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FCC review unneeded in Time Warner deal: AT&T
Washington Post
Jan. 6, 2017 5:31 pm
WASHINGTON - AT&T is trying to ease its way out of scrutiny by the Federal Communications Commission over the wireless and TV giant's $85 billion acquisition of Time Warner.
Telecom regulators shouldn't need to analyze the deal because it will be beyond their jurisdiction, AT&T signaled in a filing Thursday to the Securities and Exchange Commission.
By potentially eliminating a layer of oversight, the claim could accelerate the merger's approval in Washington, D.C., where federal antitrust officials also are expected to review the proposed purchase.
AT&T, which became the nation's largest pay-TV provider when it acquired DirecTV last year, is gunning for Time Warner's massive library of content and intellectual property, which it hopes to distribute and sell advertising against. Time Warner owns CNN, HBO and Warner Bros., along with rights to lucrative media franchises such as 'Harry Potter” and 'Batman.”
To transmit shows and movies from their origins to TV screens, Time Warner beams some content to cable companies via satellite. The FCC typically has a role in overseeing any merger or acquisition that would transfer control of those airwaves from one company to another.
For months, AT&T said it had been looking to see which, if any, of Time Warner's satellite licenses it would acquire as part of the deal. In its SEC filing Thursday, AT&T said it has concluded that no licenses will be transferred.
An AT&T sign is seen outside a branch in Rolling Meadows, Illinois, U.S., October 24, 2016. REUTERS/Jim Young