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NYSE Deutsche Boerse Merger: EU Blocks $10 Billion Deal

Nyse Deutch Boerse Merger

GABRIELE STEINHAUSER   02/ 1/12 08:38 AM ET  AP

BRUSSELS — The European Union on Wednesday blocked the Deutsche Boerse's planned merger with NYSE Euronext, a $10 billion deal that would have created the world's largest financial exchange operator. The European Commission, the EU's executive body, said it was ruling against the merger because the combined exchange would have controlled more than 90 percent of the trading in European derivatives – complex but highly profitable financial products that allow investors to bet on changes in interest rates or the price of oil. It said that the combined company's dominance of that market would have made it almost impossible for competitors to offer rival trading systems. "The merger between Deutsche Boerse and NYSE Euronext would have led to a near-monopoly in European financial derivatives worldwide," the EU's Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia said in a statement. "These markets are at the heart of the financial system and it is crucial for the whole European economy that they remain competitive." The Commission's decision deals a blow to Deutsche Boerse AG and NYSE Euronext, which hoped combining their businesses would have allowed them to compete better with other large exchanges in the U.S. and Asia. But it also underlines the profound transformation their businesses – and financial markets as a whole – have undergone over the past decade. Today, the value of outstanding derivatives contracts has surpassed by many times the value of traditional financial products like stocks and bonds. Deutsche Boerse and NYSE Euronext both managed to build highly profitable businesses out of this trend and today own Europe's biggest derivatives exchanges. A push from regulators across the globe to push more derivative trades onto exchanges to make the market more transparent has opened even bigger opportunities for established players. To make the merger acceptable, the Commission wanted the companies to sell either Deutsche Boerse's Eurex or NYSE Euronext's Liffe – something they refused. "This is a black day for Europe and its global competitiveness on financial markets," Deutsche Boerse Chief Executive Reto Francioni said in a news conference in Frankfurt, Germany. Francioni added that the decision will prevent the creation of a "globally competitive" European exchange group that would have helped strengthen the Commission's push for transparent and stable financial markets. NYSE said in a statement that the two companies are now discussing terminating the merger agreement. "While we are disappointed and strongly disagree with the EU decision, which is based on a fundamentally different understanding of the derivatives market, it is now time to move on," NYSE Euronext Chairman Jan-Michiel Hessels said. The Commission's decision did not come as a surprise as last month a competition case team recommended the merger should be blocked, based on the combined company's dominance in the trading of some of the most popular and liquid European derivatives. But the two exchanges argued that the vast majority of derivatives are traded directly between banks and other investors, or over-the-counter (OTC), rather than on exchanges, providing healthy competition in the overall market. They also pointed to Chicago-based CME Group, which has a similar dominance over trading in key American derivatives. But Almunia argued that neither the over-the-counter derivatives market nor CME Group could have been true competitors to a company owning both Eurex and Liffe. He said derivatives based on U.S. indexes or interest rates traded on the CME were useless for investors trying to hedge against changes in their European equivalents. Over-the-counter trades, he argued, were riskier than exchange-based trades, eliminating then as an alternative to many companies. Deutsche Boerse announced nearly a year ago that it was looking to buy NYSE Euronext for $10 billion. NYSE Euronext owns bourses in Paris, Lisbon, Brussels and Amsterdam, in addition to New York. __ Juergen Baetz in Berlin and David McHugh in Fankfurt, Germany, contributed to this story.
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BRUSSELS — The European Union on Wednesday blocked the Deutsche Boerse's planned merger with NYSE Euronext, a $10 billion deal that would have created the world's largest financial exchange oper...
BRUSSELS — The European Union on Wednesday blocked the Deutsche Boerse's planned merger with NYSE Euronext, a $10 billion deal that would have created the world's largest financial exchange oper...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kamact
Market Observer
10:13 PM on 02/01/2012
EU decision is the right one for billions of people,...
10:48 PM on 02/01/2012
EU members have balls? Who would have thought it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mike Keough
09:26 PM on 02/01/2012
Ah shucks, a black day for the Market, and investors. So just where do normal people fit into this equation. Good ruling EU. No American Regulation, not Congress or the SEC, woulda done that.
Funny how the rich only consider the rich, ain't it?
05:53 PM on 02/01/2012
Capitalism only works when there is competition.

Monopolies are bad for the consumer and only good for the monopoly.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
09:40 AM on 02/02/2012
capitalism's only real natural check is competition, lacking natural competition Government regulations are needed to stand between the ever present Greed of capitalism and the consumer. The Government has in the past made regulations that have favored the lessening of competition , those are the bad regulations that need to be removed. the problem is obvious to many, the regulations that help certain business reduce their competition favor the very business segments that give the greatest campaign donations (bribes in an ordinary world) to the politicians responsible for correcting the misdeeds.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotorhead1871
who are you jivin' with that cosmic debris?...
05:31 PM on 02/01/2012
those brokers will do anything to get those commissions.......ANYTHING.......
06:26 PM on 02/01/2012
Too late. They seem to have tried hard over the past month or two (when it emerged that European authorities would oppose the merger) and obviously got some coverage here in Germany.

The decision by the EU Commission is final. Comments today across many news in Germany were that behind backroom doors many brokers/ employees in Germany actually celebrated the decision.

The only way open now is the EU Court of Justice. But that is unlikely. Previously, the state of Hesse's authorities indicated that had not the EU opposed the merger, they would have done so. And both companies will probably not like to conduct a several yearlong legal battle.
05:17 PM on 02/01/2012
Our friends in Europe. Business as usual, you can come over and die for us, but don't buy our stock market. Your Fed can give us a trillion dollars to keep from failing, but don't try to buy our stock market. Typical European answer to America, stick your dollars where the sun don't shine unless you want to loan us (WW2 Lend-Lease=give us) something that is only to our benefit.
04:57 PM on 02/01/2012
Guess the CME Group in Chicago is having champagne
and caviar tonight.
04:42 PM on 02/01/2012
They're smarter than we have been.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotorhead1871
who are you jivin' with that cosmic debris?...
05:25 PM on 02/01/2012
and they know it....they will be back.....
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kolblh
Like your freedom - Thank a Vet!
03:40 PM on 02/01/2012
Somebody is going to make a lot of euros/dollars.
edvince
amstel
03:36 PM on 02/01/2012
one of these companies will go to Qatar region and boost interest for merging with middle eastern and Gulf exchanges
03:32 PM on 02/01/2012
That is one of the longest sentences I have ever read
REDSTATEREFUGEE
Texan by birth ; Californian by choice
02:50 PM on 02/01/2012
The financial barons are always trying to create semi-monopolies to control sectors of the market and, thus, the flow of money itself.....into their bank accounts, of course. Americans are finally beginning to wake up to how the affluent use and abuse them economically on a daily basis....
04:10 PM on 02/01/2012
eh, americans arent really waking up. they are simply just forced to semi-consciously acknowledge theres something wrong with the world and how its been stolen from the majority, resources, property, you name it its controlled 100% by people who didnt earn any of it. besides, the sheep are still excluding ron paul and voting romney or gingrich, following the news propoganda like good sheep..
05:06 PM on 02/01/2012
Oh please, get off the Dem/Repub thing. It's called a greedy man thing. All Politicians are already bought and paid for on both sides by the time they are eligible to run for any office.
02:38 PM on 02/01/2012
Why is it that Rurope understands what our politicians do not? - Oh, right: they get money from these corporations.
REDSTATEREFUGEE
Texan by birth ; Californian by choice
02:51 PM on 02/01/2012
You cannot trust them socialistic, communistic, perverted Europeans!!! ( snark ) They are always out to suppress our American way of life.....capitalism for the middle class ; socialism for the affluent.
02:32 PM on 02/01/2012
Getting the facebook listing on the NYSE is paramount now.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
4 EYES
I SEE YOU...and right through your words....8-)
02:22 PM on 02/01/2012
How D@R3 the EU block a b@nk$t3r$ path to global_domination...Somebody's gonna pay for this....8-)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MUDPUPTN3
01:59 PM on 02/01/2012
I don't agree with the UN on much, but thank You for this decision UN!! Let Germany and NY continue to scam their own citizens to pay for their own greed!!