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Oracle-Siebel deal gets EC clearance

Dawn Kawamoto CNET News

Published: 22 Dec 2005 16:25 GMT

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European Commission officials gave their blessing on Thursday to Oracle's $5.8bn (£3.3bn) merger with Siebel Systems, removing the last major antitrust hurdle for the enterprise software companies.

The European Commission declined to challenge Oracle's megamerger with Siebel Systems, a move that had been anticipated by industry watchers.

"After examining the operation carefully, the Commission concluded that the transaction would not significantly impede effective competition... and has therefore approved the concentration," the commission said in a statement.

The Commission noted that the only area the two enterprise software vendors face overlap is in customer relationship management (CRM) software, a fragmented market, according to the commission's statement.

"The Commission also examined possible conglomerate effects," the EC stated. "Widely-used open standards make it unlikely that the merged entity would impose restrictions on newly acquired Siebel's CRM customers, as regards to their use of non-Oracle databases."

The green light from European antitrust regulators stands in stark contrast to their response to Oracle's acquisition of another archrival, PeopleSoft. Both the EC and the US Department of Justice raised concerns about the takeover when it was proposed. After 18 months of hostile maneuvering to acquire PeopleSoft, however, Oracle ultimately prevailed.

With its last antitrust hurdle cleared in the Siebel deal, Oracle now awaits approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission. Oracle executives previously indicated they expected the merger to close in the first quarter, as early as mid-January.

Despite generating less controversy than the PeopleSoft deal, Oracle's pending acquisition of Siebel has not been without drama.

Oracle executives at one point were in buyout discussions with Siebel while also trying to land the PeopleSoft deal.

And the DOJ, which lost its court challenge in the PeopleSoft case, expressed a desire to take a more in-depth look at the Siebel merger, before ultimately allowing it to proceed.

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