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UK watchdog confirms Vole's merger sneaky

by on05 September 2024


But does not care

A UK regulator ruled that the software king of the world Microsoft only bought Inflection’s IP and hired away its key staff, but that’s still enough to constitute a merger.

The UK’s antitrust watchdog, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has wrapped up its investigation into Vole's crafty manoeuvre of hiring the majority of staff from Inflection and licensing the company’s technology.

The CMA published a summary of its decision finding that while Microsoft’s actions constituted a “relevant merger situation” and thus fall under its purview, they did not result in what it called “a realistic prospect of a substantial lessening of competition (SLC).”

In other words, it is a merger. Still, the regulator is OK with that and will not pursue a full-scale investigation into the deal, which funnelled an estimated US$650 million into Inflection’s coffers.

Similar deals may, however, come under scrutiny for their effect on competition.

This was one of many regulatory glances at investments in AI startups by big tech companies hoping to dodge regulatory scrutiny with what some have dubbed a quasi-merger: strategic investments or hiring key team members that gain the investor influence or control over the startup without actually buying the company.

At the same time the UK investigation into Microsoft was announced, the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) began investigating Amazon’s hiring of key executives, including the CEO, from AI startup Adept and its plan to license some of Adept’s technology.

In early August, the CMA announced that it is launching an inquiry into Amazon’s relationship with Anthropic to determine whether it, too, warrants a full investigation. A CMA inquiry into Google’s relationship with Anthropic is also underway.

In its summary of the Microsoft-Inflection decision, the CMA said that it assessed the criteria for a relevant merger situation under the Enterprise Act 2022, noting, “There is no particular combination of assets that constitutes an enterprise. As set out in the CMA’s guidance, it may include a group of employees and their know-how, enabling a particular business activity to be continued.”

“In addition to hiring the core former Inflection team, Microsoft also acquired additional assets, including access to Inflection IP. Developing the core team with these assets was critical to the value of the Transaction, as it enabled the former Inflection team to continue the pre-Transaction Inflection roadmap for consumer-facing AI product development within Microsoft.

“On this basis, the CMA believes that Microsoft has substantively acquired Inflection’s pre-Transaction FM [Foundation model] and chatbot development capabilities. Accordingly, the CMA has found that at least part of the activities of pre-Transaction Inflection has been brought under the control of Microsoft and, as a result, that two enterprises have ceased to be distinct such that the Transaction falls within the CMA’s merger control jurisdiction for review.”

Last modified on 05 September 2024
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