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

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  • 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.

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