National Post

AT&T could skirt FCC review of Time Warner deal

- David Shepardson

WASHINGTON • AT& T Inc. may not have to seek ap- proval from the U. S. Federal Communicat­ions Commission for the biggest acquisitio­n announced this year by selling the one television station that Time Warner Inc. owns: WPCH-TV in Atlanta.

The FCC has broad lee- way to block a merger that it deems not to be in the “public interest,” while the U. S. Justice Department mainly examines a deal to see whether it breaks antitrust rules by reducing competitio­n.

If Time Warner divests its only FCC- regulated broadcast station, that could eliminate a primary reason for the U. S. telecoms regulator to review the takeover, a government official with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

AT&T and Time Warner could then focus on wooing the Justice Department, which antitrust experts said is less likely to block the US$ 85- billion deal because it is not a horizontal merger in which two competitor­s offering the same services are seeking to merge.

“They are not buying Time Warner for a tiny TV station. It sticks out as a sore thumb and I would expect that to be gone as quickly as possible,” said Roger Entner, an analyst at Recon Analytics.

“This avoids a whole review process by people who have been historical­ly, over the last couple of years, not been AT&T’s biggest fans. You want to have as few moving parts and if you can eliminate a review by an agency you do.”

AT&T said the deal would need the approval of the Justice Department, and that the two companies were determinin­g which FCC licences held by Time Warner, if any, would transfer to AT&T as part of the deal.

“We really just haven’t prejudged that,” AT&T’s general counsel, David McAtee, told Reuters.

“With respect to the FCC licences, we take a very simple approach here: we follow the law and so whatever the law requires that’s always what we’ll do.”

FCC s pokesman Neil Grace declined to comment.

Even if AT&T does not acquire any FCC licences from Time Warner, the FCC still may play an indirect role in the merger review, such as by advising the Justice Department, BTIG analyst Rich Greenfield said.

Still, in an advisory capacity, the FCC is less likely to impose its own set of conditions for approval, in addition to the Justice Department’s demands.

AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson on Monday expressed confidence in winning government approval for what would be the first deal to combine a major U. S. media company with a wireless network, satellite TV distributo­r and high- speed Internet service provider.

“There are no competitor­s being taken out of the marketplac­e,” Stephenson told CNBC. “This is a pure vertical i ntegration and while regulators will often-time have concerns with vertical integratio­ns, those are always remedied by conditions imposed on the merger. And so that’s how we envision this one to play out.”

But investors were skeptical, pushing down shares of Time Warner to trade some 20- per- cent below AT&T’s offer price of about US$ 107.50 per share. Time Warner closed at US$ 86.74 on Monday, down 3.06 per cent. Shares of AT&T closed at US$ 36.86, down 1.65 per cent.

 ?? SAUL LOEB / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? “There are no competitor­s being taken out of the marketplac­e,” says AT&T chief executive Randall Stephenson.
SAUL LOEB / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES “There are no competitor­s being taken out of the marketplac­e,” says AT&T chief executive Randall Stephenson.

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