[opendtv] News: Shift on Antitrust Issues May Aid Sirius-XM Deal
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2007 07:11:28 -0500
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/21/business/media/21radio.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin
Shift on Antitrust Issues May Aid Sirius-XM Deal
By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN
Published: February 21, 2007
Mel Karmazin, the chief executive of Radio">Sirius Satellite Radio,
made a lot of phone calls seeking advice before he entered into a
merger deal with Radio">XM Satellite Radio on Monday.
Maybe he should have called Charles W. Ergen, the founder and
chairman of EchoStar Communications.
Mr. Ergen could have given Mr. Karmazin an earful about his failed
effort to merge EchoStar with DirecTV four years ago, a deal that
seems eerily similar to the one Sirius and XM have proposed.
Will the government see things differently this time?
Michael K. Powell, the former chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission who blocked the EchoStar-DirecTV deal, is not so sure.
"I do think it could get through, but I don't think it's going to be
an easy one," he said. "It's going to be incumbent on the companies
to demonstrate that the analysis in EchoStar-DirecTV is different."
In opposing that deal, regulators - both from the F.C.C. and the
Justice Department - argued the merger would create a monopoly.
EchoStar and DirecTV, on the other hand, argued that the market
should be defined more broadly than simply satellite television and
should encompass cable television operators and telephone companies
providing video over phone lines.
When Sirius and XM announced their merger on Monday, they made a
similar argument - that their market is much bigger than just
satellite radio.
"In addition to existing competition from free 'over-the-air' AM and
FM radio as well as iPods and mobile phone streaming, satellite radio
will face new challenges from the rapid growth of HD Radio, Internet
radio and next generation wireless technologies," the companies said.
There is no question that times have clearly changed: a decade ago,
the argument for a Sirius-XM merger would have never had a chance.
Joel I. Klein, then the acting assistant attorney general in charge
of the antitrust division, gave a speech to the radio industry 10
years ago this week, suggesting that merging terrestrial radio
stations in the same market was "no different from a situation where
all soft drink manufacturers would seek to merge and control 100
percent of that market. We wouldn't walk away from such a merger -
and if you like soft drinks I should think you wouldn't want us to
walk away - merely because there are lots of other beverages out
there, such as milk, juice, beer, wine, et cetera."
But the regulatory tone in Washington has changed. Inside Sirius and
XM, executives are bullish on government approval.
In a conference call with analysts yesterday, Mr. Karmazin said that
"I would not have gone to our board," if he "didn't think there was
greater than a 50-50 chance of approval." In fact, the deal's timing
was driven in part by a feeling that the current administration was
more likely to let the deal through and that it needed to be done
before that window closed.
The Justice Department's surprising approval of Whirlpool's
acquisition of Maytag - a deal that created the nation's largest
manufacturer of appliances with more than 50 percent market share -
has encouraged others to proceed with deals that might have seemed to
pose regulatory problems.
But Sirius and XM should not necessarily take solace in the shifting
attitude in Washington and the Whirlpool decision, some antitrust
experts suggest, because the deal's fate may be decided by the
F.C.C., which issued two sets of satellite spectrum to Sirius and XM
in order to create competition.
At the time, the F.C.C. defined free-to-air radio as a separate
market from satellite because free-to-air radio, which included local
programming like weather and traffic, was tightly regulated while
satellite's content would be unfettered.
"Howard Stern couldn't do his current broadcast on radio," said Mr.
Powell, who had fined Mr. Stern several times for some of his lewd
talk on terrestrial radio before his program moved to Sirius.
Mr. Powell said that in the end, the deal's fate would lie in the
evidence that both companies produce during the government's review.
He said that while EchoStar and DirecTV publicly talked up an
assortment of competitors like cable and telephone, when the
government got its hands on the companies' documents about the way
they internally defined their rivals, "it seemed that the only
competitors who mattered were each other."
Of course, perhaps the largest factor in their decision will be the
precedent regulators want to set. "If the Federal Communications
Commission grants a green light for this transaction, the brakes will
be off for similar telecommunications industry hookups," Carmi Levy,
senior research analyst with Info-Tech Research Group, wrote to
clients. If so, perhaps Mr. Ergen will get a second chance.
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