EC officials are being pressured to finish its investigation into an Oracle buyout of rival Sun Microsystems
The European Commission (EC) is being
pressured by U.S. senators to finalize its investigation into
Oracle's proposed multi-billion acquisition of Sun
Microsystems.
Earlier in the month, the EC issued
a "statement of objections" to Sun, showing different
reasons why antitrust regulators were weary of the proposed
acquisition. There is concern that the deal, which Oracle
rivals Hewlett-Packard and IBM have helped bring to the headlines,
would give Oracle an unfair advantage.
"Some have raised
concerns over
the company's ability to continue to employ its thousands of
workers," Senators informed Charge d'Affaires Angelos Pangratis,
who serves as the European Commission liaison to the United
States.
Specifically, 59 senators pointed out the risk of
thousands of jobs -- and millions of dollars lost -- if the EC pushes
the investigation back further, or stops Oracle from closing the
deal. Sun reportedly lost $120 million in the most recent
financial quarter, and continues to bleed money while idling until
the deal can be completed.
Even with the political power of
almost 60 U.S. senators, it's unknown if the EC will approve of the
deal any time soon -- Oracle also said it is ready to dig in and
prepare for battle over Sun, even if the company continues to suffer
because of it.
The proposed deal, which U.S. antitrust
regulators has already approved, was expected to close before the end
of the year. The longer it takes before the investigation is
done, the more money Sun stands to lose each financial quarter.
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