
BT Group’s takeover of mobile phone network EE has been given final clearance by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA).
The £12.5bn deal brings together the UK’s largest fixed-line business and the largest mobile telecoms business. The CMA said it was unlikely to harm competition as BT was “smaller in mobile” and EE a “minor player” in broadband.
But rival Vodafone said it still had “wider market concerns”. The deal creates a communications giant covering fixed-line phones, broadband, mobile and TV.
John Wotton of the CMA said: “The evidence does not show that this merger is likely to cause significant harm to competition or the interests of consumers.”
BT chief executive Gavin Patterson said: “The combined BT and EE will be a digital champion for the UK, providing high levels of investment and driving innovation in a highly competitive market.”
BT has around 88,000 employees in 61 countries, with 72,000 of those working in the UK. It controls 31% of the UK fixed-broadband market, according to Ofcom, and has a 37.6% share of the market for UK home phone traffic. The deal would add EE’s 33.8% mobile market share to BT’s portfolio.
BT’s EE acquisition was originally announced in February last year, and the CMA provisionally approved the merger in October last year. Rivals TalkTalk and Vodafone at the time called for competition authorities to force BT to spin off its Openreach operation.