By Drew FitzGerald and Joe Flint 

This article is being republished as part of our daily reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S. print edition of The Wall Street Journal (August 18, 2017).

The government review of AT&T Inc.'s $85 billion takeover of Time Warner Inc. has reached an advanced stage, people close to the situation said, a significant milestone in a deal that was closely watched for signs of how the Trump administration would view large mergers.

The deal's regulatory review has hit a late-stage point where AT&T lawyers are discussing merger conditions with the Justice Department, the people said. The review process has reached that point despite a vacant seat atop the department's antitrust division.

An approval could underscore the administration's pro-business credentials at a time when President Donald Trump's ties with America's CEOs are under severe stress. Two advisory panels filled with a host of top U.S. executives disbanded this week in response to the president's comments about the violence at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va.

During his presidential campaign, Mr. Trump had attacked the proposed deal. "AT&T is buying Time Warner, and thus CNN, a deal we will not approve in my administration because it's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few," he said. Mr. Trump has since avoided talking publicly about the transaction but frequently complained on Twitter about the way CNN, a unit of Time Warner, has reported on him.

Markets are also growing more optimistic about the deal's chances. Time Warner's share price on Wednesday was 5.2% lower than the value of AT&T's cash-and-stock offer -- a vast improvement from the nearly 20% discount it traded at when the deal was announced last October. The narrowing of the gap suggests more investors are betting the deal will succeed.

Presidents don't approve mergers -- antitrust enforcers do -- but they set the tone, in part through their appointments, for how big industry-changing deals will be received in Washington.

The White House didn't respond to requests for comment.

Consolidation has been afoot more broadly in media. Discovery Communications Inc. agreed to buy HGTV and Food Network parent Scripps Networks Interactive Inc. last month, a nearly $12 billion a deal that is partly in reaction to the bulking up of distributors like Charter Communications Inc., which completed a $60 billion takeover of Time Warner Cable last year, and AT&T's pending deal. Broadcasters have been in on the action as well, with local TV station-owning giant Sinclair Broadcast Group agreeing in May to acquire Tribune Media.

AT&T's acquisition of Time Warner would turn the giant telephone company into one of the world's biggest media owners, putting CNN, HBO and the Warner Bros. film studio under the same corporate roof as DirecTV and roughly 100 million wireless users.

All along, executives at the companies have said the deal wouldn't hurt competition and can actually help it, because they have little overlap and they hope to become a rival in digital advertising to Alphabet Inc.'s Google and Facebook Inc.

Among the topics raised in the government's review is ensuring that AT&T doesn't discriminate or treat channels that compete with Time Warner's content less favorably, the people close to the situation said. For example, the government could prevent AT&T from favoring HBO over other premium-TV brands in its marketing and pricing, the people said.

Another issue is AT&T's control of data on customers, especially its wireless subscribers, which could be used to target advertising. The Justice Department has probed whether that data should be available at a reasonable cost to rivals, the people say.

AT&T is counting on its advertising division to fuel a bigger share of future profits and recently hired Brian Lesser, head of ad agency GroupM in North America, to run it .

AT&T General Counsel David McAtee said it would be inappropriate to comment on discussions with the Justice Department. "We respect the DOJ's confidential process, which allows us to have candid conversations with the professionals at the Department," he said in a statement. "As we have stated previously, that process is on track from our perspective."

Several competitors including the Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.'s premium programming service Starz and rival satellite broadcaster Dish Network Corp. have raised concerns about the deal, people familiar with the matter said.

Starz has warned that AT&T could favor Time Warner's HBO in the way it markets the channel and sets prices for customers. After it announced the acquisition, AT&T offered HBO free for a year to some new video and unlimited wireless data subscribers.

Dish, which competes head-to-head with DirecTV, is worried that AT&T owning HBO could give too much leverage to its No. 1 competitor, a person familiar with the matter said. State attorneys general who are reviewing the deal have been exploring similar issues, this person said.

AT&T is proceeding with confidence about the review. Last month the company shuffled its management structure and tapped DirecTV executive John Stankey to lead Time Warner's companies if the deal is approved. The company said it has no plans to divest CNN, and pledged to support the news network's editorial independence. AT&T has also lined up its financing for the deal, including through a $20 billion bond offering.

There are still regulatory headwinds to the AT&T-Time Warner, including the Justice Department antitrust chief's empty seat. AT&T executives expected the U.S. Senate to confirm deputy White House general counsel Makan Delrahim as antitrust chief earlier this summer, according to people familiar with the matter. Congress kicked off a recess earlier this month, pushing his confirmation to September at the earliest.

Mr. Delrahim said in a May Senate Judiciary Committee hearing that he would keep politics out of the antitrust division's decisions if confirmed. He also pledged in July to tell lawmakers if the White House tries to improperly influence his work at the department.

The Justice Department can still make antitrust decisions without Mr. Delrahim, though a political appointee usually has the final say on whether to challenge a major transaction.

An AT&T spokesman said the company is "perfectly comfortable continuing this process with the Department of Justice, with or without Mr. Delrahim's confirmation." A Justice Department spokesman and Mr. Delrahim declined to comment.

Write to Drew FitzGerald at andrew.fitzgerald@wsj.com and Joe Flint at joe.flint@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

August 18, 2017 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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