Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Communications Government Network United States

FCC Says It Needs More Time To Review T-Mobile, Sprint Merger (cnbc.com) 22

The FCC says it needs more time to review the proposed Sprint-T-Mobile deal, the agency said in a letter to the companies Tuesday. According to CNBC, "The agency has paused an 'informal' 180-day transaction clock 'to allow for thorough staff and third-party review' of recently submitted materials." From the report: Sprint and T-Mobile have gone down a rocky road to a merger, calling off and resuming talks. The companies announced that they would merge last April in a bid to cut costs and combine forces to develop a next-generation network called 5G, which would provide faster speeds, more capacity and lower response times. But the companies could encounter hurdles to gaining regulatory approval for the tie-up. A deal between T-Mobile and Sprint, who are the third largest and fourth largest wireless carriers in the United States by subscribers, previously faced opposition from antitrust regulators under President Barack Obama's administration.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

FCC Says It Needs More Time To Review T-Mobile, Sprint Merger

Comments Filter:
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Someone competent needs to start reviewing the merger plans of these companies...any company. It is, by default, anti-competitive behavior and suspect in a free market.

      They have. They have been shouted down for at least since Clinton allowed the merger of 2 large oil companies. I remember that one because I used to think the D's would protect us from this shit, but Clinton took the donations and gave it a free pass.
      / Monica prolly had his cock in her mouth at the time
      // #metoo is about 30 years too late
      // fewer competition -> fewer consumer choices -> higher prices, no brainer

      • Actually, bigger oil companies can negotiate better with OPEC. It's not remotely the same situation as with Telcos.
    • It is, by default, anti-competitive behavior and suspect in a free market.

      Mergers aren't anti-competitive by default.

      • If one or both of the merging companies would otherwise have gone bankrupt, then it's not anti-competitive. The merger just redistributes the company's assets before bankruptcy, instead of after (assets are sold off). In other words, the merger accomplishes the same thing as a bankruptcy, except with less disruption to the market, creditors, stockholders, employees, and customers.
      • If nei
  • by Revek ( 133289 ) on Tuesday September 11, 2018 @07:15PM (#57293924)

    Lets face it that dingle berry only approves if he get paid.

Real Users find the one combination of bizarre input values that shuts down the system for days.

Working...