AT&T-Time Warner suit could be the start of a more aggressive antitrust era

The Justice Department departed from years of precedent on Monday when it sued to block AT&T’s (T) planned $85 billion acquisition of entertainment giant Time Warner (TWX).

The move is unusual because the government does not typically challenge so-called vertical mergers like this one, which do not involve the combination of direct competitors. Some have speculated the challenge stems from President Donald Trump’s stated disdain for Time Warner-owned CNN, which he has decried as “fake news.

Indeed, AT&T seems confident a judge will approve the merger. But several antitrust experts told Yahoo Finance that the case is far from a slam dunk for AT&T despite its unusual nature. That’s because the government has a solid argument that AT&T could make Time Warner’s sought-after content like HBO more expensive for competing distributors like Dish, according to those experts.

Moreover, one leading antitrust scholar has seen growing momentum for more antitrust enforcement after the last decade yielded mega-mergers that might be seen as hurting consumers.

‘Attitudes towards mergers are changing’

To be sure, the government’s challenge of the AT&T merger initially appeared to come out of nowhere, fueling the speculation of its political motivation.

John Kirkwood, a professor at Seattle University School of Law, said that the government hasn’t challenged a vertical merger since 1973 in a case involving Fruehauf Corporation, then the nation’s biggest maker of truck trailers. And in that case, an appeals court ruled for Fruehauf.

Since then, antitrust enforcement has arguably grown relatively lax for both vertical mergers like the AT&T/Time Warner tie-up and horizontal mergers involving direct competitors like airlines. Those years of loose enforcement may be fueling a backlash, though.

“Attitudes towards mergers are changing and they’re changing in the direction of more enforcement,” says Herbert Hovenkamp, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and a leading authority on antitrust law. “There’s a view out there … that mergers have been under-enforced in the past decade or so and that too many mergers have gone through that have yielded higher prices.”

Chief Executive Officer of AT&T Randall Stephenson speaks during a press conference in New York City, New York, U.S. November 20, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Chief Executive Officer of AT&T Randall Stephenson speaks during a press conference in New York City, New York, U.S. November 20, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

Of course, many mergers that have sparked criticism for hurting consumers — like those of airlines — have involved direct competitors. But, as the Justice Department alleges in its complaint against AT&T and Time Warner, vertical mergers can arguably raise prices for consumers, too. Hovenkamp noted that the guidelines for these types of vertical mergers have not been updated since 1984, and that they favor companies that want to merge rather than antitrust regulators.