European Union antitrust regulators may order Alphabet's Google to sell a part of its advertising-technology business, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Monday.
The EU's top antitrust
watchdog, the European Commission, could issue a formal complaint against
Google as early as Wednesday, the source said, further intensifying
trans-Atlantic efforts to diminish the tech giant's dominance in digital ads.
In 2022, the Commission
launched an investigation into Google's sweeping presence at almost all levels
of the supply chain for online display advertising, expressing concern about
its dominant position.
Break-up orders from the EU
competition enforcer are rare. However, frustration has been mounting after
Google failed to address competition concerns, the source said.
The Commission and Google did
not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment.
Google is the most dominant digital advertising platform in
the world with a 28 percent market share of global ad revenue, according to
research firm Insider Intelligence.
First-quarter ad sales at Alphabet slipped from a year
earlier to $54.55 billion, but beat what analysts were expecting. The Google
parent's total revenue during the period stood at $69.79 billion.
Google's dominance in online advertising has been
increasingly questioned over the past few years. Complaints from rivals about
its allegedly anti-competitive practices have led to antitrust investigations
in multiple continents concerning its practices.
Earlier this year, the United States launched an ad tech
lawsuit against Google demanding the sale of its ad manager suite, and had
argued that the search giant illegally abused its dominance of online
advertising. Google has denied any wrongdoing.
The EU's likely move was first reported by the Wall Street
Journal on Monday. © Reuters