The competitors regulator has launched a probe into the deliberate merger of Vodafone and Three.
The tie-up would create Britain’s largest cellular community.
But the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) mentioned yesterday it had opened a ‘section 1’ investigation to look at whether or not the deal would result in a ‘substantial lessening of competitors’.
The announcement got here after a PR consultant for Vodafone and Three mistakenly launched statements from the UK bosses of each corporations earlier this week responding to the inquiry – earlier than it was even introduced.
They argued the merger would ‘considerably improve’ competitors and funding within the British cellular market.
Probe: The tie-up between Vodafone and Three would create Britain’s largest cellular community
Vodafone and Three introduced plans in June to create a £15billion three way partnership that will grow to be the UK’s largest cellular operator.
The entity can be 51 per cent-owned by Vodafone and 49 per cent by Three proprietor, Hong Kong’s CK Hutchison.
The CMA has 40 days to finish this probe and determine on subsequent steps, which might imply a deeper probe.
But the CMA announcement got here a day after Vodafone was informed by the Government that its relationship with largest shareholder, UAE-controlled group Emirates Telecommunications, posed a threat to nationwide safety.