News

Spectrum owner Charter to buy Cox for $21.9 billion in mega cable deal

By Aditya Soni, Jaspreet Singh and Milana Vinn

(Reuters) -Charter Communications on Friday agreed to buy privately held rival Cox Communications for $21.9 billion, combining two of the largest U.S. cable and broadband operators in their battle with streaming giants and mobile carriers.

The deal – one of the biggest globally this year – will bolster Charter’s push to bundle broadband and mobile services at a time when wireless carriers are luring internet customers with aggressive plans, while millions ditch traditional pay-TV for streaming services.

Analysts have said Charter’s strategy of combining internet, TV and mobile services into a single, customizable package has shown merit, but it needs scale as cable firms rely on leasing network access from major carriers to offer mobile plans. Charter leases wireless network capacity from Verizon.

“This combination will augment our ability to innovate and provide high-quality, competitively priced products,” said Charter CEO Chris Winfrey, who will head the combined company.

The merger will be among the first major tests of M&A regulation under the Trump administration, as it would create the largest U.S. cable TV and broadband provider with around 38 million subscribers, surpassing market leader Comcast.

U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Democrat from Minnesota on the Senate antitrust committee, said a review of the deal needs to “make sure this proposed merger does not harm consumers by adversely affecting competition or stifling innovation in cable and broadband markets.”

“Telecommunications services are essential to our economy, and I urge our antitrust enforcers to take an in-depth look at this merger to ensure it will not raise prices or create additional barriers to internet access,” she said.

It will likely be reviewed by the U.S. Department of Justice’s antitrust division. Assistant Attorney General Gail Slater, who leads the division, has made it clear she intends to focus on mergers that decrease competition in ways that harm consumers or workers.

“There is likely no significant direct competition between the two compared to the overall footprint so that should mitigate a lot of the competition concerns,” said Andre Barlow, an antitrust lawyer in Washington.

The DOJ will look instead at whether the merged company will have leverage over rivals, he said. The DOJ did so in 2016 when it cleared Charter’s acquisition of Time Warner Cable on the condition that the company not restrict programming providers from entering distribution deals with streaming services.

About the author

admin

Add Comment

Click here to post a comment