AT&T’s Deal for Time Warner Faces Tough Climate

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AT&T’s deal to buy Time Warner sails toward two cresting waves of opposition: resurgent antitrust enforcement in Washington and politicians fired by a new bipartisan populist rage.

It is too early to know how regulators will treat the AT&T-Time Warner deal. But after several quiet years, President Barack Obama’s antitrust team has switched into high gear in response to a recent spurt of deal-making. This trend is likely to continue in the next administration, as both presidential campaigns have signaled unease with the AT&T deal and with economic consolidation more broadly. Justice Department antitrust enforcers say they have sunk eight would-be deals over the past year and are currently waging court fights over three more, including two big health-insurance mergers. In all, the Justice Department has stopped 43 deals over the past eight years, more than double the mergers blocked by the preceding Bush Justice Department.


AT&T’s Deal for Time Warner Faces Tough Climate