The Borneo Post

AT&T CEO plans to expand CNN despite Trump’s ire

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AT& T Chief Executive Officer Randall Stephenson said CNN is ripe for expansion into social media and mobile, and he wouldn’t consider a divestitur­e to win approval of his company’s US$ 85.4 billion ( RM384 billion) merger with Time Warner Inc. despite President-Elect Donald Trump’s problems with the news network.

Trump has said he opposes the deal, and it’s unclear how much of his motivation stems from his animosity for Time Warnercont­rolled CNN. But Stephenson said the news network is “a great business” and one of the key brands that can help AT& T transition to a media powerhouse, seeking to produce some of the world’s most popular shows and movies.

“CNN is unique,” Stephenson said in an interview Wednesday with Bloomberg Television at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d. “They have a lot of content with Time Warner that we think can be innovated and be used to change the business model in the media entertainm­ent business. That’s what this deal is all about.”

Stephenson, along with Bob Quinn, AT& T’s head of external and legislativ­e affairs, met with Trump for about 40 minutes last week in New York. The discussion with Trump was about increasing investment and jobs and his proposals on tax reform, not about the Time Warner deal, which is being assessed by the Department of Justice, Stephenson said.

“When a deal is under review by an independen­t agency, it is prudent to not have a talk about the deal with the incoming president,” Stephenson said.

When a deal is under review by an independen­t agency, it is prudent to not have a talk about the deal with the incoming president. Randall Stephenson, AT&T Chief Executive Officer

He added that his confidence level on closing the deal is “very high.”

Trump’s options as president to block the merger are limited, especially if AT& T can avoid a review by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission by not acquiring wireless licences Time Warner holds. The Justice Department could sue to stop the transactio­n, but it would have to convince the courts that the deal would threaten competitio­n. That could be tough because AT&T isn’t buying a direct competitor.

“By the letter of the law, this deal should be approved,” he said. “I think the facts will show that this is a pro-competitiv­e merger.”

Investors remain sceptical that the deal will clear regulatory hurdles. Time Warner shares closed at US$ 94.87 last Tuesday, about a 12 per cent discount to the US$ 107.50 sale price.—WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Pedestrian­s pass in front of CNN headquarte­rs building in Atlanta on Aug 2, 2014. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Pedestrian­s pass in front of CNN headquarte­rs building in Atlanta on Aug 2, 2014. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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