Advertisement
Promo

Office applications Toolkit

Adobe's Macromedia deal to be probed

Dawn Kawamoto CNET News

Published: 12 Jul 2005 10:10 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

US Federal antitrust regulators have requested additional information about Adobe's proposed purchase of Macromedia, the companies said Monday.

The Justice Department apparently is taking a closer look at the competitive landscape for multimedia content tools. Specifically, officials have requested additional information on both companies' Web-authoring design and vector graphics illustration products, the companies said.

Adobe announced in April that it intended to buy Macromedia in an all-stock deal valued then at $3.4bn. The company is seeking to expand the breadth of tools it offers and distribute multimedia content over a number of operating systems and devices.

The deal comes as Adobe, a market leader in electronic documents with its PDF software, is beginning to face greater competition from open source players entering the market. And, of course, the multimedia tools designer is keeping a watchful eye on Microsoft.

Despite regulators' request for additional information, Adobe still anticipates the deal will close this fall, the company stated.

Large mergers are often subject to close scrutiny by federal antitrust regulators, particularly if the companies involved serve the same markets.

"It's not unusual to see a second request [for information] in cases were the parties serve the same market, especially in software," said attorney Connie Robinson, who heads up the antitrust department at Kilpatrick Stockton. "Unlike a widget, where you can see it and touch it, software is harder to get your hands around and understand."

The request is considered a second request, because — as is standard among companies contemplating a merger — Adobe and Macromedia have already submitted preliminary information to the department.

Regulators are interested in reviewing what effects a merger would have on the industry's other players and on the competitive landscape overall — and how changes would affect pricing and hence customers.

Even if Justice Department officials challenge a merger, as in the case of the Oracle-PeopleSoft deal, it does not necessarily kill the transaction. Companies sometimes prevail despite challenges from the government.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
84 out of 151 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:










Video icon

Video

Discussions

J.A. Watson J.A. Watson

Taking Out the Skype Garbage

Sunday 15 November 2009, 6:12 AM

4 comments
CA CA

No thomas..

Sunday 15 November 2009, 2:16 AM

12 comments
roger andre roger andre

Taking Out the Skype Garbage

Saturday 14 November 2009, 8:48 PM

4 comments

Vista Upgrade Blog

Windows 7 pricing all over the shop..a...

I really think Microsoft have made a mess of Windows 7 pricing. They got the product right, yet there initial pricing of at around £44.95 for the full version of Windows 7 Home Premium... More

7 comments

Adobe Reader in the Enterprise

This week I had the pleasure of working with some of the Microsoft Premier Field Engineers (PFE's) in an effort to further understand some of the application compatibility issues that... More

Post a comment

No Email Program in Windows 7???????

This has got to be a joke (albeit a very bad one). Or an oversight. A mistake, maybe? Is there really NO EMAIL PROGRAM IN WINDOWS 7????? Not even Microsoft is that stupid, are they?... More

14 comments


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters