Britain's antitrust regulator is waiting for Microsoft to submit a modified deal structure to buy "Call of Duty" maker Activision Blizzard, its boss Sarah Cardell said on Thursday.
"We understand from Microsoft that they would like to put forward proposals to us to restructure the deal, potentially re-notifying that deal, to address our competition concerns," she told Sky News. "If they do that we will consider those restructured proposals carefully."
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) blocked the $69 billion deal in April over concerns about its impact on competition in the cloud gaming market.
It has been left increasingly isolated in opposition after U.S. regulator, the FTC, failed to block it in court last week, and the CMA has taken the unprecedented step of reopening talks.
Cardell said any new proposal put forward by Microsoft would "need to fully and comprehensively resolve our concerns".
(Reporting by Paul Sandle; editing by Sarah Young and Kate Holton)
Also Read
Microsoft, Activision CEOs to defend $69 billion deal in fight with FTC
US FTC files injunction to halt Microsoft's Activision deal: Report
Where the next targets lie after UK blocks Microsoft's Activision takeover
UK blocks Microsoft's $69 bn deal Activision deal over competition fears
Microsoft, Activision Blizzard extend deadline to close $69 bn deal
OPPO launches Reno 10 5G smartphone at Rs 32,999; sale starts from July 27
Google employee salaries leaked, software engineers paid Rs 5.90 crore
At 36.1 mn, India's smartphone market records 1% dip in shipments in Q1FY24
Apple testing its AI chatbot to rival OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Bard
As repetitive taxation fears arise, gaming firms wait for clarity