Los Angeles Times

Cable giant to meet with feds

Cable giant’s attempt to buy Time Warner Cable for $45 billion may be in jeopardy.

- By Meg James meg.james@latimes.com

Comcast Corp.’s attempt to buy Time Warner Cable for $45 billion may be in jeopardy.

Comcast Corp.’s turbulent bid to acquire Time Warner Cable Inc. shifts into high gear this week, some 14 months after the blockbuste­r $45-billion deal was unveiled.

Company executives plan to meet with U.S. Justice Department officials in Washington on Wednesday to begin in-depth discussion­s about whether the government’s antitrust concerns are significan­t enough to torpedo the merger — or if conditions could be fashioned to neutralize possible harms, according to people close to the situation who asked not to be identified discussing confidenti­al matters.

The Justice Department has spent nearly a year trying to determine whether a bulked-up Comcast would choke competitio­n. The Federal Communicat­ions Commission separately is considerin­g whether the tieup is in the public interest.

“When you look at the clout that this company would have and its ability to crush smaller competitor­s, you see why we need to deny this merger,” Rep. Tony Cardenas (D-Los Angeles), an outspoken opponent of the deal, said Monday. “Talk about dominating the competitio­n.”

Consumers, rival entertainm­ent companies and Internet streaming services have long protested the merger.

But Comcast in recent weeks has suffered several additional setbacks, including a member of the California Public Utilities Commission saying he would not support the deal. The PUC separately is reviewing whether the combinatio­n, which would give Comcast 2 million subscriber­s in Southern California, is in the public interest.

Critics contend that Comcast would use its muscle to stifle new online streaming services, such as Netflix and Hulu, which compete with Comcast’s core business of providing bundles of TV channels.

Regulators are also said to be reviewing whether Comcast meddled in the affairs of Hulu, in which Comcast has a one-third equity stake. Comcast promised not to get involved in Hulu as part of its 2011 agreement with the Justice Department, which Comcast struck to win government approval to take control of NBCUnivers­al.

But some executives long have alleged Comcast applied pressure to abort a plan to sell Hulu two years ago, a claim that Comcast has denied.

“The sheer size and scope of a combined Comcast/Time Warner Cable, coupled with its incentive to protect its core video business from innovative ‘overthe-top’ online video providers, would allow it to threaten nascent competitio­n in so many different ways,” a coalition of high-profile opponents said Friday in a letter to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler.

Another sticky issue is high-speed Internet market share. Comcast routinely provides Internet speeds of 25 megabits per second, which meets the FCC’s recently adopted standard. Under that definition, Comcast’s market share would reach 57% of the U.S.

However, it was just last year that the FCC defined high speed as 10 megabits per second. Under that definition, Comcast’s market share would total 40%.

The company argues that it should not be penalized for the FCC’s change in the measuring stick, particular­ly when it is one of the few companies in the U.S. to routinely offer some of the fastest speeds around.

“The Comcast/Time Warner Cable transactio­n will result in significan­t consumer benefits — faster broadband speeds, access to a superior video experience, and more competitio­n in business services resulting in billions of dollars of cost savings,” Comcast spokeswoma­n Sena Fitzmauric­e said in a statement.

Comcast has argued that because consumers would not see a reduction in the number of providers, the deal should not be considered anti-competitiv­e.

“The regulatory process remains f luid,” Time Warner Cable said this week in a statement. “We believe the transactio­n is pro-competitiv­e, in the public interest and that there is no basis for regulators to block the deal.”

Wall Street shrugged off reports that the deal might be in jeopardy. Shares of Comcast rose 5 cents, or less than 0.1%, to $58.47, while Time Warner Cable shares closed up $1.26, or 0.8%, to $150.87.

“It is impossible to judge how strong the case is against the merger or how likely it is that concerns can be remedied with conditions,” Paul de Sa, a media analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., wrote Monday in a report.

One critic of the deal, Paul Goodman, legal counsel for the Greenlinin­g Institute, agreed it is too soon to predict an outcome.

“The deal seems to be in trouble, but that just means that Comcast will double down,” Goodman said. “The fight is far from over.”

 ?? William T. Cain
Getty Images ??
William T. Cain Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States