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Competition Bureau gets temporary stay of Tribunal decision on Rogers-Shaw merger

The Competition Bureau says a Federal Court has issued an emergency stay temporarily suspending the Competition Tribunal's dismissal of its case against Rogers Communications Inc.'s $26-billion takeover of Shaw Communications Inc.

Emergency stay issued by Federal Court will remain until agency's application for stay, injunction are heard

Close-up of a hand holding two cellphones that clearly display the Rogers and Shaw Communications names and logos.
A woman holds two cellphones showing the Rogers and Shaw company logos in this photo illustration March 29, 2021, in Chelsea, Que. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

The Competition Bureau says a Federal Court has issued an emergency stay temporarily suspending the Competition Tribunal's dismissal of its case against Rogers Communications Inc.'s $26-billion takeover of Shaw Communications Inc.

The federal agency says the suspension will remain in place until its application for a stay and an injunction is heard.

The injunction would block the deal from closing until the Bureau's full appeal of the decision, rendered on Thursday, is heard.

The Tribunal said in its ruling that the merger was not likely to result in higher prices for wireless customers and that it was satisfied a plan to sell Shaw's Freedom Mobile to Quebecor Inc.'s Videotron was adequate to ensure competition isn't substantially reduced.

The Bureau had sought to block the merger and in its appeal argues that the Tribunal acted outside of its jurisdiction in a "rush to judgment."

WATCH | Competition Tribunal paves way for Rogers-Shaw merger:

Competition Tribunal paves way for Rogers-Shaw merger

2 years ago
Duration 2:07
The federal Competition Tribunal has cleared the way for Rogers' merger with Shaw Communications, stipulating that the acquisition can only proceed if Shaw sells its wireless division Freedom Mobile to Quebec-based Videotron.

If the Tribunal's decision stands, the merger will only require the approval of federal Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne to go ahead. Champagne said Saturday that he will wait until there is "clarity" in the ongoing legal process before issuing a decision.

The deal was originally scheduled to close by the end of 2022, with a possible extension to Jan. 31.