America's imminent merger mania

Let there be deals!

The Disney Store in Times Square.
(Image credit: Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

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"Let there be deals," said Elizabeth Winkler at The Wall Street Journal. That's what corporate executives across the country heard last week when Judge Richard Leon gave the go-ahead for AT&T's blockbuster $85 billion acquisition of Time Warner. The judge systematically rejected the government's antitrust arguments against the union of the telecom giant and media behemoth, and "didn't impose so much as a single constraint on the merger." His decision "lifted a legal cloud that had been hanging over" other major media deals, and CEOs plainly got the message: Within a day, Comcast launched a bidding war for 21st Century Fox, stepping in with an all-cash $65 billion offer in the hope of derailing Disney's stock-based $52.4 billion bid for the entertainment conglomerate. (Disney later upped its offer to $71.3 billion.) The merger frenzy will extend far past media, said Paul La Monica at CNN. Companies are armed with stockpiles of cash, thanks to historically high markets, and "many smaller firms are growing their sales and profits more rapidly," making them attractive takeover candidates. Corporate mergers around the globe — in health care, food, utilities, tech, and transport — have already surged at a record pace this year, with more than $2 trillion in deals unveiled. "If this keeps up, merger activity should easily pass the all-time annual record of $4.7 trillion in deals set in 2015."

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