U.S. States urge FCC Constraints on XM-Sirius Deal
Posted on Fri, 28 Mar 2008 00:05:00 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By Peter Kaplan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group of state attorneys general on Thursday urged the
U.S. Federal Communications Commission to impose restrictions on Sirius
Satellite Radio's purchase of rival XM Satellite Radio if it decides to approve
the $4.15 billion deal.
Attorneys general from 11 states including Ohio, Missouri, Connecticut and Iowa
told the FCC they were "disappointed" by Justice Department antitrust
regulators' decision on Monday to let the deal proceed without conditions.
The FCC must now determine if the XM-Sirius deal is in the public interest, and
whether to enforce its 1997 order barring either satellite radio company from
acquiring the other.
The states said the deal should be subject to restrictions designed to preserve
competition and protect consumers.
"The combination of these companies will result in a single corporation
controlling access to all nationally available satellite radio," the attorneys
general said.
The states said the FCC should consider requiring Sirius and XM to make
interoperable radio receivers available to customers, offer different packages
of channels on an a la carte basis, and divest some radio spectrum that would
allow another competitor into the business.
The merger would bring entertainers such as Oprah Winfrey and shock-jock Howard
Stern under the same banner. It has been criticized as anti-competitive by the
traditional radio industry, and by some U.S. lawmakers.
However, antitrust authorities at the Justice Department approved the
combination after concluding it would not harm consumers. The department said
satellite radio companies face stiff competition from traditional AM/FM radio,
high-definition radio, MP3 players and audio delivered by mobile phones.
With the Justice Department's approval in hand, analysts say XM and Sirius are
unlikely to face outright opposition from the FCC. However, the FCC could impose
conditions on the deal designed to protect consumers and preserve competition.
Sirius Chief Executive Mel Karmazin has promised that the company would offer a
la carte pricing and would let customers block adult channels and get a refund
for those channels. Sirius also said all existing XM and Sirius satellite radios
will continue to work after the companies are combined.
The deal, in which Sirius is offering 4.6 shares for each share of XM, is worth
about $4.15 billion based on Sirius' closing price of $2.83 on Thursday.
(Reporting by Peter Kaplan, editing by Richard Chang)
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Posted on Fri, 28 Mar 2008 00:05:00 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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