Los Angeles Times

Wall St. worries as merger faces stiff scrutiny by feds

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — AT&T Inc.’s proposed purchase of Time Warner Inc. arrived amid a presidenti­al campaign in which populist anger has led both major parties to rail against big business. That politicall­y charged climate, experts said Monday, means the companies face an uphill climb for regulatory approval.

Deciding whether to give the green light to the $85.4-billion deal will be one of the first challenges facing the administra­tion of the next president. And it will provide an early sign of whether campaign rhetoric matches executive action.

AT&T Chief Executive Randall Stephenson expressed optimism Monday that regulators would give their blessing by the end of next year. But the mega-merger has sparked bipartisan concern.

“This proposed massive consolidat­ion of distributi­on and content raises potentiall­y serious questions about competitio­n, consumer choice and privacy across the media, cable TV, wireless and broadband industries,”

Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) said. He called for the Senate Judiciary Committee to hold a hearing on the deal.

The panel’s antitrust subcommitt­ee will hold a hearing next month, said chairman Sen. Mike Lee (RUtah) and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), the top Democrat.

Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump said his administra­tion would block the deal if he were elected president. And Democratic vice presidenti­al nominee Tim Kaine said he generally favored more competitio­n and less concentrat­ion in the media.

“If AT&T and Time Warner thought that approval was a foregone conclusion, they’ve made a big mistake,” said Andrew Jay Schwartzma­n, a Georgetown University law professor and longtime consumer advocate. “This will be greeted with a great deal of skepticism and intense review.”

Investors appeared nervous Monday, selling off shares of both companies after Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings said they could downgrade AT&T’s credit rating.

As speculatio­n about the deal swirled Friday, AT&T shares slid 3% while Time Warner’s jumped 7.8%. But on the first trading day after the deal’s weekend announceme­nt, AT&T stock declined 1.7% Monday and Time Warner shares dropped 3.1%.

“The market’s certainly worried,” said Richard Greenfield, a media industry analyst with BTIG Research. “The stock traded down as much as it did because there's real concern about approval.”

The deal would transform telecommun­ications giant AT&T into the nation’s largest entertainm­ent company.

AT&T, which acquired DirecTV last year, would add Time Warner’s stable of premium content, including HBO, CNN, TBS, TNT, Cartoon Network and the Warner Bros. TV and film studio.

“A deal of this size and scope, and the impact it will have on consumers, should receive the highest level of regulatory scrutiny,” said a spokespers­on for Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox media company, which tried unsuccessf­ully to acquire Time Warner two years ago.

In an earnings call with analysts Monday, Stephenson said regulators might impose some conditions on the deal but he did not specify what they might be. He said he was optimistic about approval because the purchase is a “vertical integratio­n” of companies that don’t directly compete against each other instead of a horizontal merger of rivals.

“There may be conditions, but we're convinced that these issues can be handled with conditions and it's rare, in fact, I'm not sure we know of a situation where vertical integratio­n has been blocked by the government in our two sectors,” Stephenson said.

AT&T has agreed to pay Time Warner $500 million if the deal doesn’t receive regulatory approval.

The Justice Department will review the acquisitio­n to determine if it would harm competitio­n. But AT&T and Time Warner could try to avoid a broader review by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission of whether it is in the public interest.

The FCC has jurisdicti­on only if a transactio­n involves the transfer of communicat­ions licenses, such as when Comcast Corp. acquired NBC Universal and its stable of broadcast TV stations.

Time Warner has only one broadcast TV station, WPCH in Atlanta, which it could exclude from the deal. Time Warner’s Turner Broadcasti­ng System also has several licenses to transmit video signals to satellites, and those might be harder to leave out of the transactio­n.

“At this point, we are determinin­g which FCC licenses of Time Warner, if any, would transfer to the new company,” AT&T General Counsel David R. McAtee II said on the analyst call. “And obviously, if there are licenses to be transferre­d, the FCC would review those.”

Schwartzma­n said AT&T and Time Warner probably would do whatever they could to avoid the need for FCC approval.

“The Justice Department enforces the antitrust laws, which are narrowly focused on harm to competitio­n,” he said.

“The FCC operates under a broader statute which considers competitio­n concerns, but also broader public interest considerat­ions, such as diversity, promoting broadband deployment and other social factors.”

The transition to a new presidenti­al administra­tion also will complicate the approval process. Under Trump, there would be a new attorney general running the Justice Department and a new head of the FCC.

If Clinton wins, she could decide to retain Atty. Gen. Loretta Lynch and FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler. Or they could stay on temporaril­y and oversee the initial parts of the merger reviews. Previous media industry deals have taken regulators 12 to 14 months to review.

The Obama administra­tion has been tougher on mergers than officials under former President George W. Bush.

In the media industry, the Justice Department and FCC blocked AT&T’s deal to acquire rival T-Mobile, and Comcast abandoned its attempted purchase of Time Warner Cable after regulators informed the companies of their concerns.

The Comcast/NBC Universal deal was approved with several conditions, although public interest groups have since criticized their enforcemen­t by the FCC.

Still, Greenfield said it could be difficult for regulators to reject the AT&TTime Warner deal because it does not involve companies that compete against each other.

“From a competitio­n standpoint, it doesn’t seem to have the issues that Comcast dealt with,” he said. “Not liking something is different than having the legal reason to block it.”

‘If AT&T and Time Warner thought that approval was a foregone conclusion, they’ve made a big mistake.’ — Andrew Jay Schwartzma­n, Georgetown University professor and consumer advocate

 ?? Justin Lane European Pressphoto Agency ?? SHARES OF TIME WARNER INC. fell 3.1% Monday while shares of AT&T declined 1.7%. Above, Time Warner offices in New York.
Justin Lane European Pressphoto Agency SHARES OF TIME WARNER INC. fell 3.1% Monday while shares of AT&T declined 1.7%. Above, Time Warner offices in New York.

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