EU Clears $26 Billion Microsoft-LinkedIn Deal -- 3rd Update
December 06 2016 - 2:29PM
Dow Jones News
By Natalia Drozdiak
BRUSSELS -- The European Union on Tuesday approved Microsoft's
$26 billion acquisition of LinkedIn Corp., after the software giant
agreed to safeguards to assuage antitrust concerns.
The European Commission, the bloc's executive arm, said it was
clearing the deal on the condition that, postmerger, Microsoft
allowed other professional networking sites access to programming
commands for its Office applications and cloud-computing services
for the next five years. It must also grant computer manufacturers
the option not to install the LinkedIn shortcut on desktop devices,
the EU said.
"A growing number of Europeans subscribe to professional social
networks. Today's decision ensures that Europeans will continue to
enjoy a freedom of choice between professional social networks,"
said EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager.
Microsoft announced its deal with LinkedIn in June.
The concessions are mild. Microsoft already offers its Office
Add-in program to professional social-networking services. Giving
rivals access to its cloud-computing system could ultimately
benefit Microsoft, because companies that took advantage of that
system would use Microsoft products to do so. Moreover, LinkedIn
has become the dominant professional social network without help
from Microsoft's desktop, counting 467 million members in its most
recent quarter, up 18% from a year earlier.
"The quote-unquote concessions are minimal and very much in line
with the openness that Microsoft has been pursuing in the last few
years," said Stifel Nicolaus & Co. analyst Brad Reback.
The EU's approval strikes a blow to Salesforce.com Inc., which
lost out to Microsoft in the bidding for LinkedIn. It argued that
Microsoft would gain an unfair advantage over competitors through
its access to LinkedIn's vast pool of data.
Salesforce in a statement encouraged regulators to be "vigilant"
as they monitor Microsoft's use of LinkedIn.
"As AI [artificial intelligence], machine learning and other
technologies continue to advance, questions around access to
critical data sets will only become more important and Salesforce
will continue to share its views with regulators and policy makers
around the world about the ways in which access to data is emerging
as a key issue in competition policy," said Salesforce's chief
legal officer Burke Norton.
However, the EU said it was unlikely the deal would allow
Microsoft to shut competitors such as Salesforce.com, Oracle and
SAP out of the customer-relationship-management market. It ruled
that access to the full LinkedIn database was inessential to
compete in the market.
"We've now obtained all the regulatory approvals needed to
complete the acquisition and the deal will close in the coming
days," Microsoft's Chief Legal Officer Brad Smith said in a blog
post.
To win EU approval, Microsoft also agreed to permit rival social
networks to access Office's application programming interfaces,
which allow discrete programs to communicate with each another.
Among other things, the measures proposed by Microsoft would
allow for the display of profiles from sites other than LinkedIn in
a calendar entry of a meeting.
Moreover, the EU said Microsoft must allow rival networks access
to Microsoft Graph, a collection of software used to build
applications that can tap data in the Microsoft cloud. Developers
already have access to the software, a person familiar with the
matter said.
Write to Natalia Drozdiak at natalia.drozdiak@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 06, 2016 14:14 ET (19:14 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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