Spanish Watchdog Starts Proceedings Against Telefonica Over DTS Merger

Spain’s antitrust watchdog said on Wednesday it had started disciplinary proceedings against Telefonica for possibly breaching the commitments it made when it bought cable TV operator DTS in 2015.

The CNMC, as the regulator is known, said it found back in 2021 some evidence Telefonica didn’t comply with the commitments it made when acquiring control of DTS from Spanish media company Prisa (PRS.MC) for 724.6 million euros.

To get the acquisition approved, Telefonica committed, as part of a series of conditions, to refrain from hindering the switching of its pay-TV customers to other operators for at least five years to ensure competition, which got extended in 2020 for another three years, CNMC said.

Related: Spain: CNMC approves Telefonica and DTS merger

The regulator mentioned cheap mobile phone rentals and three-year subscription offers as potential infringements.

Telefonica will respond to the allegations and will ask for the case to be dropped, a spokesperson said on Wednesday, adding the company didn’t hinder competition as customers had full freedom to leave and the offers mentioned are not related to pay-TV service.