The Saudi-led investor group acquiring Electronic Arts for $55 billion has sought European Union clearance under the bloc's foreign-subsidy rules, opening a second regulatory front for one of the largest leveraged buyouts on record. According to a European Commission filing on 24 June 2026, the consortium — comprising Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, private equity firm Silver Lake and Affinity Partners — has triggered a review under the EU's Foreign Subsidies Regulation, with the Commission setting a 30 July deadline to either clear the deal or open a full investigation.
The filing adds to the antitrust scrutiny already under way. The consortium separately sought EU merger clearance earlier in June, giving the Commission a 22 July deadline to decide whether to approve that aspect of the transaction, with or without remedies, or to launch a deeper inquiry. The two reviews run in parallel and assess different risks: the merger process examines whether the deal would harm competition in the European market for games and related services, while the foreign-subsidies review considers whether non-EU state backing — here, the involvement of a Saudi sovereign wealth fund — could distort competition when a buyer acquires a company with EU activities.
The Foreign Subsidies Regulation is the more distinctive hurdle. Introduced to prevent government support from outside the bloc giving acquirers an unfair advantage, the rules allow the Commission to assess non-EU public financial contributions above a set threshold, and they apply squarely to a transaction underpinned by the Public Investment Fund, Saudi Arabia's roughly $1 trillion sovereign wealth fund. The deal's structure makes it a natural test case: the sheer scale of state-linked capital behind the bid is exactly what the regime was designed to scrutinise, even where the investors do not directly compete with the target in the same markets.
The transaction itself is a landmark in size and ambition. Announced in September 2025, the all-cash deal values Electronic Arts — the publisher behind franchises including EA Sports FC, Battlefield, The Sims and Madden NFL — at about $55 billion and would take the company private, financed through roughly $36 billion of equity and $20 billion of debt at a premium of around 25% to EA's share price before the deal emerged. For the Public Investment Fund, the acquisition reflects a strategy of betting on the enduring value of blockbuster game franchises and positioning Saudi Arabia as a global hub for games and sport, part of a broader effort to diversify the kingdom's economy through high-profile investments in entertainment and technology.
The dual review process points to the rising regulatory complexity facing large sovereign-backed acquisitions of Western assets. A deal of this scale, taking a major US-listed publisher private with substantial state-linked capital, must now clear both traditional competition tests and the newer foreign-subsidy regime before it can complete in Europe — a layered scrutiny that did not exist for cross-border deals of this kind a few years ago. The structure of the financing, the role of sovereign capital and the strategic motives behind the bid all feed into how Brussels weighs the transaction, and the outcome will shape how future sovereign-fund-led buyouts of consumer-technology assets are assessed.
How the Commission rules by its July deadlines will determine whether the deal proceeds smoothly or faces a prolonged investigation. Clearance on both fronts would clear the European path for one of the most significant take-private transactions in the games industry, while a decision to open a full inquiry on either basis would introduce delay and uncertainty into a deal already among the largest of its kind. For the consortium, securing both approvals is a necessary step toward completing an acquisition that has become a closely watched measure of how Western regulators treat large inflows of sovereign capital into strategic consumer and technology sectors.
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