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ThyssenKrupp files complaint against European Commission   

GERMAN industrial giant ThyssenKrupp said last month it filed a complaint at an EU court against the European Commission for blocking its plan to merge with Indian group Tata Steel.

“We regret the European Commission’s decision and regard it as too far-reaching and wrong. That is why we are filing a complaint,” said Donatus Kaufmann, member of ThyssenKrupp’s board.


The European Union’s powerful anti-trust authority had in June vetoed the deal, finding that it would have “reduced competition and increased prices for different types of steel”.

It also found that proposed solutions would not adequately mitigate the problem.

But ThyssenKrupp has now turned to the general court of the European Union, as it argued the Commission has “set out a restrictive market definition that unduly extends the scope of the existing competition law”.

The German company also claimed that the European Commission had failed to take into “adequate account the structural importance of imports into Europe”.

“Over capacities and high import pressure from Asia create an environment in which the planned joint venture with Tata Steel would not have impaired competition,” said Kaufmann.

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Warner Bros urges shareholders to reject Paramount's £80.75 billion bid, backs Netflix deal

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  • Warner Bros board unanimously rejects Paramount Skydance's $108.4bn (£80.75bn) takeover bid.
  • Netflix's $72bn (£53.7bn) deal for film and streaming businesses deemed superior by board.
  • Paramount backed by billionaire Ellison family, while Netflix offer seen as better financed with clearer structure.

Warner Bros Discovery has told shareholders to reject Paramount Skydance's $108.4bn (£80.75bn) takeover bid, recommending instead a $72bn (£53.7bn) deal with Netflix for its film and streaming businesses.

The board "unanimously" agreed the Netflix deal was in the firm's best interests, despite Paramount claiming its offer was "superior" to the streaming giant's proposal.

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