Satya Nadella, chief executive officer of Microsoft Corp., pauses during a Bloomberg event on the opening day of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2020.
Simon Dawson | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The Federal Trade Commission on Monday applied for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction seeking to block Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard before the deal’s July 18 deadline.
CNBC reported on the FTC’s plans earlier in the day.
The FTC said it fears that should Microsoft be allowed to buy Activision, Microsoft would have the power to “withhold or degrade” Activision’s gaming products, through price, game quality, experience on competitor offerings or “withholding content from competitors entirely.”
If the parties were allowed to merge before the case made its way through an administrative proceeding, the FTC argued that “reestablishing the status quo would be difficult, if not impossible.”
Microsoft announced its intent to buy Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billion in January 2022 in what would be its largest transaction to date. At the time, the software maker said it expected to complete the deal by the end of June 2023. If the deal falls apart, Microsoft might wind up owing Activision Blizzard a termination fee worth up to $3 billion.
The FTC sued to block the acquisition in December 2022, choosing to bring the case before its internal administrative law judge.
“We welcome the opportunity to present our case in federal court,” Microsoft President Brad Smith said. “We believe accelerating the legal process in the U.S will ultimately bring more choice and competition to the market.”
A hearing on the FTC’s case will begin on Aug. 2, the agency said in Monday’s filing.
Brad Smith, Microsoft’s president and vice chair, was scheduled to meet last week with UK Chancellor Jeremy Hunt regarding the deal, Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed people.
In May the European Union’s executive arm approved the deal after initially saying it was worried the deal would reduce competition. Regulators had originally felt that Microsoft might be able to prevent other companies from distributing Activision Blizzard games such as Call of Duty titles on other consoles other than Microsoft’s Xbox.
Microsoft offered its main rival in consoles, Sony, a decade-long contract to make every Call of Duty game available on Sony PlayStation at the same time the Xbox gets it. But Sony has not accepted.
“I don’t want a new Call of Duty deal. I just want to block your merger,” Jim Ryan, Sony Interactive Entertainment’s president and CEO, has said, according to a tweet from Lulu Cheng Meservey, an Activision Blizzard executive.
This story is developing. Please check back for updates.
WATCH: Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella on OpenAI relationship, generative A.I., Microsoft-Activision deal
Discussion about this post