By Todd Spangler
Aug 11, 2021
Courtesy of MGM
A group of four major labor unions representing almost 4 million workers is urging the Federal Trade Commission to block Amazon’s proposed acquisition of MGM.
In a 12-page letter sent Wednesday to the FTC, the unions’ Strategic Organizing Center (SOC) argued Amazon’s $8.45 billion takeover of MGM should be blocked to prevent Amazon from amassing more power in the entertainment industry and exploiting that through anticompetitive business practices.
“Amazon’s proposed acquisition of MGM would further bolster Amazon’s ability to leverage power across multiple lines of business related to the SVOD market and create further harmful vertical integration in the film industry at large,” SOC executive director Michael Zucker wrote in the letter.
The SOC represents four affiliated unions: the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the Communications Workers of America (CWA) and the United Farmworkers.
The labor coalition alleges that Amazon currently engages in anticompetitive practices in subscription VOD and related markets — for example, by using its dominance in ecommerce to build SVOD market share and by bundling Prime Video with the Prime program to offer the service “at below market prices.”
A copy of the letter is available at this link. It was addressed to FTC Competition Bureau acting director Holly Vedova.
Reps for Amazon and the FTC declined to comment.
The FTC is heading up the antitrust review of Amazon’s deal to acquire MGM, and it is also conducting a broader antitrust probe into Amazon’s business practices. Amazon has formally requested that FTC chair Lina Khan, an outspoken critic of Amazon and other tech giants, recuse herself from antitrust reviews involving the company.
In May, Amazon announced a definitive agreement to acquire MGM and its library of 4,000 movies and 17,000 TV shows, including the storied James Bond film franchise. “We’re looking forward to reimagining and developing the deep catalog of MGM,” Amazon founder Jeff Bezos said at the company’s May 26 annual shareholders meeting.
In the letter, the SOC union coalition argues that Amazon has a well-documented history of leveraging its dominance in ecommerce to gain share in vertically adjacent markets using a range of unfair and anticompetitive practices.
Allowing Amazon to acquire MGM would give Amazon expanded power to “impose onerous contract terms such as all-rights provisions, which sap income from other distribution methods and can also curb the benefits of community engagement with content by, for example, restricting its availability in educational settings,” SOC’s Zucker wrote in the letter. And it would give the company even more creative control over content, presenting “troubling implications” for “the integrity and diversity of content available to consumers and, by extension, freedom of expression itself,” the SOC argues in its letter.”
The SOC said the FTC should place significant conditions on the merger, if it does allow it to proceed — but that the “best course would be to prevent Amazon from gaining an additional foothold in the SVOD market from which to expand its power and reach into this important area of economic and cultural significance for our country,” Zucker’s letter concluded.
According to Amazon, by buying MGM, it will be able to offer more choice and more content for consumers in the highly competitive entertainment and streaming-video markets. Amazon hasn’t said when it expects the MGM deal to close. The proposed acquisition is far smaller than Disney’s takeover of 20th Century Fox or AT&T’s deal for WarnerMedia (which is now being unwound).
A group of four major labor unions representing almost 4 million workers is urging the Federal Trade Commission to block Amazon’s proposed acquisition of MGM.
In a 12-page letter sent Wednesday to the FTC, the unions’ Strategic Organizing Center (SOC) argued Amazon’s $8.45 billion takeover of MGM should be blocked to prevent Amazon from amassing more power in the entertainment industry and exploiting that through anticompetitive business practices.
“Amazon’s proposed acquisition of MGM would further bolster Amazon’s ability to leverage power across multiple lines of business related to the SVOD market and create further harmful vertical integration in the film industry at large,” SOC executive director Michael Zucker wrote in the letter.
The SOC represents four affiliated unions: the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the Communications Workers of America (CWA) and the United Farmworkers.
The labor coalition alleges that Amazon currently engages in anticompetitive practices in subscription VOD and related markets — for example, by using its dominance in ecommerce to build SVOD market share and by bundling Prime Video with the Prime program to offer the service “at below market prices.”
A copy of the letter is available at this link. It was addressed to FTC Competition Bureau acting director Holly Vedova.
Reps for Amazon and the FTC declined to comment.
The FTC is heading up the antitrust review of Amazon’s deal to acquire MGM, and it is also conducting a broader antitrust probe into Amazon’s business practices. Amazon has formally requested that FTC chair Lina Khan, an outspoken critic of Amazon and other tech giants, recuse herself from antitrust reviews involving the company.
In May, Amazon announced a definitive agreement to acquire MGM and its library of 4,000 movies and 17,000 TV shows, including the storied James Bond film franchise. “We’re looking forward to reimagining and developing the deep catalog of MGM,” Amazon founder Jeff Bezos said at the company’s May 26 annual shareholders meeting.
In the letter, the SOC union coalition argues that Amazon has a well-documented history of leveraging its dominance in ecommerce to gain share in vertically adjacent markets using a range of unfair and anticompetitive practices.
Allowing Amazon to acquire MGM would give Amazon expanded power to “impose onerous contract terms such as all-rights provisions, which sap income from other distribution methods and can also curb the benefits of community engagement with content by, for example, restricting its availability in educational settings,” SOC’s Zucker wrote in the letter. And it would give the company even more creative control over content, presenting “troubling implications” for “the integrity and diversity of content available to consumers and, by extension, freedom of expression itself,” the SOC argues in its letter.”
The SOC said the FTC should place significant conditions on the merger, if it does allow it to proceed — but that the “best course would be to prevent Amazon from gaining an additional foothold in the SVOD market from which to expand its power and reach into this important area of economic and cultural significance for our country,” Zucker’s letter concluded.
According to Amazon, by buying MGM, it will be able to offer more choice and more content for consumers in the highly competitive entertainment and streaming-video markets. Amazon hasn’t said when it expects the MGM deal to close. The proposed acquisition is far smaller than Disney’s takeover of 20th Century Fox or AT&T’s deal for WarnerMedia (which is now being unwound).
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