LONDON (Reuters) - Deutsche Boerse
That decision plunged the 26 billion euro ($27.6 billion) deal into uncertainty, and Kengeter said on Wednesday the German group could continue on its own.
Speaking at the London School of Economics on Friday, he said work on the merger had not stopped.
"A process such as this has a very strong legal cooperation framework. If you don't do those (certain) steps at a certain time then you are damaging the integrity of the process. So everyone is continuing to do their work, that's absolutely clear," he said. He said the date on which the merger would be confirmed or rejected by the European Commission was not yet set. "I think the date is still 3rd April. It could be earlier but it doesn't have to be."
EU competition officials had raised concerns over MTS.
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($1 = 0.9425 euros)
(Reporting by Helen Reid; editing by John Stonestreet)
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