Canada explains why Rogers-Shaw deal concessions insufficient

Commissioner of Competition, Canada’s competition agency, explained in filing that why huge concessions offered by Rogers Communications to buy Shaw Communications in a $16 billion deal were insufficient.
Rogers 5G network in Canada
The companies have proposed divestment of Shaw’s wireless business, Freedom Mobile, to address concerns about the deal’s anti-competitive effects on the wireless market in Canada.

Commissioner of Competition Matthew Boswell said in a filing to the Competition Tribunal that the new owners of Freedom Mobile would be likely to provide less effective financial, managerial, technical or other support for the wireless services business.

The deal might prevent or lessen competition in wireless and business services in British Columbia, Alberta and Ontario, according to the commissioner.

The proposed divestment will not eliminate the lessening or prevention of competition resulting from the proposed transaction, Matthew Boswell said in a filing to the Competition Tribunal. The commissioner, head of the Competition Bureau, had already stated his opposition to the merger on competition grounds.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest

More like this
Related

Telcos Ramp Up AI Infrastructure Investment to Capture Sovereignty-Driven Demand and New Revenue Streams

Telecom operators are accelerating capital investment in AI infrastructure...

Proximus selects Nokia to modernize charging and voice core with cloud-native platform

Belgian telecom operator Proximus has selected Nokia to modernize...

MVNO in a Box Platforms to Drive Global MVNO Market to 438 mn Subscribers by 2030

The global mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) market is...

Europe Leads Global 2G and 3G Network Switch-off, Focus Shifts to 5G Expansion

Analysis from Omdia’s latest report, 2G and 3G Switch-off...