144 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

Tom Warren

Tom Warren

Senior Correspondent

Senior Correspondent

    More From Tom Warren

    Tom Warren
    Tom Warren
    Microsoft responds to the FTC’s emergency motion.

    The FTC has filed an appeal over its loss of FTC v. Microsoft with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. It also wants an emergency injunction to temporarily block Microsoft from closing its Activision Blizzard deal until there’s a ruling on the appeal.

    Microsoft has now responded to the FTC’s motion, arguing that “the FTC’s claimed emergency is entirely of its own creation,” because the FTC didn’t seek an injunction through federal court until six weeks before the deal close.

    Microsoft also claims the FTC could have filed its request for emergency relief earlier, as Judge Corley sent a copy of the ruling to both the FTC and Microsoft on Monday July 10th.

    “The Court should not mistake the FTC’s litigation gamesmanship for an emergency meriting this Court’s deviation from the ordinary appellate process,” says Microsoft in its filing.

    If the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals doesn’t grant this emergency injunction then Microsoft is free to close its Activision Blizzard deal after 11:59PM PT tonight, once the temporary restraining order, put in place by Judge Corley, expires.

    Finally, Microsoft says the FTC has committed “the cardinal sin of antitrust: mistaking competitive disadvantage for a particular competitor (Sony) with harm to competition and consumers.”

    Tom Warren
    Tom Warren
    The CAT awakens.

    We’ve been waiting on this one. The UK’s Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) is handling Microsoft’s appeal of the Competition and Markets Authority’s (CMA) ruling on its proposed Activision Blizzard acquisition. Things are now starting to get moving at the CAT.

    A case management conference has been called for Monday July 17th at 2:30PM UK time “to consider the application made jointly by all parties to adjourn these proceedings pending further discussions between the CMA and Microsoft.”

    Both the CMA and Microsoft have agreed to pause their legal battles to negotiate how the transaction might be modified in order to address the CMA’s cloud gaming concerns.

    Earlier today the CMA issued a notice of extension for its overall investigation into the deal, moving the date for a final order from July 18th to August 29th. The extension arrived just hours after Bloomberg reported that Microsoft is considering selling its UK cloud-gaming rights to a telecommunications, gaming, or internet company to allow the Activision deal to close with the CMA.

    The CAT’s case management conference could reveal some details on what Microsoft is proposing, but it’s also possible that Microsoft will have closed its Activision Blizzard deal by then — providing the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals doesn’t extend a temporary restraining order (TRO) that’s currently preventing Microsoft from closing its deal until 11:59PM PT tonight.

    All eyes are now firmly on Monday.

    Tom Warren
    Tom Warren
    What’s happening with FTC v. Microsoft?

    The situation is changing daily as we approach the key July 18th deal deadline. After the FTC lost its request for a preliminary injunction earlier this week the regulator has filed an appeal. Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley set the expiration date of a temporary restraining order (TRO) preventing Microsoft from closing its deal to 11:59PM PT for Friday July 14th. This means the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has very little time to rule on the FTC’s appeal.

    The FTC wants the Ninth Circuit Court to grant emergency relief to extend the temporary restraining order until when the appeals court can rule on the preliminary injunction decision. If granted, this will block Microsoft from closing its proposed Activision Blizzard acquisition until the court can make a full decision. If the Ninth Circuit Court doesn’t grant an extension before 11:59PM PT today then Microsoft is free to close the deal over the weekend or early next week.

    But there’s still the matter of the UK.

    The Competition and Markets Authority in the UK are now negotiating with Microsoft. Both the CMA and Microsoft have agreed to pause their legal battles to figure out how the transaction might be modified in order to address the CMA’s cloud gaming concerns. The CMA blocked Microsoft’s deal earlier this year, citing competition fears in the emerging cloud gaming market.

    The CMA has just issued a notice of extension for its overall investigation into the deal, moving the date for final undertakings or a final order from July 18th to August 29th. The extension comes hours after Bloomberg reported that Microsoft is considering selling UK cloud-gaming rights to a telecommunications, gaming, or internet company to allow the Activision deal to close with the CMA.

    The extension could mean Microsoft and the CMA aren’t quite ready to make a final deal in time for the July 18th deal deadline. The CMA also warned this week that Microsoft’s proposals may “lead to a new merger investigation” and that discussions with Microsoft were at an early stage.

    All eyes are now on the Ninth Circuit Court and the situation with the CMA in the UK.

    The Xbox logo
    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge
    Tom Warren
    Tom Warren
    The CMA extends its final order date.

    The Competition and Markets Authority in the UK has just issued a notice of extension in its investigation of Microsoft’s proposed acquisition of Activision Blizzard. The CMA was due to accept final undertakings or make a final order by July 18th, but thanks to fresh negotiations with Microsoft it has now extended that by six weeks to August 29th. “However, the Inquiry Group aims to discharge its duty as soon as possible and in advance of this date,” says CMA group chair Martin Coleman.

    The extension comes hours after Bloomberg reported that Microsoft is considering selling UK cloud-gaming rights to a telecommunications, gaming, or internet company to allow the Activision deal to close with the CMA. The UK regulator originally blocked the deal in April over cloud gaming concerns.

    Image: CMA