‘Everything’s on the line’: AT&T’s showdown with DOJ over Time Warner finally gets a decision today

‘Everything’s on the line’: AT&T’s showdown with DOJ over Time Warner finally gets a decision today

6 years ago
Anonymous $roN-uuAfLt

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-switch/wp/2018/06/12/att-time-warner-decision/

A federal judge is expected to rule Tuesday on whether to block AT&T's $85 billion Time Warner merger, in what has become America's most closely watched antitrust trial in decades.

The opinion by Judge Richard Leon could determine AT&T's future in digital entertainment as the company seeks to go toe-to-toe with tech titans such as Facebook, Google and Netflix. But the stakes are equally high for the Justice Department, which has not litigated a case of this kind since the Nixon administration. A court victory for the government, analysts say, could symbolize the beginning of a tough new era in antitrust enforcement. But an AT&T win could give pause to regulators — and perhaps deter them from blocking mergers in the future that might otherwise be deemed anticompetitive.

‘Everything’s on the line’: AT&T’s showdown with DOJ over Time Warner finally gets a decision today

Jun 12, 2018, 1:24pm UTC
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-switch/wp/2018/06/12/att-time-warner-decision/ > A federal judge is expected to rule Tuesday on whether to block AT&T's $85 billion Time Warner merger, in what has become America's most closely watched antitrust trial in decades. > The opinion by Judge Richard Leon could determine AT&T's future in digital entertainment as the company seeks to go toe-to-toe with tech titans such as Facebook, Google and Netflix. But the stakes are equally high for the Justice Department, which has not litigated a case of this kind since the Nixon administration. A court victory for the government, analysts say, could symbolize the beginning of a tough new era in antitrust enforcement. But an AT&T win could give pause to regulators — and perhaps deter them from blocking mergers in the future that might otherwise be deemed anticompetitive.