Mon, May 28, 2012, 8:43 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

US, EU clear Google's $12.5B Motorola Mobility bid

US, EU antitrust regulators approve Google's $12.5 billion bid for Motorola

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Google's $12.5 billion bid to buy cellphone maker Motorola Mobility has won approvals from U.S. and European antitrust regulators, moving Google a major step closer to completing the biggest deal in its 13-year history.

Monday's blessings mean Google Inc. just needs to clear regulatory hurdles in China, Taiwan and Israel before it can take control of Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. and expand into manufacturing phones, tablet computers and other consumer devices for the first time.

Getting government approval in China looms as the biggest stumbling block remaining. Google's relationship with China's ruling party has been on shaky ground since the company blamed hackers in that country for breaking into its computers two years ago. The breach prompted Google to move its Internet search engine from mainland China in protest of laws requiring some results to be censored.

Google prizes Motorola Mobility's more than 17,000 patents — a crucial weapon in an intellectual arms race with Apple, Microsoft and other rivals maneuvering to gain more control over smartphones, tablets and other mobile devices. Google announced the deal six months ago.

The deal will "enhance competition and offer consumers faster innovation, greater choice and wonderful user experiences," Don Harrison, Google's deputy general counsel wrote in a blog post.

Besides signing off on the Motorola Mobility deal, the Justice Department also approved two other moves in the mobile patent battles. The approvals cover the $4.5 billion purchase of Nortel Networks patents by a group including Apple, Microsoft and BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd. and a separate Apple acquisition of Novell Inc. patents.

The Justice Department ended its investigations after concluding the new patent owners won't try to drive up the prices of competing mobile devices by demanding exorbitant licensing fees. The agency said it was particularly concerned about key patents held by Motorola Mobility and Nortel.

Apple Inc. and Microsoft promised to license the Nortel patents on reasonable terms while Google's commitments on the Motorola Mobility patents were "more ambiguous," according to a statement from the Justice Department's antitrust division.

Nevertheless, the Justice Department didn't find any evidence that Google's ownership of Motorola Mobility would lessen competition in a mobile device market that is becoming increasingly important as more people connect to the Internet on smartphones and tablet computers instead of desktop and laptop computers.

In granting its approval, the European Union also raised concerns about Motorola's aggressive enforcement of its patents. EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia said regulators will "keep a close eye on the behavior of all market players in the sector, particularly the increasingly strategic use of patents."

In its statement, the Justice Department also vowed to crack down on any sign that mobile patents are being used to throttle competition. Microsoft said it was encouraged by the regulatory commitments.

Other key concerns centered on Google's Android operating system, free software that now powers more than 250 million mobile devices made by a variety of manufacturers, including Motorola Mobility. Competition could be hurt if Google gives Motorola Mobility the most advanced versions of Android or withholds the mobile software from other cellphone makers.

Google, though, has pledged to make Android available to all its mobile partners. Even if Google were to discriminate, cellphone makers still could rely on mobile software from Microsoft Corp., Research in Motion and Hewlett-Packard Co., among others.

The European regulators see no danger that Google will prevent other device makers from using its popular Android operating system after the takeover.

"Android helps to drive the spread of Google's other services," the Commission said. "Given that Google's core business model is to push its online and mobile services and software to the widest possible audience, it is unlikely that Google would restrict the use of Android solely to Motorola," which only has a small market share in Europe.

The government reviews in U.S. and Europe have come as regulators also have been conducting a broader inquiry into whether Google has been abusing its dominance in Internet search to hobble its rivals. Those investigations are still ongoing.

Assuming Google eventually takes over Motorola Mobility, the union will open new opportunities and pose potentially troublesome challenges for a management team that so far has concentrated on Internet search, ad sales and other software-driven online services.

Motorola Mobility's expertise in mobile devices and set-top boxes for cable TV will allow Google to play an even more influential role in shaping the future of hand-held computing and home entertainment. Even as it navigates the regulatory gauntlet, Google has begun testing a device for connecting electronic components within homes, according to a filing with the Federal Communications Commission.

Absorbing Motorola Mobility also threatens to crimp Google's earnings growth and drag down its stock price. That's because Motorola Mobility has been struggling on its own as Apple's iPhone and other smartphones made by rivals such as Samsung Electronics undercut sales of its products.

Google is making a huge bet that Motorola Mobility can do better. The $12.5 billion price is more than the combined amount that Google has paid for the 185 other acquisitions that it has completed since going public in 2004.

Google's stock rose $6.29, or 1 percent, to close Monday at $612.20. Motorola Mobility's gained 18 cents to $39.63, just below the proposed sale price of $40 per share. Google is based in Mountain View, California, while Motorola Mobility has its headquarters in Libertyville, Illinois.

___

Steinhauser reported from Brussels.

 

24 comments

  • ET  •  Nanjing, China  •  3 months ago
    never get into consumer product's business - cell phone, very bloody. Google!!
    • tnc26 3 months ago
      THEY BUYING MOTOROLA FOR THEIR THOUSAND OF PATENTS,, NOT THE PHONE ITSELF. YOU'RE NOT IN BUSINESS SO YOU'RE DON'T UNDERSTAND WHY?
    • Zoey 3 months ago
      Thank YOU, Captain Caps-A-Lot! Jeez. I really despise people, who type out in freaking CAPs all the @#$#-ing time. =_=;
  • Citizen concerned  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
    The more competition, the lower the prices---as long as Google shares its technology at a reasonable price. We'll see.
  • Joshua  •  3 months ago
    Why does, or should, the EU have any say whatsoever as to whether an American company buys an American company?
  • Barney  •  3 months ago
    Well, there went Google.
  • jb7511  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  3 months ago
    What ever happened to the Right to Privacy law suit Germany had against Google?
    Any one know?
    The fact they were sued concerns me enough to not ever use them since.
  • Michael D.  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    So when do you think a corporation will buy it's first country.
    • DBF 3 months ago
      It's been happening across the globe. The first country was probably China.
    • troy 3 months ago
      US sold out long time ago, fortunatly nobody has total control.
  • Zoey  •  Basin, Wyoming  •  3 months ago
    O_o I am oh so happy, that I got my Motorola Droid, before THIS happened! Though, I'm NOT worried about this #$%$ I have more important things to worry about, in my life, for the time being!
  • Fiona  •  3 months ago
    am I the only person that is not happy about Google owning everything?
    • John & Amanda 3 months ago
      You, Apple and the cult of customers they have...
  • tnc26  •  Pleasanton, California  •  3 months ago
    OK, MOST OF YOU GUYS POSTS MAKE NO SENSE BECAUSE YOU GUYS DOESN'T KNOW THE BUSINESS SIDE OF IT. LETS ME TELL YA WHY GOOGLE BOUGHT MOTOROLA BECAUSE MOTOROLA HOLDS THOUSAND OF PATENTS IN WHICH , APPLE MIGHT BE INFRINGING. ITS ABOUT GOOGLE AND APPLE GOING HEAD TO HEAD, GOOGLE ALSO HELPING OUT THEIR PARTNERS LIKE SAMSUNG AND OTHERS THAT LICENSED ANDROID.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
    That means Google is completely connected. Google can shut your whole life down with one signal kill. Has anyone ever realized that if Google wanted to they could legally stop all your emails,workflow output, twitter, and cell phone calls? Thousands of businesses depend on Google to exist. I guess these companies will never be able to do anything independently again. One good solar flare/electromagnetic storm could kill millions of small business transactions simultaneously due to dependence on Google. People never learn.
    • Jessie Torres 3 months ago
      Why used Google? Yahoo everything.
    • Benjamin Steel 3 months ago
      I think you overestimate how much of a foothold google really has. There biggest revenue maker is most likely still simply in advertising.
    • Dork Cop ♣ 3 months ago
      cuckoo, cuckoo
  • Poseidón18  •  3 months ago
    That's not a smart move by the E.U. Most of your electronics are made by the US already and we get most of the revenue. You need to create, save, and protect your own companies unless you want to be a country who's economy is controlled by a foreign country....
    • iDumb 3 months ago
      The EU dont give a crap about saving jobs did you see they just gave 200 billion to greece
    • vrm 3 months ago
      maybe they should have saved nokia from being m$ roadkill
  • iDumb  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    Motrolola is a junk, i was using my moms android what a piece of crap, hopefully google fixes the company up
  • Go figure  •  Fort Worth, Texas  •  3 months ago
    All I know is gas prices is killing me.....
  • Mark S  •  Victoria, Canada  •  3 months ago
    It will be interesting to see how the Justice Department looks at the FRAND issues between Mot, Qualcomm, and Apple. Will it be like a Mob wedding with those envelopes being stuffed in briefcases? Time to call your broker and place your bets.
  • Dan  •  3 months ago
    The $12.5B that google has offered is from selling our info online
  • LIBBREAKER  •  3 months ago
    THE PURCHASE $$$ FROM GOOGLE WILL BE USED TO SUBSIDIZE GREECE.

    when the e.u. runs out of $$$ completely... they'll sell greece itself
  • KKZZIA1  •  Scotts Valley, California  •  3 months ago
    That's not what I want!!
  • KKZZIA1  •  Scotts Valley, California  •  3 months ago
    NSA LOOK!! national security already compromised. google isn't too prized!
  • KKZZIA1  •  Scotts Valley, California  •  3 months ago
    NSA Go Get IT!!!!
  • Jammer  •  3 months ago
    F' China move manufacturing of all Motorola electronics here.
 
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