EU wants Google to break up its online ad business

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The European Union's antitrust watchdog wants Alphabet's Google (GOOG, GOOGL) to sell part of its online ad business, meaning the tech giant now faces regulatory challenges to a major part of its operations on both sides of the Atlantic.

That message came Wednesday when European regulators officially notified Google that the European Commission had reached a preliminary determination that the company's activity in the ad tech business breached EU antitrust rules by distorting competition in the market.

"Only the mandatory divestment by Google of part of its services would address its competition concerns," the European Commission said in a statement explaining its decision, while noting that its preliminary determination does not prejudge the outcome of its investigation.

A Google spokeswoman said the company will oppose demands to exit or divest its online ad business.

Dan Taylor, vice president of global ads for Google, said the commission's investigation "focuses on a narrow aspect of our advertising business and is not new. We disagree with the EC’s view and we will respond accordingly."

Margrethe Vestager, the European Commission executive vice president for a Europe fit for the digital age, spoke about the Google case at a press conference Wednesday in Brussels. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo) · (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

The potential EU action adds to Alphabet's legal troubles. In the US, antitrust authorities and US states have filed antitrust lawsuits against the company.

In January, the US Justice Department and eight US states brought an action saying Google unlawfully leveraged its monopoly in the $278.6 billion online advertising market to block competitors from entering. Nine additional states have since joined in the litigation.

The Justice Department also alleges in a separate suit filed against Google in 2021 that the company is operating an illegal monopoly in the online search business.

In its dispute over Google’s advertising business, the DOJ is asking the court to order Google's divestment of certain ad tech entities, specifically its Ad Manager suite, which would include its publisher ad server DFT, also known as DoubleClick or GAM, and its ad exchange AdX.

The various legal challenges represent a danger to a big portion of Alphabet's business. In 2022, ad sales drove approximately 80% of approximately $224.5 billion in revenue. Google’s online advertising business controls most of the technology in the markets to buy, sell, and serve advertisements online.

'A competitive advantage'

The core of the European Commission's initial finding is that Google abuses its dominance in the European Economic Area-wide markets by leveraging its publisher ad servers and programmatic ad buying tools for the open web.