EU Antitrust Chief Set To Stop WorldCom-Sprint Merger

Published: 1 November 1999 y., Monday
European Competition Commissioner Mario Monti told reporters in Washington, D.C., he could consider accepting late proposals for a remedy but has not received any. June 18 was the deadline for the company to propose new conditions to gain European approval. The European Commission, the administrative arm of the European Union, is expected to vote on the merger July 12. Under a market test, regulators confirm that a remedy would serve competitors and the public interest.EU and U.S. regulators are concerned because the mammoth merger combines the second- and third-largest long-distance companies and dominant Internet backbone providers. WorldCom (stock:WCOM), Clinton, Miss., is focused on acquiring Sprint's wireless system to fill a major hole in its bundle of services, while Sprint (stock: FON), based in Kansas City, Mo., would establish a global footprint. Monti has been in the United States since last week to discuss antitrust transatlantic cooperation, including the WorldCom-Sprint merger. He has met with his counterparts, Attorney General Janet Reno, Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust Joel Klein, and Federal Trade Commission Chairman Robert Pitofsky, and was to confer with Federal Communications Commission Chairman William Kennard later Monday. The European Commission learned lessons from the merger two years ago between MCI (stock: MCIC) and WorldCom that restructuring conditions imposed on the combining companies must be truly effective. To gain approval, MCI sold its Internet assets to Cable and Wireless (stock: CWP), which later litigated the sale as incomplete. Even if the European Commission rejects the merger, the WorldCom and Sprint can resubmit their application and start the process over with new remedy proposals, the European antitrust chief said.
Šaltinis: TechWeb News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Minor bug lingers in Pentium 4 chipset

A bug associated with the Pentium 4 that delayed Intel's introduction of the chip by a month is still with us, but the company and PC makers have worked to contain the potential damage. more »

Information about Baltic States’ and Finland’s roads

Information about Baltic States’ and Finland’s roads to be available on the Internet more »

E-Money To Be Made Legal Tender In Singapore

Electronic money will be made legal tender in Singapore by the year 2008 more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Free Links, Only $50 Apiece

Online news sites are turning to a novel way to make some extra cash: requiring fees for links. more »

Everywhere Network

In a lab at the University of California at Berkeley, computer scientist John Kubiatowicz is designing a networking scheme that, in ten years, just might take over your life. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

German Internet Providers are Living Dangerously

After the DDoS attacks on Yahoo!, eBay, and Amazon in February 2000, the German Federal Minister of the Interior Otto Schily founded a task force which in June published a catalog of defense measures against such hacker attacks. more »

Porn-filter disabler unleashed

An anti-censorship group Peacefire has released a program which disables porn-filtering programs. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »