Is
there anything Comcast could do at this point to save its controversial
proposed merger with Time Warner Cable? According to a new report in
The Wall Street Journal, the answer is “no.” Although Comcast is set to
have an exclusive meeting with U.S. regulatory officials on Wednesday to
offer concessions in a last-minute bid to saving the deal, the
Journal's sources say that it's unlikely Comcast can offer anything that
will make either the Department of Justice or the Federal
Communications Commission warm to the proposed deal.
“Justice
Department antitrust enforcers doubt that their concerns about
Comcast's planned acquisition of Time Warner Cable could be resolved by
promises about how the cable giant would conduct business after the
merger, according to people familiar with the matter,” the Journal
writes. “Such commitments, known as behavioral remedies, aren't usually
the preferred approach for the Justice Department when it seeks to
address mergers it views as problematic.”
The
DOJ did accept such behavioral remedies when it signed off on Comcast's
merger with NBCUniversal back in 2011 but the department apparently
finds the new merger proposal to be much more problematic than that
deal. Additionally, enforcing such remedies would require constant
scrutiny from the DOJ, which is something the department is reluctant to
commit resources for when a simpler solution would be to just block the
deal.
At
any rate, it looks like Comcast's plan to gain more control over the
home broadband market through buying Time Warner Cable is in big
trouble. And if customer satisfaction surveys are any indication, most
Comcast customers don't feel a shred of pity for the cable giant.
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