China Grants Microsoft “Unconditional Clearance” for its $68.7 Billion Bid for Activision Blizzard

Peter_Brosdahl

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The deal is nearly done as China grants Microsoft an "Unconditional clearance" for its plans to acquire Activision Blizzard. This latest approval follows another major milestone when it gained support from the European Commission. Microsoft has been succeeding with regulators from around the world and China's approval makes it the 37th country to approve the deal.

The deal has yet to pass in the UK where its Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) expressed concerns and cited multiple reasons in its final report blocking it. Microsoft is expected to appeal the CMA's decision. Meanwhile, in the U.S., Microsoft has had mixed success in getting support. While some U.S. senators have expressed support, there was enough pressure on the FTC, which filed its own lawsuit at the beginning of 2023, to block the deal. The Register reports hearing is set to happen on August 23 while interested parties have until June 19th to finish submitting their responses to the CMA.

A list of some of the countries that have already approved the deal includes Brazil, Chile, Serbia, Japan, the EU, Saudi Arabia, and now China. Other countries still reviewing the deal include South Korea, New Zealand, and Australia.

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I mean it's a big deal... but to MS, it's like... a 5% blip. Bad news in the market is more impactful to their bottom line than this purchase.

(MS being a 2.37 trillion dollar company) As a note.. the .07 of their value would cover this purchase with enough left over so nobody in this forum would need to work for the next 3 generations of their family.
 
Interesting that China would feel the need to approve this when they lock down video games so much that Acti/Bliz can't even directly sell in the country.

I guess MS does some business there, but apparently it's less than 2% of MS's overall revenue
 
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