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Georgetown Law 2025 Advanced eDiscovery Institute
November 21, 2025 | 8:30 AM – 9:30 AM ET
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Articles + Publications June 2, 2025
This article was republished by the EACCNY on June 2, 2025.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has agreed to accept the new administration’s first settlement of a merger-enforcement challenge. The settlement includes the divestiture of three businesses and will allow Synopsys, Inc. to complete its $34 billion acquisition of Ansys, Inc.
Although the remedy is consistent with the previously announced remedies accepted by the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority and the European Commission (EC), the consent agreement is notable not only because it is the first of the administration but also because Chair Andrew Ferguson’s related statement discusses when this FTC will choose settlement instead of litigation.
The statement points to both practical and substantive factors as guideposts for its decisions, including impact of a settlement proposal on litigation, ability to fashion a remedy that is structural (not behavioral), quality of the asset package available for divestiture, and strength of the proposed divestiture buyer.
The Merger
The parties’ product portfolios are mostly complementary. Synopsys largely offers electronic design automation (EDA) software, services, and hardware used to design semiconductor devices, such as chips, and offers semiconductor intellectual property. Ansys mostly offers multi-physics simulation and analysis software and services to simulate and analyze the behavior of a product, process, or system using digital models. Some of these EDA tools are used by chip designers. The firms characterized the merger as the logical next step given their history of collaboration.
According to publicly available information, the parties filed the merger notifications in the UK and Europe in November 2024 before filing in the United States on January 29, 2025.
Theories of Harm
The FTC complaint alleges that Synopsys and Ansys are the only two competitors in optical software tools and that the transaction would give Synopsys the ability to determine input prices for producers of screens, lenses, and mirrors, including automotive, smartphone, camera, and television manufacturers. With respect to photonic software used for designing and simulating photonic devices, Synopsys and Ansys are head-to-head competitors and view each other as their closest competitor despite the presence of other competitors. Similarly, each party considers the other its closest competitor for Register Transfer Level (RTL) power consumption analysis tools, and market participants recognize them as such. For example, Synopsys and Ansys have each innovated their products in direct response to competition from the other.
The Settlement
The UK and the EC provisionally accepted the parties’ proposed remedy on January 8 and January 10, 2025, respectively. Although not yet final because the settlement remains subject to the public comment period, the FTC describes the consent order as “preserv[ing] competition across several software tool markets that are critical for the design of semiconductors and light simulation devices, which are used in a wide range of products.” Specifically, Synopsys will divest its optical software tools and photonic software tools, while Ansys will divest PowerArtist, a power consumption analysis tool. The settlement will also require the companies to provide a “limited amount” of technological support and transition services to the divestiture buyer so that it can immediately compete with the merged company.
Chair Ferguson issued a statement, which was joined by the two other commissioners, to explain his views on the role that remedies should play. Key points of the statement include:
Litigation is the only tool that the agency has to prevent anticompetitive acquisitions;
Although, in the past, not all merger remedies have been effective, they must be an option for the FTC;
Only settlements the agency believes are certain to address the proposed transaction’s anticompetitive effects are acceptable; and
The commission intends to publish a policy statement on its understanding of the role of remedies.
The agency should not disregard proposed settlements that would address a merger’s competition problems, because the parties can present that settlement as a remedy to the court during litigation. Courts often consider whether the proposed remedies would alleviate the competition concerns raised by the challenged transaction. Chair Ferguson acknowledges that even inadequate settlement proposals can complicate the agency’s litigation efforts and substantially increase its risks. To avoid relegating the judgments about the acceptability of remedies to the parties to the transaction and the courts, the FTC will not preclude the potential for consent agreements such as that proposed by Synopsys and Ansys.
Additionally, given the expense and staff time necessary to litigate antitrust cases, refusing to settle merger cases unnecessarily limits the impact that the FTC can have with its finite resources.
The statement also makes clear that the agency should only accept settlements when it is confident that the settlement will protect competition “to the same extent that successful litigation would.” As with prior administrations, behavioral remedies will be disfavored in merger matters. Also, structural remedies should typically involve the sale of a standalone or discrete business and all tangible and intangible assets necessary (1) to make that line of business viable, (2) to give the divestiture buyer the incentive and ability to compete vigorously against the merged firm, and (3) to eliminate to the extent possible any ongoing entanglements between the divested business and the merged firm. The agency needs also be confident that the divestiture buyer has the resources and experience necessary to make the business competitive.
Although the statement acknowledges that “settlements, where they resolve the competitive concerns that a proposed transaction creates, save the commission time and money that it can then deploy toward other matters,” Chair Ferguson explains that he would favor litigation over an uncertain settlement.
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Georgetown Law 2025 Advanced eDiscovery Institute
November 21, 2025 | 8:30 AM – 9:30 AM ET
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Restructuring in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
November 17, 2025 | 1:30 PM – 2:30 PM ET
Offices of CohnReznick
New York, NY
Leading the energy evolution.
Learn more
From compliance to the courtroom, we have you covered.
Learn more
Helping you focus on what matters – improving human health.
Learn more
Trusted advisors to leading insurers for 100+ years.
Learn more
Unlocking value in the middle market and beyond.
Learn more
Full-service legal advice from coast to coast.
Learn more
Applying radical applications of common sense
Explore More
Our standard-setting client experience program.
Explore more
Delivering life-changing help to those most in need.
Explore More
Our firm’s greatest asset is our people.
Explore More
Market-leading eDiscovery and data management services.
Explore more
The Pepper Center for Public Services
Explore more
Strategies helps businesses and individuals solve the complexities of dealing with the government at every level. Our team of specialists concentrate exclusively on government affairs, representing clients nationwide who need assistance with public policy, advocacy, and government relations strategies.
This unique program provides innovative and affordable opportunities to startups and early-stage emerging companies with a solid technology or scientific foundation. We help companies that have a quality management team in place and do not have other significant legal representation.
eMerge’s lawyers and technologists work together to deliver strategic end-to-end eDiscovery and data management solutions for litigation, investigations, due diligence, and compliance matters. We help clients discover the information necessary to resolve disputes, respond to investigations, conduct due diligence, and comply with legal requirements.
Stay ahead of the curve and in touch with our latest thinking on the issues that are top of mind across our practices and industry sectors.
Change happens fast in today’s turbulent world. Stay on top of the latest with our industry-specific channels.
Take a closer look at how we partner with clients to help them realize their goals.