Los Angeles Times

Judge OKs AT&T deal to purchase Time Warner

Ruling will create a giant likely to reshape the media business and is a sharp blow to Trump administra­tion.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a and Meg James

WASHINGTON — A federal judge Tuesday cleared the way for AT&T Inc.’s $85.4-billion purchase of Time Warner Inc., creating an entertainm­ent colossus that promises to reshape the media business.

U.S. District Judge Richard Leon’s ruling in the biggest antitrust case of the century is expected to pave the way for more megamerger­s and was a stinging defeat for the Trump administra­tion.

The Justice Department sued to block the merger, arguing it would harm competitio­n in the pay-TV market and raise consumer prices. But speaking before a packed courtroom, Leon made it clear that the government had failed to prove any of its arguments against the merger during the sixweek trial.

“The parties have waged an epic battle,” Leon said. “The court has spoken.”

His decision means the deal, announced in October 2016, can close by next week, creating a giant new player in entertainm­ent. The new AT&T will combine a large programmin­g universe — including blockbuste­r movie franchises, such as “Wonder Woman” and “Batman,” hit TV shows, such as HBO’s “Game of Thrones” and

“Westworld,” and live news and sports programmin­g — with a nationwide network of wireless and satellite services to better compete with Netflix and other technology heavyweigh­ts.

The ruling also is expected to accelerate a wave of media mergers. A decision against AT&T would have put a damper on other potential combinatio­ns, said Mark Ostrau, an attorney and mergers and acquisitio­ns expert at Mountain View, Calif., law firm Fenwick & West.

Other companies pursuing similar deals can breathe a little easier, he said, “because it may cause the Department of Justice to think twice about pursuing a case.”

Comcast Corp., for example, probably will proceed with plans to try to outbid Disney for the bulk of 21st Century Fox’s assets, he said.

The lawsuit against AT&T was unusual because the federal government rarely blocks mergers involving companies that don’t directly compete.

Politics also cast a long shadow over the litigation. The friction between President Trump and Time Warner’s CNN led to speculatio­n that the government’s opposition was fueled by his animus toward the cable news network. Trump had said during the 2016 campaign that the merger would concentrat­e too much media power in one company.

AT&T even hired Trump’s former “fixer” Michael Cohen shortly after the 2017 inaugurati­on and paid him $600,000 for insight into Trump’s thinking, a decision that AT&T Chief Executive Randall Stephenson last month called a “big mistake.” AT&T’s retention of Cohen was made public in May amid the legal skirmish over the president’s alleged affair with Stormy Daniels more than a decade ago.

But Leon denied AT&T’s request to try to uncover any evidence that the White House might have influenced the decision.

The judge strongly urged the Justice Department not to seek an emergency stay of his ruling pending appeal, warning it could cause the merger to collapse because of a June 21 deadline the companies set to close.

Daniel Petrocelli, the lead attorney for AT&T and Time Warner, told reporters Leon recognized that the companies have been subjected to an “interminab­le delay” in closing the deal and that “it’s unfair to the defendants, to the hundreds of thousands of employees of their companies, whose lives have been hanging in the balance, and to all the shareholde­rs and all the other constituen­cies of these two great companies.”

Asked if there was political motivation in the Justice Department bringing the case, Petrocelli noted AT&T had wanted to try to figure that out.

“It was a case that never should have been brought,” he said.

The sweeping repudiatio­n of the government’s case was a stunning defeat for the Justice Department. After the hearing, Assistant Atty. Gen. Makan Delrahim said that he was “obviously disappoint­ed” by the decision and that he and his team would review the judge’s 170-page decision.

“I’ve taken an oath to uphold competitio­n and we’re going to take a review of the opinion and take the next steps as necessary,” Delrahim said as he left the federal courthouse near Capitol Hill.

Wall Street welcomed the decision, which boosted the shares of other media companies. Time Warner Inc. closed at $96.22 and jumped 5% in after-hours trading, although shares in AT&T, which closed at $34.35 on Tuesday, dropped 1.5% after markets closed.

AT&T, already a telecommun­ications giant with more than 100 million wireless subscriber­s and 25 million pay-TV homes, will acquire Time Warner’s valuable entertainm­ent assets, including HBO, CNN, Cartoon Network, TBS, TNT, Turner Classic Movies and Warner Bros., Hollywood’s largest TV and movie studio.

During the trial, Justice Department lawyers argued that AT&T wanted to “weaponize” Time Warner’s content to give it leverage to raise customer prices.

The result, the government warned, would be significan­t harm to competitio­n — particular­ly new online pay-TV providers — and a powerful new gatekeeper that would lead to an increase of more than $400 million a year in prices for all Americans.

But AT&T and Time Warner Inc.’s legal team, led by Petrocelli, pursued an aggressive defense that included testimony from Stephenson and Time Warner CEO Jeffrey Bewkes.

Bewkes and Stephenson had argued that the merger was needed so the companies could better battle online competitor­s such as Netflix, Amazon, Facebook and Google.

The combinatio­n of Time Warner’s “premium content” with AT&T’s vast subscriber network would allow the new company to engage consumers and target advertisin­g tailored to their habits. Prices would go down, not up, AT&T executives said.

The Justice Department sought to use three arguments to prove that the deal would substantia­lly lessen competitio­n. But on each one, Leon said the government failed to meet its burden of proof under antitrust law.

The Justice Department’s first argument was that acquiring Time Warner content would give AT&T increased leverage in negotiatio­ns with distributo­rs to withhold content because AT&T’s own pay-TV services — DirecTV and U-verse — would pick up some of the customers lost from rivals during a programmin­g blackout.

Leon noted there had never been a long-term blackout of Turner network content. Testimony from rival distributo­rs about AT&T leverage “was too speculativ­e in nature” and “contained obvious competitiv­e bias,” he said.

The government’s second argument — that AT&T alone or in conjunctio­n with Comcast Corp. would try to slow the growth of online rivals by withholdin­g content from those services — also failed to pass muster. Leon deemed the theory unlikely.

And Leon dismissed the third government argument, that AT&T would deny competitor­s the ability to use HBO in customer promotions, as a “gossamerth­in claim” based on “bare conjecture.”

George A. Hay, a Cornell Law School antitrust professor who served in the Justice Department’s antitrust division, said the opinion would be difficult to overturn.

“The opinion does not take the DOJ completely out of the merger business, but simply admonishes them to make sure the facts support their theory,” Hay said.

The antitrust case was unusual because it dealt with a vertical merger, meaning the two companies do not directly compete in their primary businesses.

Such deals are different from horizontal mergers, which involve companies that compete directly. Those mergers remove competitor­s from the marketplac­e and are more frequently blocked.

The last time the Justice Department successful­ly blocked a vertical merger was nearly 50 years ago.

In an unusual move, Leon did not post his decision online. He delivered it from the bench at 4 p.m. Eastern time, after U.S. financial markets had closed. Spectators were not allowed to leave the courtroom until Leon finished.

Profession­al line-standers, who were paid by attorneys, corporate executives and hedge fund managers to hold a place in the courtroom line, began queuing up outside the courthouse Monday afternoon — nearly 24 hours in advance. About 50 spent the night on the street outside.

Court deputy John Haley instructed the packed crowd that nobody would be able to leave while the judge was delivering his decision “except maybe on a gurney.”

jim.puzzangher­a @latimes.com meg.james@latimes.com Puzzangher­a reported from Washington and James from Los Angeles. Times staff writer Ryan Faughnder in Los Angeles and special correspond­ent Eliza Fawcett in Washington contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? AT&T’S $85.4-billion deal for Time Warner was announced in October 2016. The federal government’s lawsuit was unusual because the U.S. rarely blocks mergers involving companies that don’t directly compete.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press AT&T’S $85.4-billion deal for Time Warner was announced in October 2016. The federal government’s lawsuit was unusual because the U.S. rarely blocks mergers involving companies that don’t directly compete.
 ?? Aaron P. Bernstein Getty Images ?? DANIEL PETROCELLI, lead attorney for AT&T and Time Warner, said AT&T had wanted to look into whether there was political motivation for the suit.
Aaron P. Bernstein Getty Images DANIEL PETROCELLI, lead attorney for AT&T and Time Warner, said AT&T had wanted to look into whether there was political motivation for the suit.
 ?? Jose Luis Magana Associated Press ?? AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson had argued that the merger was needed so the companies could better battle online rivals such as Netf lix and Amazon.
Jose Luis Magana Associated Press AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson had argued that the merger was needed so the companies could better battle online rivals such as Netf lix and Amazon.

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