National Post

Facebook may have to sell Gif-maker Giphy on U.K. competitio­n concerns

- Pushkala aripaka

Britain might require Facebook to sell GIF website Giphy after the country’s competitio­n regulator said on Thursday its investigat­ion found the deal between the two companies would hurt the display advertisin­g market.

Facebook, the world’s largest social media company, bought Giphy, a website for making and sharing animated images, or GIFS, in May last year to integrate it with its photo-sharing app, Instagram. The deal was pegged at US$400 million by Axios.

The U.K’.S Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA) began a probe into the deal in January, and in April referred the deal to an in-depth investigat­ion.

“Giphy’s takeover could see Facebook withdrawin­g GIFS from competing platforms or requiring more user data in order to access them. It also removes a potential challenger to Facebook,” said Stuart Mcintosh, chair of the independen­t investigat­ion for the CMA.

Another major provider of GIFS is Google’s Tenor.

The CMA found that before the Facebook deal Giphy was considerin­g expanding its paid advertisin­g services offered in the United States to other countries, including the U.K.

However, Facebook terminated Giphy’s ad partnershi­ps following the deal, according to the regulator.

“We disagree with the CMA’S preliminar­y findings, which we do not believe to be supported by the evidence. As we have demonstrat­ed, this merger is in the best interest of people and businesses in the U.K. and around the world,” a Facebook spokespers­on said.

The representa­tive added that the California-based company would continue to work with the CMA. Giphy declined to comment.

This is not the first time the CMA has raised concerns about major deals. The Us$9.2-billion ebay-adevinta deal has caught its attention, and the CMA has asked the new owners of supermarke­t chain Asda to fix fuel competitio­n concerns.

The watchdog said that it has engaged with other agencies reviewing the deal to help the CMA’S investigat­ion, and is now inviting comments from interested parties by Sept. 2 for its provisiona­l findings.

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