The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) will be the agency to review Amazon’s proposed acquisition of Hollywood studio MGM, the Wall Street Journal. Amazon’s US$6.4 billion MGM deal was announced in May.
Amazon announced its deal for MGM, which would boost its Prime Video streaming platform in a market that includes rivals such as Netflix and Walt Disney MGM has a library of more than 4,000 films, including the James Bond franchise, and a TV catalog that includes “The Handmaid’s Tale” and “Vikings.”
Companies doing sizable mergers have to submit their deals for government antitrust review. The FTC shares antitrust authority with the Justice Department, and the two agencies split up the work of reviewing proposed deals. The Department has recently reviewed transactions involving video content, including Disney’s acquisition of 21st Century Fox and AT&T’s acquisition of Time Warner, a deal the Department unsuccessfully attempted to block in court.
During recent interagency negotiations, the FTC secured the right to review Amazon’s US$6.4 billion MGM deal, the people familiar with the matter said. The FTC pushed for jurisdiction over the merger review because it already has an open, wide-ranging antitrust investigation into Amazon’s business practices, the people said.
The FTC and the Justice Department previously agreed to divide up investigations of four leading tech giants’ conduct, with the Department taking Google and Apple, while the FTC took Facebook and Amazon.
The MGM review could present an early test for new FTC Chairwoman Lina Khan, who made her name in antitrust circles in large part by criticizing Amazon. She wrote a widely read law-review article while at Yale Law School that argued US antitrust law has failed to restrain the online retailer.
Amazon is a growing producer of its own video content and has become an aggressive buyer of sports rights including those for the National Football League. But it still has a relatively modest library compared with traditional media giants.
MGM is now one of the smaller studios in Hollywood, meaning the tie-up isn’t necessarily the kind of transaction that in the past would have raised immediate red flags about anticompetitive concentration. But in light of Amazon’s broader marketplace footprint, the addition of MGM could raise concerns about the expansion of the online giant’s platform, which critics in Washington already believe is too powerful.