Khaleej Times

Google's mega deal would prompt new fight with regulators

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Google parent Alphabet’s contemplat­ed acquisitio­n of marketing software company Hubspot would likely spark opposition from regulators even as many experts agree it would not curb competitio­n, and would require the technology giant to open a new front in its battle with antitrust watchdogs.

Reuters reported last week that Google was mulling an offer for Hubspot, which has a market value of $34 billion. Google has been weighing the antitrust risks of a potential deal and has yet to decide if it will make an offer.

Nearly a dozen antitrust experts and industry analysts said in interviews and analyst notes that it was unlikely that an acquisitio­n by Google would hamper competitio­n.

They said this is because the so-called customer relationsh­ip management (CRM) software sector in which Hubspot operates is already served by several major players, including Salesforce, Adobe, Microsoft and Oracle. Google does not compete in CRM, and the acquisitio­n could make Hubspot a more formidable player thanks to Google’s cloud-computing resources, improving offerings and prices for customers, they added.

According to technology researcher Gartner, Hubspot, which focuses on smaller customers, had a 4.9 per cent market share in 2022 in the CRM marketing software industry, while Salesforce and Adobe each held a 15 per cent share.

Yet these experts also said it is very likely that a Google deal for Hubspot would trigger challenges from US and European antitrust regulators, given their growing aversion to technology giants getting bigger through acquisitio­ns.

Arguing for the merits

They added that Google would have to be willing to argue for the merits of the deal in a long court battle, and would need to convince Hubspot to do the same.

“My initial reaction is such a deal would face a pretty tough reception from the antitrust regulators,” said Seth Bloom, a former general counsel of the U.S. Senate antitrust subcommitt­ee who now runs his own advisory firm.

Google and Hubspot did not respond to requests for comment.

Google already faces several antitrust challenges, including two lawsuits from the United States Department of Justice. One accuses it of abusing its position as online search leader, while the other alleges it is monopolizi­ng the market for digital advertisin­g.

A Department of Justice spokespers­on did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The regulatory terrain for Google is also hostile in Europe. It is among technology firms probed by the European Union for potential breaches of the new Digital Markets Act, a directive that makes it easier for people to move between competing online services like social media platforms, internet browsers and app stores.

“This transactio­n has not been formally notified to the Commission. If a transactio­n constitute­s a concentrat­ion and has an EU dimension, it is always up to the companies to notify it to the Commission,” said a spokespers­on for the European Commission, the EU’S executive arm, which has fined Google in the past for anticompet­itive practices in online search.

Cash pile

The intensity of the antitrust scrutiny has dissuaded most technology giants from pursuing mega deals. The last major acquisitio­n completed was Microsoft’s $69 billion deal to buy “Call of Duty” maker Activision Blizzard, which the maker of the Xbox console managed to get past Britain’s regulators only after it agreed to give up streaming rights for Activision’s games.

In December, Adobe shelved its $20 billion deal for cloudbased designer platform Figma, citing “no clear path” for antitrust approvals in Europe and Britain. The regulators fretted about the ability of Figma’s smaller rivals to compete.

Prior to its Hubspot deliberati­ons, Google had steered clear of large acquisitio­ns. Its biggesteve­r deal, the purchase of Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion, came more than a decade ago. It has kept its dealmaking small, showing an affinity toward acquisitio­ns in advertisin­g with purchases such as Doubleclic­k and Admob.

 ?? — AP FILE ?? The Google building in New York. Google already faces several antitrust challenges, including two lawsuits from the United States Department of Justice.
— AP FILE The Google building in New York. Google already faces several antitrust challenges, including two lawsuits from the United States Department of Justice.

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