Kay Koplovitz, former USA Networks CEO, and CNBC's Hampton Pearson discusses the government losing its case against AT&T over the merger with Time Warner, and what it means for the future of media consolidation.
Walter Isaacson, Perella Weinberg, and Roger McNamee, Elevation Partners, discusses what the AT&T-Time Warner greenlight means for the future of media and tech consolidation.
Michael White, former DirecTV CEO, discusses the government losing its case against AT&T over the merger with Time Warner, and what it means for the future of media consolidation like the sale of Fox assets.
Eric Hippeau, Lerer Hippeau managing partner, and Jim Stewart, New York Times columnist, discuss the future for mergers and antitrust regulations following the approval of the AT&T-Time Warner deal.
Shares of drugstore CVS Health jump after a federal judge approved AT&T's bid for Time Warner.
The "Squawk on the Street" crew talks about the implications of a federal judge ruling that clears the way for other mega-mergers as competition for content and consumers become fierce. Murdoch is now a very happy seller, says David Faber.
Jennifer Fritzsche, Wells Fargo senior analyst, and Larry Haverty, Gabelli Multi-Media Trust, weigh in on what the AT&T-Time Warner deal approval means for players like Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon.
Steve Case, Revolution CEO and AOL co-founder, provides insight to the failure of Time Warner and AOL to capitalize on their merger, and the future of big media as competition heats up the space.
CNBC's David Faber reports on Comcast's likely bid for Twenty-First Century Fox's assets, which is expected later in the day, which would include an all-cash offer.
Ralph Schlosstein, Evercore CEO and BlackRock co-founder, talks about a judge's antitrust ruling in favor of AT&T and the ripple effect it may have on the M&A media market.
Craig Moffett, MoffettNathanson founding partner, and Ed Lee, New York Times media reporter, provide insight to Comcast and Disney's bid for Twenty-First Century Fox's assets.