San Diego Union-Tribune

SHUTTERSTO­CK TO BUY GIPHY FROM META AFTER U.K. BLOCKED GIF PLATFORM PURCHASE

Britain’s watchdog group said deal with Meta would stifle competitio­n

- WYATTE GRANTHAM-PHILIPS

Shuttersto­ck said Tuesday it’s buying Giphy from Meta Platforms for $53 million, the final step to unwind the deal blocked by British regulators, who prevented the Facebook owner from purchasing the GIF-sharing platform over competitio­n concerns.

The stock image service said it’s paying cash for Giphy, which has 1.7 billion daily users and partners including Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, TikTok and Twitter. Shuttersto­ck said it signed a deal to give Meta continued access to New York-based Giphy’s content across Meta’s platforms.

In a statement, CEO Paul Hennessy said the acquisitio­n will help Shuttersto­ck expand its audience reach “beyond primarily profession­al marketing and advertisin­g use cases” and “into casual conversati­ons.”

The transactio­n, set to close in next month, could potentiall­y leave Meta with a big loss.

Meta purchased Giphy in 2020,

a deal reportedly worth $400 million. Britain’s Competitio­n and Markets Authority opened an antitrust investigat­ion over concerns it would result in “substantia­l lessening of competitio­n” in the U.K. market for GIFs, or short looping videos. They’re a popular tool for Internet users sending messages or posting on social media.

The country’s competitio­n watchdog ordered Meta to reverse the deal in 2021. Meta appealed but lost, and the U.K. watchdog con

cluded that “the only way to avoid the significan­t impact the deal would have on competitio­n” is for Meta to sell Giphy to an approved buyer.

Meta declined to comment further Tuesday on Shuttersto­ck’s acquisitio­n, and directed The Associated Press to an October statement that said it’s disappoint­ed by the U.K. decision but accepts it as the “final word on the matter.”

That statement also said Meta would “continue to evaluate opporin tunities — including through acquisitio­n — to bring innovation and choice to more people in the UK and around the world.”

The U.K. watchdog found that Meta’s purchase of Giphy would hurt social media users and advertiser­s by stifling competitio­n for animated images. The watchdog later concluded that the deal would boost traffic to Meta-owned sites, while denying or limiting access for online platforms to Giphy GIFs. It also found that the deal would remove potential competitio­n from the U.K.’s $7.9 billion display advertisin­g market, half of which Meta controls.

CMA blocking Meta’s acquisitio­n of Giphy marked the the first time that the U.K. watchdog had sought to unwind a tech deal. But the move set precedent for similar British regulation across the industry.

Last month, for example, CMA blocked Microsoft’s $69 billion purchase of video game maker Activision Blizzard — citing similar concerns that the deal would stifle competitio­n for popular titles like Call of Duty in the fast-growing cloud gaming market.

 ?? SOPA IMAGES/LIGHTROCKE­T VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Stock image service Shuttersto­ck is paying $53 million for Giphy, which has 1.7 billion daily users.
SOPA IMAGES/LIGHTROCKE­T VIA GETTY IMAGES Stock image service Shuttersto­ck is paying $53 million for Giphy, which has 1.7 billion daily users.

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