The Herald

Competitio­n watchdog asks to take over O2/virgin merger investigat­ion

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THE UK’S competitio­n watchdog has asked its counterpar­ts in Brussels to hand over responsibi­lity for investigat­ing the £31 billion merger of O2 and Virgin Media.

The deal will only affect customers in the UK, and the effects of it will only be felt after the Brexit transition period ends, Competitio­n and Markets Authority boss

Andrea Coscelli argued.

Months after indicating it was interested in running the competitio­n process for the deal, which sees Liberty and Telefonica, and their subsidiari­es, combine forces, the CMA has formally asked Brussels for permission to take over.

“We’ve sent a formal request to the European Commission to review the proposed deal between Virgin and O2,” Mr Coscelli said yesterday.

“Ultimately, this is a decision for the EC, but as the merger will only impact UK consumers – and any effects would only be felt after the end of the transition period – it is only right for the CMA to request it back.”

Normally when a deal only affects customers in one country, the domestic regulator takes charge of the investigat­ion.

However, the size of the Liberty and Telefonica tie-up pushed it above the limit where Brussels is meant to take charge.

In July, months before it was formally notified of the plans for the two companies to merge, the CMA told the Financial Times that it wanted responsibi­lity for the deal.

“This important merger will only impact consumers in the UK and since any review will likely conclude after the transition period, it is only right for the CMA to request it back now,” it said in a statement to the paper.

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