Updated 9:47 am EDT
Microsoft (MSFT) -) shares edged higher after the tech giant unveiled plans to unbundle its Teams app from its broader Office products suite in order to appease competition concerns from European officials.
The move comes after the European Commission last month launched a probe into the impact of Microsoft's tying Teams, a popular chat and video app that gained traction during the pandemic, to its Office 365 suite.
Microsoft rival Salesforce (CRM) -) earlier this year filed a complaint with European officials, arguing that including Teams as a free offering in Office 365 was harming the company's ability to expand Slack, the business messaging app it purchased in 2020.
Over the past 10 years Microsoft has paid more than $2.4 billion in fines to the European Commission linked to the bundling of its products, which authorities have said stifles fair competition.
"Today we are announcing proactive changes that we hope will start to address these concerns in a meaningful way, even while the European Commission's investigation continues and we cooperate with it," Microsoft's vice president for European government affairs, Nanna-Louise Linde, said in a blog post.
'Customers should be able to choose a business suite without Teams at a price less than those with Teams included. ... We should do more to make interoperability easier between rival communication and collaboration solutions and Microsoft 365 and Office 365 suites."
Microsoft shares at last check were 0.2% higher around $329.50.
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