 | EU Objects to Oracle-Sun Deal |
Heinz Wehrli writes "The
European Commission today issued a so-called Statement of Objections
over Oracle’s (ORCL) proposed acquisition of Sun Microsystems (JAVA).
Disclosed in a regulatory filing by Sun, the document give...
...formal
voice to the EC’s concerns over the fate of Sun’s open-source MySQL
database. From Sun’s filing:
On November 9, 2009, the European Commission issued a statement of
objections relating to the acquisition of Sun by Oracle Corporation.
The Statement of Objections sets out the Commission’s preliminary
assessment regarding, and is limited to, the combination of Sun’s open
source MySQL database product with Oracle’s enterprise database
products and its potential negative effects on competition in the
market for database products. The issuing of a Statement of Objections
allows addressees to present arguments in response to the Commission’s
preliminary assessment of the competitive effects of a notified
transaction. A Statement of Objections is a preparatory document that
does not prejudge the European Commission’s final decision. Any final
decision by the European Commission is subject to appeal to the
European Court of First Instance.
Indignant that the EC would dare to bring the $7 billion deal into question, Oracle vowed to take it to the mat in a harshly worded rebuttal:
Oracle’s acquisition of Sun is essential
for competition in the high end server market, for revitalizing Sparc
and Solaris and for strengthening the Java development platform. The
transaction does not threaten to reduce competition in the slightest,
including in the database market. The Commission’s Statement of
Objections reveals a profound misunderstanding of both database
competition and open source dynamics. It is well understood by those
knowledgeable about open source software that because MySQL is open
source, it cannot be controlled by anyone. That is the whole point of
open source.
The database market is intensely competitive with at least eight
strong players, including IBM, Microsoft, Sybase and three distinct
open source vendors. Oracle and MySQL are very different database
products. There is no basis in European law for objecting to a merger
of two among eight firms selling differentiated products. Mergers like
this occur regularly and have not been prohibited by United States or
European regulators in decades.
The U.S. Department of Justice carefully reviewed the proposed
acquisition during the normal Hart-Scott-Rodino review and considered
it again when the European Commission initiated a second phase review.
On both occasions the Justice Department came to the conclusion that
there is nothing anticompetitive about the deal, including specifically
Oracle’s acquisition of the MySQL database product. The U.S. Department
of Justice approved the acquisition without conditions and terminated
the waiting period under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act on August 20, 2009.
Sun’s customers universally support this merger and do not benefit
from the continued uncertainty and delay. Oracle plans to vigorously
oppose the Commission’s Statement of Objections as the evidence against
the Commission’s position is overwhelming. Given the lack of any
credible theory or evidence of competitive harm, we are confident we
will ultimately obtain unconditional clearance of the transaction.
And Oracle will evidently pursue its case with help from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division, which also issued a statement on the EC’s move today:
After conducting a careful investigation of
the proposed transaction between Oracle and Sun, the Department’s
Antitrust Division concluded that the merger is unlikely to be
anticompetitive. This conclusion was based on the particular facts of
the transaction and the Division’s prior investigations in the relevant
industries. The investigation included gathering statements from a
variety of industry participants and a review of the parties’ internal
business documents. At this point in its process, it appears that the
EC holds a different view. We remain hopeful that the parties and the
EC will reach a speedy resolution that benefits consumers in the
Commission’s jurisdiction.
Several factors led the Division to conclude that the proposed
transaction is unlikely to be anticompetitive. There are many
open-source and proprietary database competitors. The Division
concluded, based on the specific facts at issue in the transaction,
that consumer harm is unlikely because customers would continue to have
choices from a variety of well established and widely accepted database
products. The Department also concluded that there is a large community
of developers and users of Sun’s open source database with significant
expertise in maintaining and improving the software, and who could
support a derivative version of it.
The Department and the European Commission have a strong and
positive relationship on competition policy matters. The two
competition authorities have enjoyed close and cooperative relations.
The Antitrust Division will continue to work constructively with the EC
and competition authorities in other jurisdictions to preserve sound
antitrust enforcement policies that benefit consumers around the world.
Source: by John Paczkowski, http://digitaldaily.allthingsd.com/20091109/eu-objects-to-oracle-sun-deal/
"
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