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Microsoft-Activision US$69 billion deal back on track after US court win

  • The US Federal Trade Commission had requested the transaction be halted pending an investigation on competition concerns
  • Decision hands a major victory to Microsoft and allows it to close its purchase of Activision, the maker of Call of Duty, as planned

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Activision’s Call of Duty on a smartphone near a photograph of the Microsoft logo. Photo: AP

A US federal judge on Tuesday resurrected Microsoft’s US$69 billion buyout of video gaming giant Activision Blizzard by refusing to allow the temporary suspension of the long delayed deal.

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The US Federal Trade Commission, the Washington-based antitrust enforcer, requested that the blockbuster transaction be halted pending an investigation on competition concerns.

But Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley said “the FTC has not shown a likelihood it will prevail on its claim.”

The decision handed a major victory to Microsoft and allowed it to close its purchase of Activision, the maker of Call of Duty and Candy Crush, as planned on July 18.
Xbox-owner Microsoft launched a bid for Activision Blizzard early last year, seeking to establish the world’s third biggest gaming firm by revenue after China’s Tencent and Japan’s PlayStation maker Sony.
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While the European Union has greenlit the deal, Microsoft still needs to overcome a veto from the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) in Britain.

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