Google Makes Concessions in Effort to Buy Fitbit
September 30 2020 - 12:04PM
Dow Jones News
By Valentina Pop
BRUSSELS -- Google's plan to buy health-tracker Fitbit is
inching toward approval in Europe after the U.S. tech company made
new concessions to competitors using its Android system for mobile
devices.
European Union officials in August launched an in-depth probe
into the Alphabet Inc. unit's acquisition plans, saying that
Google's initial pledge to refrain from using Fitbit data for
advertising purposes was insufficient. The $2.1 billion deal is
also under review by the U.S. Justice Department and by Australia's
competition authority.
The review of the Fitbit deal comes as Google and other
U.S.-based tech companies face intense scrutiny in both the EU and
the U.S. for allegedly anticompetitive practices. Some tech critics
also say tech companies have used acquisitions to eliminate
potential competitors, arguing that merger controls in the U.S. and
EU haven't been aggressive enough in recent years.
Google's latest concessions make an approval more likely,
according to two people familiar with the case, as the concessions
include guarantees not to discriminate against rivals that use
Google's Android operating system. Existing agreements between
Fitbit and other health-data services, such as Strava, are also to
continue unimpeded under Google's commitments. The concessions were
reported earlier by Reuters.
Google said it was working with the EU to safeguard competition,
in addition to ensuring that Fitbit data won't be used for
advertising. "This deal is about devices, not data," Google said.
"We're also formalizing our longstanding commitment to supporting
other wearable manufacturers on Android and to continue to allow
Fitbit users to connect to third-party services."
The European Commission, the EU's competition enforcer, has a
Dec. 23 deadline to approve or reject the deal but could give its
assent beforehand.
Google's use of data to potentially undermine rivals is the
subject of a separate preliminary antitrust investigation by the
commission, which has also leveled fines totaling more than $9
billion for the company's anticompetitive practices. Google has
challenged those fines in EU courts.
--Sam Schechner in Paris contributed to this article.
Write to Valentina Pop at valentina.pop@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 30, 2020 11:49 ET (15:49 GMT)
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