Microsoft-LinkedIn Tie-up
Any probe into Microsoft's acquisition of professional social
network LinkedIn Corp. is likely to focus on the tie-up's potential to leverage
vast amounts of user data, the European Union's antitrust chief said Friday.
The European Commission would look at whether "the data
purchased in the deal has a very long durability and might constitute a barrier
for others, or if they can be replicated so that others stand a chance to enter
the market," Margrethe
Vestager said.
"We've done that kind of analysis in the past and it's
something we're generally paying a lot of attention to," she said in an
interview in Copenhagen Friday.
The Dane, who took office at the end of 2014, has signaled a
willingness to delve more into how merging companies leverage the treasure
trove of data at their disposal. Data was one of the key considerations in the
review of Facebook's takeover of messagingservice WhatsApp, even though her predecessor in
the end concluded there were no data-usage concerns.
Vestager warned earlier this year that even though the regulator
hasn't found a data competition problem yet, "this doesn't mean we never
will."
James Cakmak, an analyst at Monness Crespi Hardt & Co., said
that from a data standpoint, the WhatsApp purchase "warranted greater
scrutiny" than the LinkedIn deal.
"LinkedIn has roughly 100 million members in Europe,
compared to about 350 million Facebook users in Europe," he said.
"The trajectory of growth of WhatsApp was significantly different to that of
LinkedIn."
Microsoft
will acquire LinkedIn for about $26.2 billion, one
of the largest technology-industry deals on record, as the maker of Windows and
Office software attempts to put itself at the center of people's business
lives. The deal is a way for Microsoft, which largely missed out on the
consumer web boom dominated by the likes of Google and Facebook, to sprint ahead in social tools in this case, for
professionals.
When it announced the deal, Microsoft outlined a vision in which
a person's LinkedIn profile resides at the middle of other pieces of their work
life, connecting with Windows, Outlook, Skype, Office productivity tools like
Excel and PowerPoint, and other Microsoft products.
Microsoft said on June 13 its bid for LinkedIn will require
regulatory approval in the EU, US, Canada and Brazil and that it's confident of
closing the transaction before the end of the year. The company's press office
had no further comment Friday.
LinkedIn's analytics will help power data tools for Microsoft's
Dynamics, which competes with Salesforce.com in helping companies manage
relationships with their customers.
Salesforce.com was a rival potential bidder for LinkedIn in the
process leading up to the acquisition by Microsoft, according to people
familiar with the matter.
No comments:
Post a Comment