UK regulator takes control of Microsoft-Activision deal as court temporarily halts appeal

UK regulator takes control of Microsoft-Activision deal as court temporarily halts appeal

LONDON, July ‌21 (Reuters)‌ – ‌Microsoft’s⁤ Activision ⁣Blizzard​ deal is⁤ back in​ the ​hands of‌ Britain’s antitrust regulator after⁣ an appeals court‍ granted an adjournment,‌ and the ​grounds for‌ why the UK should ‍reconsider its ​block on the U.S. software giant’s takeover‍ were published.
The Competition⁣ and Markets​ Authority (CMA)⁢ set out on Friday Microsoft’s ‍arguments ⁣for ⁣the reconsideration, ⁣as the ⁣U.S. battles ​to win UK approval to⁢ buy “Call ⁢of Duty” maker‍ Activision.
Having​ initially ⁣blocked⁢ the $69‌ billion deal ‍in‍ April over concerns ⁣about its ⁣impact on​ competition ‌in the ‍cloud gaming market, ​the ⁢CMA has‍ since reopened‍ the‍ file,‍ after⁤ it ‌was ‍left increasingly ‌isolated ⁢amongst⁣ world⁢ regulators in ⁤its opposition.
The⁣ CMA ⁤said ⁣it ​is ⁢likely​ to be ​able to​ reach ‌a⁢ new ⁢provisional⁢ view on​ the restructured deal‍ in the⁢ week beginning Aug.​ 7.
Explaining why ‌the deal should now​ be given ‌the ⁢green light, Microsoft⁣ argued‌ that the binding commitments ‌accepted ​by the European⁤ Union shortly ‍after Britain had blocked‍ the⁣ deal changed‍ matters, court‌ documents ‌published⁢ showed.
The software⁣ company ‍gave‍ legally-binding commitments ‌to⁤ European ⁢authorities‌ that Activision⁤ games ⁤can be⁣ streamed for a decade‍ after the​ merger, ⁤and has entered ⁢into agreements with⁢ NVIDIA,​ Boosteroid ‍and​ Ubitus.
As part⁤ of that ⁤a⁢ monitoring and⁣ enforcement⁤ regime will⁣ be ⁣established, which Microsoft ⁢said‌ should⁣ ease some ⁢of the CMA’s concerns.
Microsoft also argued ⁣that ⁤the terms‌ of the CMA’s ⁣proposed block⁣ reached​ further⁢ than ‌necessary‌ to tackle ⁣its cloud gaming concerns, for⁣ example ⁢in covering ‌Activision Blizzard’s King unit, which ‌makes mobile ​device ⁢games ⁢like Candy Crush‌ Saga.
The CMA⁢ said it‍ understood that⁣ Microsoft⁣ considered⁤ the ‍recent licensing ‍deal it agreed ‌with ‌Sony constituted a ​further⁢ material change of circumstance or ​special reason.
For⁢ its part, the CMA dismissed as‌ “irrelevant⁣ and ⁢immaterial” ​to its ⁢decision ⁢to look again​ at⁤ the deal⁣ the failure by U.S. ​authorities ‌to ​get it⁣ blocked ‌in ⁢the​ courts ‌there.
Britain’s Competition Appeal Tribunal ‌provisionally approved the adjournment on​ Monday ‍subject ‌to ⁣further ​submissions from the parties. It‌ formally granted it on Friday.
Reporting by Sarah Young, ‌Paul Sandle and‌ Sam Tobin; Editing by⁣ Alistair Smout ⁢and‌ Louise Heavens
Our⁢ Standards: The ⁢Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source ‌from www.reuters.com

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