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European Union antitrust regulators launched an in-depth probe on Thursday into Oracle's $7 billion take-over of Sun Microsystems on concerns the deal could dent competition in the database market. "The (European) Commission has an obligation to ensure that customers would not face reduced choice or higher prices as a result of this take-over," Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said in a statement.
The Commission, competition watchdog of the 27-country European Union, set a January 19, 2010 deadline for its decision, putting the world's No 3 software maker, Oracle, months behind its original plan for closing the deal. The regulatory delay could allow rivals - including Hewlett-Packard Co and International Business Machines Corp - more time to poach hardware customers from Sun, the No 4 maker of computer servers.
HP and IBM have been offering discounts and other incentives to woo Sun customers since Oracle agreed to buy Sun in April, playing up concerns that Oracle might have trouble running a hardware maker. Oracle had on August 20 received the green light from the US Department of Justice for its take-over of Sun, developer of Java software, among the world's most widely used computer languages.
Christopher Thomas, a Brussels-based antitrust lawyer at law firm Lovells, said the Commission's in-depth probe showed it was more cautious than its US counterparts but did not necessarily mean the deal would be derailed. "I would not read too much into the investigation. The Commission has different sets of documents than the US authorities. I would imagine the issues are broadly the same," he said.
"At this stage, it is too early to say if this is particularly bad news for the transaction itself though it will affect the timing of the transaction," added Thomas, who is advising companies on the deal. The Commission said it was concerned that the open source nature of Sun's MySQL database might not eliminate fully the potential for anti-competitive effects.
With Oracle's databases and MySQL competing directly in many sectors of the database market, MySQL is widely expected to represent a greater competitive constraint as it becomes increasingly functional, the EU executive said. Oracle, IBM and Microsoft are the main players in the proprietary database market. Analysts have expressed doubts on whether Oracle's acquisition of MySQL would stifle competition in the $19 billion a year database market. Sun generates about $300 million in revenue from MySQL.

Copyright Reuters, 2009

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