Datamation content and product recommendations are
editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links
to our partners.
Learn More
A federal judge is expected to hear closing arguments Tuesday in the government’s antitrust case against Oracle.
District Judge Vaughn Walker is considering a U.S. Department of Justice request to block Oracle’s $7.7 billion unsolicited bid for PeopleSoft. The government spent four weeks trying to prove that the deal would limit choice and create uncertainty in the enterprise resource planning (ERP) market.
Oracle’s lawyers called several witnesses, including CEO Larry Ellison, to argue that the government’s ERP definition is too narrow and must be widened to include Microsoft and IBM, as well as Fidelity and Ceridian.
After some 40 witnesses testified and more than 360 court filings with close to 2,000 documents of evidence submitted, Judge Walker may hold off with a decision until at least August. Even as late as last week, the judge asked both sides to clarify their positions and market definitions.
”The coordinated effects analysis would appear to afford the court relatively little guidance in assessing the effects of the proposed merger,” Walker said in his July 12 filing. ”A unilateral effects analysis thus seems more appropriate on the facts of the present case. The parties have cited, and the court is aware of, only a handful of cases considering unilateral effects theories. The Horizontal Merger Guidelines adopt a specific structural approach to addressing unilateral effects claims. This approach is one of several and appears to have received substantial criticism from antitrust scholars and little, if any, exposure in the crucible of litigation.”
Gary Reback, a well-known Silicon Valley attorney who specializes in antitrust litigation and counseling, has been blogging the court proceedings for PeopleSoft investors. His take is that Oracle’s experts contradicted each other, its CEO Ellison was in conflict with the trial position of the company, and Oracle’s efficiency study ”lacked a verifiable methodology.”
”Overall, Oracle appeared by the end of the trial to concede that the proposed acquisition would produce untoward concentration in the relevant markets, but its experts urged the court to simply ignore those inconvenient facts. Oracle claimed that new technology would change the status quo. Oracle’s case consisted largely of vague speculation and, by the end of the trial, I believe that everyone knew this,” he wrote.
Ken Marlin, managing partner of New York-based Marlin & Associates, a mergers and acquisitions investment bank focused on media and technology, said he remains confident that Oracle would succeed in its move to snatch PeopleSoft from its hearty position in the lucrative market.
”We believe that Oracle did a credible job in court showing that there is real competition in the industry and that the government has chosen an unreasonably narrow definition of the market – ignoring IBM, Microsoft and makers of specialty software such as Lawson,” Marlin told internetnews.com. ”More interesting to us, is the fact that PeopleSoft announced that net income declined to 3 cents to 5 cents a share from 11 cents a year earlier. And that Sales at $665 million, were well below the company’s forecast of at least $675 million. Once the judge rules in Oracle’s favor, the PeopleSoft board would be smart to take Oracle’s offer, while it is still good.”
This article was first published on internetnews.com. To read the full article, click here.
-
Huawei’s AI Update: Things Are Moving Faster Than We Think
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
December 04, 2020
-
Keeping Machine Learning Algorithms Honest in the ‘Ethics-First’ Era
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Guest Author,
November 18, 2020
-
Key Trends in Chatbots and RPA
FEATURE | By Guest Author,
November 10, 2020
-
Top 10 AIOps Companies
FEATURE | By Samuel Greengard,
November 05, 2020
-
What is Text Analysis?
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Guest Author,
November 02, 2020
-
How Intel’s Work With Autonomous Cars Could Redefine General Purpose AI
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
October 29, 2020
-
Dell Technologies World: Weaving Together Human And Machine Interaction For AI And Robotics
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
October 23, 2020
-
The Super Moderator, or How IBM Project Debater Could Save Social Media
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
October 16, 2020
-
Top 10 Chatbot Platforms
FEATURE | By Cynthia Harvey,
October 07, 2020
-
Finding a Career Path in AI
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Guest Author,
October 05, 2020
-
CIOs Discuss the Promise of AI and Data Science
FEATURE | By Guest Author,
September 25, 2020
-
Microsoft Is Building An AI Product That Could Predict The Future
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
September 25, 2020
-
Top 10 Machine Learning Companies 2020
FEATURE | By Cynthia Harvey,
September 22, 2020
-
NVIDIA and ARM: Massively Changing The AI Landscape
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
September 18, 2020
-
Continuous Intelligence: Expert Discussion [Video and Podcast]
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By James Maguire,
September 14, 2020
-
Artificial Intelligence: Governance and Ethics [Video]
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By James Maguire,
September 13, 2020
-
IBM Watson At The US Open: Showcasing The Power Of A Mature Enterprise-Class AI
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
September 11, 2020
-
Artificial Intelligence: Perception vs. Reality
FEATURE | By James Maguire,
September 09, 2020
-
Anticipating The Coming Wave Of AI Enhanced PCs
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
September 05, 2020
-
The Critical Nature Of IBM’s NLP (Natural Language Processing) Effort
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
August 14, 2020
SEE ALL
ARTICLES