US judge orders Nexstar to hold Tegna separate pending review
Summary
Advertisement Business US judge orders Nexstar to hold Tegna separate pending review 28 Mar 2026 11:30AM (Updated: 28 Mar 2026 12:12PM) Bookmark Bookmark Share WhatsApp Telegram Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Set CNA as your preferred source on Google Add CNA as a trusted source to help Google better understand and surface our content in search results. Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST FAST WASHINGTON, March 27 : A U.S. judge late on Friday ordered Nexstar to temporarily keep Tegna's assets separate pending a review of whether the broadcast station owner's $3.54 billion acquisition of its rival Tegna violates federal antitrust laws. District Judge Troy Nunley in Sacramento, California issued the order in response to a federal antitrust lawsuit filed by DirecTV, which argued it would irreparably drive up consumer costs, reduce local competition, shutter local newsrooms and increase both the frequency and duration of blackouts of key local sports teams. CNA Games Guess Word Crack the word, one row at a time Buzzword Create words using the given letters Mini Sudoku Tiny puzzle, mighty brain teaser Mini Crossword Small grid, big challenge Word Search Spot as many words as you can Show More Show Less The states argue that the deal, which creates the largest broadcast station group in the U.S. reaching 80 per cent of American households, would "put more broadcast programming in the hands of fewer people, cut local jobs, increase cable bills, and significantly impact the delivery of news and other media content to Americans nationwide." Nunley said DirecTV established "the proposed merger is presumed likely to violate antitrust laws based on the combined firm market share alone." DirecTV argues the merger creates a massive concentration of market power and enables Nexstar to raise prices and reduce the amount of local news.
Advertisement Business US judge orders Nexstar to hold Tegna separate pending review 28 Mar 2026 11:30AM (Updated: 28 Mar 2026 12:12PM) Bookmark Bookmark Share WhatsApp Telegram Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Set CNA as your preferred source on Google Add CNA as a trusted source to help Google better understand and surface our content in search results. Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST FAST WASHINGTON, March 27 : A U.S. judge late on Friday ordered Nexstar to temporarily keep Tegna's assets separate pending a review of whether the broadcast station owner's $3.54 billion acquisition of its rival Tegna violates federal antitrust laws. District Judge Troy Nunley in Sacramento, California issued the order in response to a federal antitrust lawsuit filed by DirecTV, which argued it would irreparably drive up consumer costs, reduce local competition, shutter local newsrooms and increase both the frequency and duration of blackouts of key local sports teams. CNA Games Guess Word Crack the word, one row at a time Buzzword Create words using the given letters Mini Sudoku Tiny puzzle, mighty brain teaser Mini Crossword Small grid, big challenge Word Search Spot as many words as you can Show More Show Less The states argue that the deal, which creates the largest broadcast station group in the U.S. reaching 80 per cent of American households, would "put more broadcast programming in the hands of fewer people, cut local jobs, increase cable bills, and significantly impact the delivery of news and other media content to Americans nationwide." Nunley said DirecTV established "the proposed merger is presumed likely to violate antitrust laws based on the combined firm market share alone." DirecTV argues the merger creates a massive concentration of market power and enables Nexstar to raise prices and reduce the amount of local news.
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US judge orders Nexstar to hold Tegna separate pending review
28 Mar 2026 11:30AM
(Updated: 28 Mar 2026 12:12PM)
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WASHINGTON, March 27 : A U.S. judge late on Friday ordered Nexstar to temporarily keep Tegna's assets separate pending a review of whether the broadcast station owner's $3.54 billion acquisition of its rival Tegna violates federal antitrust laws.
The companies quickly closed the deal after the Justice Department and Federal Communications Commission approved the deal on March 19.
U.S. District Judge Troy Nunley in Sacramento, California issued the order in response to a federal antitrust lawsuit filed by DirecTV, which argued it would irreparably drive up consumer costs, reduce local competition, shutter local newsrooms and increase both the frequency and duration of blackouts of key local sports teams.
Nexstar and DirecTV did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Eight states led by California and New York have also sought a temporary restraining order to stop the merger.
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The states argue that the deal, which creates the largest broadcast station group in the U.S. reaching 80 per cent of American households, would "put more broadcast programming in the hands of fewer people, cut local jobs, increase cable bills, and significantly impact the delivery of news and other media content to Americans nationwide."
Nunley said DirecTV established "the proposed merger is presumed likely to violate antitrust laws based on the combined firm market share alone."
DirecTV argues the merger creates a massive concentration of market power and enables Nexstar to raise prices and reduce the amount of local news.
The broadcast stations sell pay-TV providers like DirecTV rights to retransmit their content. Increases in retransmission fees result in higher prices for TV subscribers and DirecTV argues the deal will let it increase license fees further.
Nunley said Nexstar and Tegna "do not contest this merger will increase Nexstar’s bargaining leverage to extract higher fees." The judge ordered Nexstar and Tegna to appear at an April 7 hearing to determine if a preliminary injunction should be issued.
Nunley's order says Tegna must operate as a separate and distinct, independently managed business unit and must be maintained as an economically viable and active competitor.
Tegna must have separate management and Nexstar must prevent sharing of competitively sensitive information, including any information related to retransmission fee negotiations, among other restrictions.
Source: Reuters
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## Expert Analysis
### Merits
N/A
### Areas for Consideration
- CNA Games Guess Word Crack the word, one row at a time Buzzword Create words using the given letters Mini Sudoku Tiny puzzle, mighty brain teaser Mini Crossword Small grid, big challenge Word Search Spot as many words as you can Show More Show Less The states argue that the deal, which creates the largest broadcast station group in the U.S. reaching 80 per cent of American households, would "put more broadcast programming in the hands of fewer people, cut local jobs, increase cable bills, and significantly impact the delivery of news and other media content to Americans nationwide." Nunley said DirecTV established "the proposed merger is presumed likely to violate antitrust laws based on the combined firm market share alone." DirecTV argues the merger creates a massive concentration of market power and enables Nexstar to raise prices and reduce the amount of local news.
### Implications
- CNA Games Guess Word Crack the word, one row at a time Buzzword Create words using the given letters Mini Sudoku Tiny puzzle, mighty brain teaser Mini Crossword Small grid, big challenge Word Search Spot as many words as you can Show More Show Less The states argue that the deal, which creates the largest broadcast station group in the U.S. reaching 80 per cent of American households, would "put more broadcast programming in the hands of fewer people, cut local jobs, increase cable bills, and significantly impact the delivery of news and other media content to Americans nationwide." Nunley said DirecTV established "the proposed merger is presumed likely to violate antitrust laws based on the combined firm market share alone." DirecTV argues the merger creates a massive concentration of market power and enables Nexstar to raise prices and reduce the amount of local news.
- Increases in retransmission fees result in higher prices for TV subscribers and DirecTV argues the deal will let it increase license fees further.
- Nunley said Nexstar and Tegna "do not contest this merger will increase Nexstar’s bargaining leverage to extract higher fees." The judge ordered Nexstar and Tegna to appear at an April 7 hearing to determine if a preliminary injunction should be issued.
### Expert Commentary
This article covers nexstar, tegna, fast topics. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 623.
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