Tag Archives: Senior Level Management

Microsoft to Buy Activision Blizzard in All-Cash Deal Valued at $75 Billion

The deal, if completed, would sharply expand Microsoft’s already sizable videogame operation, adding a stable of popular game franchises including Call of Duty, World of Warcraft and Candy Crush to Microsoft’s Xbox console business and its own games like Minecraft and Doom. Microsoft said the transaction would make it the world’s third-largest gaming company by revenue, behind China’s

Tencent Holdings Ltd.

and Japan’s

Sony Group Corp.

The deal is valued at $68.7 billion after adjusting for Activision’s net cash, Microsoft said.

An acquisition also would mark the latest and biggest move by Microsoft Chief Executive Officer

Satya Nadella

to reshape Microsoft through a string of deals that have helped make the world’s second-highest-valued company a powerhouse in business computing and a rising giant in videogames.

The deal entails significant complications, too. Shares in Activision had been down nearly 30% since California regulators filed a lawsuit against the company in July alleging sexual harassment and gender-pay disparity among the company’s roughly 10,000 employees.

Activision shares, which jumped in premarket trading Tuesday after The Wall Street Journal reported the company was close to a deal with Microsoft, ended the day at $82.31, gaining 26%. Microsoft shares fell 2.4% Tuesday to $302.65 amid a broader market selloff.

Bobby Kotick,

Activision’s longtime CEO, is expected to leave after the deal closes, according to people familiar with those plans. Microsoft had said in its announcement Tuesday that Mr. Kotick “will continue to serve as CEO of Activision Blizzard,” and that after the deal closes “the Activision Blizzard business will report to Microsoft gaming chief

Phil Spencer.

” But the companies have agreed that he will depart once the deal closes, the people said.

In an interview Tuesday, Mr. Kotick didn’t specifically address his status after the deal closes, but said he has told Microsoft he will “always be available to ensure that we are going to have the very best integration.”

Activision Blizzard has been under intense pressure from shareholders, business partners, and others over workplace-misconduct allegations.



Photo:

Bing Guan/Bloomberg News

Since the California lawsuit, Activision, Mr. Kotick, and its board of directors have been under intense pressure from shareholders, business partners, and others over the misconduct allegations. Following a Wall Street Journal investigative article in November about Activision’s handling of workplace issues, nearly a fifth of Activision’s employees signed a petition calling for Mr. Kotick to resign, and Mr. Spencer told Microsoft employees the company was evaluating its relationship with Activision.

Microsoft approached Activision about a deal in November, after the Journal’s article, people familiar with the matter said. A Microsoft spokesman declined to comment on the timing of the acquisition. An Activision spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Activision has announced a number of changes in recent months that Mr. Kotick has said are intended to make it a welcoming and inclusive workplace, including a zero-tolerance harassment policy and an end to mandatory arbitration for harassment and discrimination claims.

Ms. Wu, a target of the GamerGate scandal, says Activision Blizzard’s CEO led a culture of non-accountability, during an interview at WSJ’s Women In: The Tech Industry event.

On Monday, the Journal reported that Activision had pushed out or disciplined more than 80 employees since July as part of efforts to address harassment and other misconduct allegations.

“We see the progress that they’re making that was pretty fundamental to us deciding to go forward here,” Mr. Spencer said about Activision’s plans to address workplace issues.

The deal follows a boom in the videogame business during the pandemic. It also comes as Microsoft and other technology giants are jockeying for position amid major changes in the sector, including a shift toward cloud-based gaming and the rise of a virtual world known as the metaverse where people can play, work and shop across different platforms using digital avatars.

Mr. Nadella’s Microsoft has shown an enormous appetite for acquisitions—but Activision is more than twice the size of its previous biggest deal. In that earlier purchase, Microsoft paid more than $26 billion for professional social network LinkedIn Corp. in 2016, pushing Microsoft into social media.

Last year, Microsoft made what was then its second-largest acquisition, shelling out $16 billion for artificial intelligence company

Nuance Communications Inc.

to help accelerate growth in the healthcare market.

In making these giant acquisitions, Microsoft has been successful largely because it keeps its hands off new entities and provides support in additional funding and technology like Microsoft’s Azure cloud, said analysts. In July, Microsoft said that LinkedIn for the first time surpassed $10 billion in annual revenue.

Microsoft has stumbled in some of its deal efforts, noticeable in the defeat in 2020 of its attempt at buying parts of short-video app TikTok from Chinese parent company ByteDance Ltd. At the time, TikTok faced a threatened ban in the U.S. by then-President

Donald Trump

over national-security concerns.

Microsoft also engaged in unsuccessful talks to buy social networking company

Pinterest

and chat startup Discord Inc.

After those deals fizzled, Microsoft decided to double down on investments into its gaming ambitions, one person familiar with Microsoft’s strategy said.

Since taking over as CEO in 2014, Mr. Nadella has spent more than $10 billion to buy more than a dozen game studios, including the companies responsible for the Doom franchise and Minecraft.

In October, at the Journal’s WSJ Tech Live conference, Mr. Spencer, the Microsoft gaming chief, said the company wasn’t slowing down on its gaming acquisition spree. “We’re always out there looking for people who we think would be a good match and teams that would be a good match with our strategy, so we’re definitely not done,” Mr. Spencer said.

Microsoft’s gaming strategy increasingly is focused on growing its subscription business, called Game Pass, which for a monthly fee lets gamers have access to a catalog of games. In the past, Mr. Nadella has likened the Game Pass strategy to the “

Netflix

for games.” Microsoft announced early last year that Game Pass had 18 million subscribers. With the Activision announcement on Tuesday, Microsoft said it now has 25 million subscribers.

Microsoft on Tuesday said the deal would bolster its Game Pass portfolio, with plans to bring Activision games into the subscription service. With Activision, Microsoft said it would have 30 internal game development studies. The transaction has been approved by the boards of both companies, Microsoft said, and is expected to close by July 2023.

Buying Activision would increase Microsoft’s videogame revenue by about half. Analysts estimate that Activision’s sales in 2021 totaled $8.7 billion, according to FactSet, while Microsoft reported $15.4 billion in gaming revenue for the fiscal year through June, accounting for about 9% of its total.

Activision’s stock had been rising, amid the videogame industry’s pandemic surge, until the July lawsuit by the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing, which alleged gender pay disparity and sexual harassment at the company. Activision has disputed the department’s allegations.

The company also has been under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Journal reported in September, with a specific focus on Mr. Kotick, who was separately subpoenaed along with other senior executives. Activision has said it is cooperating with the SEC.

Activision also said in September it had agreed to settle a two-year-long probe of sexual harassment claims by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission for $18 million. The settlement is pending a judge’s approval.

The Journal’s investigative article in November, which cited interviews and internal documents, showed that Mr. Kotick didn’t inform the board of sexual-misconduct allegations that he was aware of, including rape, against managers across the company. It also detailed misconduct allegations against Mr. Kotick, including when an assistant complained in 2006 that he had threatened in a voice mail to have her killed.

Activision has said the Journal’s reporting gave a misleading view of the company and its CEO. Mr. Kotick has said he was transparent with his board, which issued a statement supporting him. An Activision spokeswoman has said that he wouldn’t have been informed of every report of misconduct and that Mr. Kotick regrets the alleged incident with his assistant.

The Journal’s article Monday reported that Activision had collected 700 reports of employee concern over misconduct and other issues since July. A summary of the company’s personnel issues was prepared before the December holidays but Mr. Kotick held it back, believing it would make the company’s workplace problems seem bigger than is already known, the Journal reported, citing people familiar with the situation.

An Activision spokeswoman disputed the 700 figure and said employee comments included statements on social media and ranges from benign workplace concerns to “a small number” of potentially serious assertions, which the company investigated. She said “the assertion regarding Mr. Kotick is untrue.”

Microsoft itself has faced pressure from shareholders over its handling of sexual-harassment allegations among its staff. Last week, the company said it plans to be more transparent on the subject, and that its board of directors would review its sexual harassment and gender discrimination policies and unveil a summary of the results of past investigations into how the company handled allegations against company executives, including co-founder

Bill Gates.

The Journal, citing people familiar with the matter, last year said Microsoft board members pursued an investigation in 2019 into Mr. Gates’s prior romantic relationship with a female employee. Mr. Gates stepped down from the board in 2020. In the Journal article, a spokeswoman for Mr. Gates said the affair had ended amicably close to 20 years earlier, and that his decision to leave the board wasn’t related to any investigation.

Write to Cara Lombardo at cara.lombardo@wsj.com, Kirsten Grind at kirsten.grind@wsj.com and Aaron Tilley at aaron.tilley@wsj.com

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Another day, another Tesla stock sale for Elon Musk: $8.8 billion over past 7 days

Elon Musk sold a large chunk of Tesla Inc. stock for the seventh straight day Tuesday, bringing him nearly halfway to his Twitter promise of selling 10% of his stake in the company.

According to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Musk exercised more of his options and sold more than 934,000 shares Tuesday, for roughly $973 million. That followed a $930 million stock sale Monday.

In total, Musk has sold about 8.16 million shares for $8.8 billion since Nov. 8, a day after Musk’s Twitter poll decided he should sell 10% of his Tesla stake. Some of the stock sales had been put into motion well before the poll was posted.

Assuming Musk intends to sell 10% of his shares, he’s nearly halfway there. Before the sales began, his 10% stake amounted to about 17 million shares — so after Tuesday’s sales, he would have about 8.84 million shares to go.

Musk, the world’s wealthiest man, has millions of stock options that he needs to exercise by August 2022, and Musk said in September that he intended on selling a large chunk of stock in the fourth quarter. CNBC reported last week that Musk faces about a $15 billion tax bill on those options.

Tesla shares
TSLA
stopped their slide Tuesday, rising about 4%, after sinking more than 17% since Musk’s stock selloff began Nov. 8. The stock is up 50% year to date, and has gained 139% over the past 12 months.

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Intel Earnings Beat Estimates. Why Its Stock Is Falling.

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Intel stock fell after the company reported earnings.


David Paul Morris/Bloomberg


Intel

stock fell in extended trading Thursday after the company missed sales expectations and said its chief financial officer plans to retire in May. The company also chalked a decline in its PC business to broader component shortages.

For the third quarter, Intel reported adjusted earnings of $1.71 a share and adjusted revenue of $18.1 billion. The earnings figure beat analyst estimates of $1.11 a share, but analysts were looking for revenue of $18.2 billion, according to FactSet.

Intel stock (ticker: INTC) has dropped 9.8% in premarket trading Thursday following the report. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) stock has risen 1.9%, suggesting that the issue is with Intel specifically, and not with chip stocks generally.

“We broke ground on new fabs, shared our accelerated path to regain process performance leadership, and unveiled our most dramatic architectural innovations in a decade,” CEO Pat Gelsinger said in a statement summing up the quarter.

Revenue in the PC-focused client computing group fell 2% year over year to $9.7 billion. The company said notebook volumes were hampered by industrywide component shortages, but that was partially offset by higher average selling prices and strength in the desktop computer business. Revenue in its data center group business jumped 10% to $6.5 billion.

The company said CFO George Davis plans to retire from Intel in May 2022, and that the company will conduct a search for a successor.

Intel raised its full-year adjusted earnings outlook to $5.28 a share, from $4.80. It also raised its outlook for 2022 adjusted gross margin to 57% from 56.5%. The company anticipates gross margins between 51% and 53% over the next two to three years and then moving upward from there.

The company expects revenue of about $74 billion in 2022, with a compound annual growth rate of 10% to 12% over the next four to five years. Consensus estimates for full-year 2022 revenue recently sat at $73.1 billion, according to FactSet.

Meanwhile, Intel expects capital expenditures of between $25 billion and $28 billion in 2022.

Intel also said its investor day will be pushed back to Feb.17, 2022, from Nov.18. On the earnings call, Gelsinger cited the search for a CFO and added that he hopes the event can take place in-person.

Write to Connor Smith at connor.smith@barrons.com

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WSJ Tech Live Conference Features Interviews With Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, CEOs of ViacomCBS and Reddit

The Wall Street Journal is hosting its virtual Tech Live conference with top executives, technologists and policy makers to discuss a range of issues including the lasting impact of Covid-19, as businesses grapple with disrupted supply chains, a shrinking labor force and the continuing chip shortage.

The conference launches at a time when lawmakers are re-examining big tech on issues ranging from privacy to competition. The Wall Street Journal’s investigation of

Facebook Inc.

has also led to new momentum for tougher tech laws, including special online protections for children.

Here is a rundown of interviews. Access to the conference is complimentary for Journal subscribers. You can see more details here.

First, starting at 11:15 a.m. ET,

ViacomCBS Inc.

VIAC -0.32%

Chief Executive

Robert Bakish

discusses the company’s investments in content and plans to increase global subscribers, following a recent leadership revamp at Paramount Pictures.

The conference then features conversations about the cutting edge of transportation. Grab Holdings Inc. co-founder Hooi Ling Tan will discuss plans to go public in a record-setting special-purpose acquisition and the company’s future in last-mile deliveries and financial services at 11:40 a.m. ET. Two astronauts who traveled to the edge of space with actor William Shatner will talk about their space tourism experience at 12:05 p.m. ET. Later, one of the top researchers in artificial intelligence,

Raquel Urtasun,

will speak about the future of autonomous trucking at 12:40 p.m. ET.

Investor

Alexis Ohanian

speaks at 12:15 p.m. ET on his latest venture capital endeavor, Seven Seven Six, which has focuses on founders’ well-being at a time of increased burnout and always-on work culture.

Alphabet CEO

Sundar Pichai

speaks at 2 p.m. ET on Google’s evolving workplace culture, privacy concerns and regulatory challenges, as the company battles antitrust lawsuits domestically and a $5 billion antitrust fine in Europe. Then, Reddit CEO

Steve Huffman

will discuss the social media platform’s global expansion, as the popularity of “meme stocks” helped to catapult the platform to a $10 billion valuation.

Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai in Switzerland last year.



Photo:

fabrice coffrini/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Online educator Sal Khan talks about the future of virtual learning at 3:15 p.m. ET, followed by Cameo CEO Steven Galanis, who will speak about the growing opportunities for content creators to monetize their fan bases.

Arm Holdings CEO

Simon Segars

speaks at 4:35 p.m. ET about the continuing chip supply issues, in light of companies like

Apple Inc.

designing their own microchips. Following that, Xbox head

Phil Spencer

will speak about cloud gaming and the future of the console.

At 5:30 p.m. ET, the day concludes with basketball star and Los Angeles Lakers forward Carmelo Anthony who will speak about his tech investments, including his investment with Overtime Sports Inc.

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BioNTech CEO reportedly says a different COVID vaccine may be needed by next year

“This year [a different vaccine] is completely unneeded. But by mid next year, it could be a different situation.”


— BioNTech CEO Ugur Sahin

BioNTech’s chief executive officer Ugur Sahin told the Financial Times in an interview that COVID-19 is likely to continue mutating to the point where it can escape vaccines and immune systems.

A COVID vaccine developed by BioNTech
BNTX,
-6.67%
and Pfizer
PFE,
-0.19%,
using mRNA technology has been used worldwide to help fight the pandemic, with 1.5 billion doses shipped to more than 130 countries as of late September, according to a company presentation. Vaccines and booster shots currently available are potent enough for the current strains, including the highly contagious delta, but the virus has just started a process of evolving, said Sahin, in the interview that published Sunday.

“We have no reason to assume that the next generation virus will be easier to handle for the immune system than the existing generation,” said Sahin, who sees the coming year’s focus on booster shots for the vaccinated and a continued effort to vaccinate those who haven’t been

Last week, financial markets cheered news of Merck
MRK,
+8.37%
and Ridgeback Therapeutics’ experimental oral antiviral treatment for COVID-19. The drug, molnupiravir, cut risk of hospitalization or death by 50% in a Phase 3 trial, and seems to work against gamma, delta, and mu variants in around 40% of participants for whom sequencing was available. 

Read: Why a pill you take at home could change the direction of the pandemic

Medical experts have warned though that Merck’s potentially groundbreaking new treatment could be used by some as an excuse not to get vaccinated. “It’s not a magic pill,”  said Dr. William Schaffner, a professor at Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s Infectious Diseases Division.

Read: Fauci says legitimate claims to religious exemptions from vaccine mandates are scarce

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CEO’s Dad Gets a $3.6 Billion Stock Windfall at Carvana

Aside from Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and members of Walmart Inc.’s Walton family, no individual has earned more from selling stock in their company over the past year than a used-car magnate from Arizona.

Company filings show Ernie Garcia II, the father of Carvana Co.’s chief executive officer, has sold more than $3.6 billion of stock since October. The sales amount to 16% of his holdings in the company. He has benefited from an ownership structure that confers benefits on him and his family and allows them to maintain control of the business, according to company filings. Some of these benefits can come at the expense of other shareholders, according to the filings, a lawsuit, and corporate governance and tax analysts.

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Lordstown Motors Stock Is Soaring Because It Has a New CEO

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Lordstown will begin production of its Endurance electric truck later this year.


Matthew Hatcher/Bloomberg

Electric truck start-up

Lordstown Motors

has a new CEO. Investors reacted with relief.

The company named Daniel Ninivaggi as its new CEO Thursday morning, effective immediately. Lordstown (ticker: RIDE) shares are up 25% to $6.88 in early trading. The

S&P 500

is down 0.1%. The

Dow Jones Industrial Average

is up 0.2%.

Ninivaggi takes over from board chair Angela Strand, who ran the company after the departure of Steve Burns in June. Burns left shortly after the company received a “going concern” warning from its auditor. That warning, essentially, means the company might not have the capital required to keep operating without a significant change.

The company is also being investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department regarding the handling of its SPAC merger and recording of vehicle pre-orders. Vehicle pre-orders were an issue raised in a negative research report by a short seller in March.

Lordstown stock hit a 52-week low on Aug. 19. Shares have rallied off the bottom and, including Thursday’s gains, are up about 44% from a nadir of $4.77 a share. Still, shares are off about 80% from their 52-week high of almost $32.

Ninivaggi is the former CEO of

Icahn Enterprises

(IEP) and has served in a “variety of senior leadership positions in the automotive and transportation industries,” according to the company. His previous automotive jobs include stints at parts suppliers

Lear

(LEA) and Federal-Mogul. He also serves on the board of

Garrett Motion

(GTX), the turbocharger business spun out of

Honeywell International

(HON).

“I believe the demand for full-size electric pickup trucks will be strong and the Endurance truck…has the opportunity to capture a meaningful share of the market,” said Ninivaggi. The Endurance, Lordstown’s first product, is due to start production in the coming months. “I look forward to working with the talented Lordstown management team, our suppliers and other partners to bring the Endurance to market and maximize the value of our assets.”

Ninivaggi will have a tough job. Wall Street has soured on Lordstown stock. Only one out of eight analysts, or 13%, rates shares Buy. The average Buy-rating ratio for small-capitalization stocks is about 60%. What’s more, 50% rate shares Sell. The average price target of the sell-rated analysts is about $1.55 a share.

Write to Al Root at allen.root@dowjones.com

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Covid Vaccine Is Growing Less Effective, but Still Prevents Severe Disease: BioNTech

Text size

BioNTech CEO Ugur Sahin.


Bernd Von Jutrczenka/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

The protection provided by

Pfizer

and

BioNTech’s

Covid-19 vaccine is dropping due to the Delta variant, BioNTech’s CEO told the Wall Street Journal in an interview published Sunday, but most recipients are still protected against severe disease caused by the virus.

“The vaccine protection against the new variant is considerably lower,” BioNTech (ticker: BNTX) CEO
Dr. Ugur Sahin
told the Journal.

He said, however, that even though the protection against all symptomatic disease is dropping, protection against severe disease remains high, and most people may not yet need a third dose.

Read more: Will We Need Booster Shots? Study Raises Doubts

Sahin declined to take a position in the Journal interview on whether governments should authorize a booster dose of its vaccine. BioNTech’s partner

Pfizer

(PFE) has said it plans to ask the U.S. government to authorize a booster dose.

“This debate must proceed without us: We will only supply data and governments will need to tell us what they want,” Sahin told the Journal.

Read more: With Cases Rising, Travel’s Rebound Faces a Big Test

BioNTech shares were up 4% on Monday, and the stock is up 260% so far this year. Pfizer was flat, and is up 13.2% this year. The

S&P 500

was down 0.1%.

In recent weeks, as new cases of Covid-19 have climbed around the world, Pfizer has begun to push for authorization of a third dose of the vaccine. Health officials in Israel, meanwhile, have reported that the efficacy of the Pfizer and BioNTech vaccine at protecting against all symptomatic Covid-19 has dropped to 40.5% as Delta has become dominant in the country, though protection against hospitalization remains high, at 88%.

Read More: The Market for Booster Vaccines Just Keeps Getting Bigger

Federal health officials in the U.S. pushed back in mid-July against Pfizer’s assertion that it would submit a booster dose of its vaccine for emergency authorization. But late last week, a key advisory committee to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention signaled early support for recommending a booster dose for immunocompromised people.

The World Health Organization’s director general, meanwhile, said last week that the world had squandered Covid-19 vaccines by failing to distribute them more equally around the world, and called the notion of administering booster shots a “moral outrage.”

“Some of the richest countries are now talking about third booster shots for their populations, while health-workers, older people, and other vulnerable groups in the rest of the world continue to go without,” said Dr. Tedros Adhanom last Wednesday. “This is not just a moral outrage; it’s also epidemiologically and economically self-defeating. The longer this discrepancy persists, the longer the pandemic will drag on.”

Read more: Rising Covid Cases Put Economic Recovery at Risk

BioNTech’s Sahin has long warned that boosters could be necessary. He told Barron’s for a feature published in April that patients may need to be redosed with the vaccine six to nine months after their second dose, and then every 12 to 18 months after that. And in an interview at Barron’s Investing in Tech conference in June, he said that antibody responses in people who had received the vaccine were stable for four or five months after the second dose, and then at six months the antibody levels begin to drop. Redosing boosts those levels again.

“At the end of the day it’s also a decision of the governments when to introduce the booster shot for the population,” Sahin said in June.

In his comments to the Journal, BioNTech’s Sahin also said that he was staying out of the debate over whether countries should authorize booster doses. 

“When the vaccine becomes available on the free market everyone will be able to make this decision for themselves,” he said.

Write to Josh Nathan-Kazis at josh.nathan-kazis@barrons.com

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Covid-19 Immunity Wanes, but Third Shot Still Rarely Needed, BioNTech CEO Says

BERLIN—Immunity against the coronavirus is waning in people who were fully vaccinated with the shot made by BioNTech SE and Pfizer Inc. in January because of the rapidly spreading Delta variant, BioNTech’s chief executive said, confirming data that emerged from Israel last week.

But even as antibody levels are dropping seven months after immunization among some vaccine recipients, most of them will remain protected against severe disease and might not yet need a third dose, according to Ugur Sahin, CEO of the German company that invented the vaccine and partnered with Pfizer to develop the product for the global market.

“The antibody titers are going down,” Dr. Sahin said, referring to the unit of measurement for antibodies against the virus. “The vaccine protection against the new variant is considerably lower.”

Dr. Sahin made the comments after preliminary data emerged from Israel showing that people who had received the shot in January were three times more likely to get infected than those who were vaccinated in May.

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said at a White House briefing on Thursday that vaccines offer a high degree of protection against infection, serious illness and death from the Delta variant.

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Facebook Seeks Recusal of FTC Chair Lina Khan in Antitrust Case

WASHINGTON—

Facebook Inc.

sought the recusal of Federal Trade Commission Chairwoman Lina Khan from the agency’s deliberations on whether to file a new antitrust case against the company, arguing she couldn’t be impartial because of her long history of criticizing it and other big-tech firms.

“Chair Khan has consistently made public statements not only accusing Facebook of conduct that merits disapproval but specifically expressing her belief that the conduct meets the elements of an antitrust offense,” the company said Wednesday in a formal recusal petition filed with the FTC.

“When a new commissioner has already drawn factual and legal conclusions and deemed the target a lawbreaker, due process requires that individual to recuse herself,” Facebook said in the petition.

An FTC spokeswoman didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Ms. Khan has said previously that she would consult with FTC ethics officials if recusal questions arose.

Facebook’s request comes two weeks after a similar recusal petition was filed by

Amazon.com Inc.,

which is facing multiple investigations at the FTC, and is the latest sign that giant technology companies are favoring aggression over a conciliatory approach with Ms. Khan, who built her career advocating for bold antitrust action to rein in the dominant players in Silicon Valley.

President Biden installed Ms. Khan as the head of the FTC last month, part of a growing administration effort to restrain corporate power.

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Google CEO Sundar Pichai stopped short of endorsing changes proposed by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to Section 230, a law that spells out who is legally responsible for content on the internet. Photo: C-SPAN

The FTC soon must decide whether to file a new antitrust lawsuit against Facebook after a judge threw out the FTC’s previous complaint as legally insufficient. Because of the approaching deadlines in the case—the judge’s June 28 ruling gave the FTC 30 days to file an amended lawsuit—it could force Ms. Khan to confront the recusal issue on an accelerated timeline.

Ms. Khan has been a prolific writer about antitrust issues, especially as they related to big tech companies. She previously worked for a progressive antitrust advocacy group and was a key staffer on a congressional antitrust panel that conducted a 16-month investigation of large online platforms and last year recommended that lawmakers take steps to rein them in.

The FTC’s vote on a new Facebook lawsuit is likely to be a divided one. Democrats hold a 3-2 commission majority; if Ms. Khan sat out, there likely wouldn’t be a majority to sue Facebook again. The commission’s two Republican commissioners voted against the first lawsuit the FTC filed against Facebook in December.

The FTC, along with 46 states, had alleged Facebook was engaged in illegal monopolization, including by buying up other companies such as WhatsApp and Instagram to prevent them from challenging Facebook’s market position. The company denied the allegations, saying it competed fairly and achieved success because its services are popular with consumers.

In last month’s ruling, U.S. District Judge

James Boasberg

in Washington dismissed the FTC’s case at the outset of pretrial proceedings, saying the FTC didn’t plead enough allegations to support monopolization claims against Facebook. He also said the FTC didn’t have a valid challenge to Facebook’s policy of refusing to grant interoperability permissions to competing apps. The judge gave the commission 30 days to file a new lawsuit that attempts to make more detailed allegations.

Under the governing legal standards for recusal, a company seeking a commissioner’s disqualification on the grounds of prejudgment must show that a disinterested observer could conclude that the commissioner had already judged both the facts and the law in advance of a proceeding.

Ms. Khan gets to decide in the first instance how to address Facebook’s request for her disqualification. Past FTC practices show that, at least in some circumstances, the whole commission can weigh in.

Disqualification requests haven’t seen much success in modern times, but there are older court rulings that vacated FTC enforcement actions on the grounds that a commissioner should have been disqualified.

Write to Brent Kendall at brent.kendall@wsj.com

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