POLALA.COM
welcome to my space
X
Search:  
Welcome to:polala.com
NAVIGATION - HOME
Bell Mergers Sealed on DoJ Approval
Published by: jack 2008-11-18

UPDATED: The U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) Thursday afternoon approved the SBC-AT&T and Verizon-MCI mergers, requiring only that Verizon and SBC divest portions of certain local fiber-optic network facilities.

The mega-mergers of Baby Bells with the dominate long-distance carriers also require the regulatory approval of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which is meeting Friday to consider the matter.

The divestitures are considered minor details to the landmark mergers. Verizon and SBC must each divest connections to more than 350 buildings in their respective territories. These local private-line connections are used to supply voice and data telecommunications services to business customers.

According to the DoJ, the mergers, as originally proposed, would eliminate competition for facilities-based local private-line service to those buildings and result in higher prices. The divestitures affect lines in eight metropolitan areas in Verizon's territory and 11 metropolitan areas in SBC's territory.

PoliPundit.com::
UPDATE III (Live-blog begins): The speech has not even yet begun and already on ABC two references to the President’s horrible approval ratings,
http://polipundit.com/index.php?m=200601
HOME
AT&T hangs up telephone legacy / Celebrated phone company likely ::
In 1982, AT&T reached an agreement with the Department of Justice to settle an of AT&T for $16 billion, pending the approval of federal regulators.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/02/01/BUG1VB3JD51.DTL
HOME
"Today's action by the [DoJ] ensures that business customers that provide or buy telecommunications services to locations in Verizon's and SBC's territories will continue to benefit from competition," Thomas O. Barnett, the DoJ's acting assistant attorney general in charge of the Antitrust Division, said in a statement.

In other antitrust aspects of the mergers, the DoJ said the transactions would generate "substantial efficiencies" that should benefit consumers.

"The [DoJ] concluded that the transactions will not harm competition and will likely benefit consumers due to existing competition, emerging technologies, the changing regulatory environment and exceptionally large merger-specific efficiencies," Barnett said.

SBC's $16 billion bid to acquire AT&T and Verizon's $8.4 billion deal for MCI gives the two Baby Bells the ability to provide local and long-distance service in all 50 states, in addition to controlling the Internet backbones of MCI and AT&T.

Knowledge Problem: Politics Archives::
Economists at the U.S. Department of Justice recently produced a paper advocating the two companies must overcome to gain approval for the merger.
http://www.knowledgeproblem.com/archives/cat_politics.html
HOME
Both of the Baby Bells are also planning to enter the video market to directly compete with cable companies, which have been siphoning off traditional telephone customers from Verizon and SBC.

In approving the mergers, the DoJ said it "took into account competition from cable companies as well as emerging technologies such as Voice over Internet Protocol."

Legg Mason telecom analyst Blair Levin said in a statement that the DoJ decision is a "very significant victory for the Bells. Although opponents can challenge the consent decree ... we believe there is no chance the court would overturn the settlement."

SBC, which announced earlier Thursday it would be known as AT&T after the merger, issued a statement praising the DoJ's "fair and impartial" determination that the mergers would not harm competition.

"The Justice Department has a comprehensive view of the state of the communications industry," said James D. Ellis, SBC senior executive vice president and general counsel. "We applaud the DoJ staff ... for recognizing the competitive nature of today's marketplace in reaching its decision."

John Thorne, Verizon senior vice president and deputy general counsel, said in a statement, "We proved that the transaction is pro-competitive and will not lessen competition in any market."

Legg Mason's Levin, like many other analysts, doesn't anticipate regulatory problems from the FCC.

"We believe the FCC is considering a broad range of conditions related primarily to special access, but continue to believe there will be no merger requirement that the Bells reduce their special access rate or divest any facilities," Levin said.

With FCC approval, SBC said Thursday it expects to close the deal with AT&T by the end of the year. Verizon anticipates finalizing all aspects of its deal with MCI early next year.




Technical Analysis: Looking For Leadership
Gotham Can Purchase Without Contact

You are looking at:polala.com's Bell Mergers Sealed on DoJ Approval, click polala.com to home
#If you have any other info about this subject , Please add it free.#
Your name:
E-mail:
Telphone:

Your comments:


If you have any other info about Bell Mergers Sealed on DoJ Approval , Please add it free.
  • pop up on print open
  • office comments
  • word document viewing
  • solved dot files open as dot and not doc
  • stack bars in office 2007
  • macro problem namefareast
  • deleting text with
  • degree sign
  • cursor issues
  • opening an excel file from word
  • startup format has changed somehow
  • opening excel documents in word etc
  • vba arrays in word
  • solved deleting line breaks
  • mirrored margins doing the opposite of what they should

  • ms office 2003 word bullets and numbering
  • preventing word opening in reading layout
  • equation problem in word 2007 with pdf add in
  • word micro
  • is the code to manipulate shape layout
  • date formats in word
  • multiple index creation in word
  • vba code to add in new row into a table
  • word 2007 memo date format problems
  • reassign keystroke control tab
  • using different footers in one document
  • printing high quality pictures in word
  • printing on a roll of labels

  • About us -Site map -Advertisement -Jion us -Contact usExchange linksSponsor us
    Copyright© 2008 polala.com All Rights Reserved
    Site made&Support support@polala.com    E-mail: web@polala.com