest in beginning as late as May, the judge in the closely watched antitrust battle said the trial will begin March 19.

During a pre-trial hearing, U.S. District Court Judge Richard Leon in Washington established middle ground between AT&T’s request for Feb. 20 and the government’s preference of May 7.

At issue is AT&T’s proposed $85 billion takeover of Time Warner, a vertical deal that had sailed through many agencies’ review process and was thought to be days away from a DOJ stamp of approval before antitrust division chief Makan Delrahim hit the brakes. In the lawsuit filed last month by the Department of Justice said the deal would raise prices for rival distributors and also pay-TV subscribers, while hampering the growth of online video.

The mid-March date for a trial expected to last a couple of weeks means the media industry won’t have a sense of which way the regulatory winds are blowing until the second quarter of 2018. Fox and Disney appear ready to come together in a game-changing merger, plus deals between Discovery and Scripps for cable programming and Sinclair Broadcast and Tribune Media for local TV stations are already making the final rounds in Washington.
 
I think the impact of this will neither impact Fox/Disney nor Sinclair/Tribune. With AT&T/TW you have content and distribution getting together. While Disney has ABC, they don't own any cable distribution of note, neither does fox. While Sinclair and Tribune have some minor content production, it's mostly OTA distribution getting together. If TW/AT&T ultimately is allowed to proceed, it will require divestitures far exceeding what AT&T has proposed or is likely to accept.

I think this deal is a goner, rightfully so, AT&T will have to pay another fat fee as a result of a failed acquisition, and the AT&T CEO will be shown the door.
 
If AT&T owned the ONLY system of distribution, the DOJ would have a point. If there were no other options other than AT&T distribution. But that's not the case. AT&T competes with other services from Verizon and Comcast. In the case of Comcast and Universal, the government can show no examples where content costs have increased because they're co-owned. In the case of AT&T and DirecTV, the service has actually become cheaper, because AT&T offers satellite as part of a bundle. So it's cheaper than it was before the merger.

The other problem the administration has is that one way to control potential cost increases is to retain net neutrality. Net neutrality laws are a hedge against companies like AT&T from increasing costs for content through their distribution system. So if the DOJ strikes down this merger, they will provide ammunition to those who don't like their position on net neutrality.
 
Net Neutrality is gone.

Your analysis is flawed, in any case.

DOJ only has to show the potential for increases and they can use data after the Comcast/NBCU merger. Costs did increase and they can be attributed, at least in part to the marrying of content with distribution.

I doubt this even goes to trial. Either AT&T goes hat in hand to DOJ agreeing to a large list of divestitures before March, or they just give up.

They'll lose at trial and then lose in the appeals. In the meantime both AT&T and TW remain in limbo from any real planning ability hurting them competitively.

This merger deserves to fail.
 
Net Neutrality is gone. Your analysis is flawed, in any case.

Sure Republicans will ram it through regardless of my analysis, just like everything else they've done. But if rising costs is their concern, they should retain net neutrality. Just as if controlling the deficit is a concern, they should vote no on the tax bill.

DOJ only has to show the potential for increases and they can use data after the Comcast/NBCU merger. Costs did increase and they can be attributed, at least in part to the marrying of content with distribution.

Costs will increase regardless of who owns what. That is how companies work. Even if the merger fails, costs will increase. Killing net neutrality will also increase consumer costs.
 
Net Neutrality is gone.

Your analysis is flawed, in any case.

DOJ only has to show the potential for increases and they can use data after the Comcast/NBCU merger. Costs did increase and they can be attributed, at least in part to the marrying of content with distribution.

I doubt this even goes to trial. Either AT&T goes hat in hand to DOJ agreeing to a large list of divestitures before March, or they just give up.

They'll lose at trial and then lose in the appeals. In the meantime both AT&T and TW remain in limbo from any real planning ability hurting them competitively.

This merger deserves to fail.

http://thehill.com/policy/technolog...-department-to-investigate-comcast-nbc-merger

Here is an update
 
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