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Marriott-Starwood Merger Receives Final Approval

  • Skift Take
    If there were any doubts about the Marriott-Starwood deal getting done, you can now toss them out because of the approval from Chinese regulators. Now, let’s get on with it.

    After an elongated review, Chinese regulators granted antitrust approval to Marriott’s acquisition of Starwood, the last remaining hurdle to closing the merger.

    The chains said they expect the deal to close before the market opens in New York on Friday.

    The CEOs of Marriott, Expedia, Club Med, and More Are Speaking at Skift Global Forum 2016. Join Us.

    The approval follows Chinese authorities’ decision, which the companies announced Aug. 8, to take an extended look at the merger for up to 60 more days. The regulators made their decision before the Oct. 8 deadline expired.

    There was some suspicion that the extension may have been motivated by the Chinese government and/or regulators’ desires to extract divestitures or other assets from either Marriott or Starwood during the approval process. However, a Marriott spokesperson told Skift, “The transaction was approved without any conditions.”

    Marriott and Starwood had said all along that they expected the $12.2 billion deal to go through even as it had sailed through all other regulatory approvals.

    The deal, when it closes later this week, will create the largest hotel chain in the world with 1.1 million rooms, spread out over nearly 30 brands.

    As Skift previously reported, the road to closing this transaction, which Marriott and Starwood initially announced in November 2015, has taken numerous twists and turns, including an unexpected bidding war with China’s Anbang Insurance Group and its consortium in March 2016. Anbang eventually dropped out.

    The extended antitrust review by the Ministry of Commerce of the People’s Republic of China was the latest — and last — hurdle.

    Regulators in dozens of other countries and jurisdictions around the world, including the U.S., the European Union, Saudi Arabia and Mexico, had previously decided not to stand in the way of the mega merger.

    The Road to the Merger

    Corporate Travel Is Bracing for the Impact of the Marriott-Starwood Merger

    Marriott-Starwood Deal Gets Antitrust Clearance From the European Union

    Marriott and Starwood Shareholders Approve Merger To Become World’s Largest Hotel Company

    Bill Marriott Says ‘We Were Done’ if Anbang Had Made Another Starwood Bid

    Marriott-Starwood Investor Call: Anbang’s Deal Was ‘Very Real’

    Photo Credit: This April, 28, 2014 photo, shows a Marriott hotel in Cranberry Township, Pennsylvania. Marriott International announced on Nov. 16, 2015 its intent to acquire Starwood. Gene J. Puskar / Associated Press
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