FCC Approves Charter Purchase of Time Warner Cable--3rd Update
May 06 2016 - 5:47PM
Dow Jones News
By John D. McKinnon
The Federal Communications Commission said Friday it had
formally voted to approve Charter Communications Inc.'s acquisition
of Time Warner Cable Inc., creating a telecommunications giant
while imposing tough operating restrictions on it.
The conditions placed on the merger will help mitigate threats
to online video competition that could be exacerbated by
cable-industry concentration, officials say.
Specific conditions will require some degree of "overbuilding"
of cable within other cable companies' territories, something the
industry traditionally hasn't been required to do.
The deal also compels the merged company not to impose data
usage caps on customers for a number of years, and prohibits use of
pay-TV contract language that critics believe has made it harder
for media companies to offer content online.
In a statement, Charter officials said many of the conditions
grew out of its existing practices.
"The significant benefits of these transactions are clear:
greater competition; more consumer and [video-friendly] broadband
policies; broader access to affordable broadband; and added U.S.
jobs," said Tom Rutledge, president and chief executive officer of
Charter. "Charter will be a stronger competitor in the broadband
and video markets, well positioned to deliver these benefits and
more to consumers."
The approval has been expected since FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler
announced about two weeks ago that he was recommending the deal.
The Justice Department also signed off.
The merger will create the second-biggest broadband provider in
the country, after Comcast Corp., and the third-largest pay-TV
company, serving more than 17 million video customers, trailing
only AT&T Inc. and Comcast. As part of the transaction, Charter
also agreed to acquire smaller operator Bright House Networks.
The deal must still be approved by regulators in California, who
are expected to vote next week.
Some consumer groups criticized the deal, but it drew far less
concern than a similar proposed merger of Comcast and Time Warner
Cable last year. That deal fell apart amid regulators'
opposition.
Write to John D. McKinnon at john.mckinnon@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 06, 2016 17:32 ET (21:32 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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