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16APR

Cohere-Aleph Alpha merger still unfiled four weeks in

1 min read
14:27UTC

As of 23 April 2026, no formal merger notification had been lodged with the Bundeskartellamt by Cohere or Aleph Alpha, four weeks after the talks were first reported.

ConflictAssessed
Key takeaway

Berlin's sovereign AI template has not yet matured into a filing any regulator can test.

The Bundeskartellamt had received no formal merger notification from Cohere or Aleph Alpha as of 23 April 2026, four weeks after the talks first surfaced . Multiple outlets have continued to use the same "advanced" framing without further specifics on filing status. Berlin's publicly attached conditions, that development services remain in Germany and that the merged entity maintain infrastructure-sovereign deployment, remain intact as stated preconditions.

Silence on the public register does not rule out a filing in progress: German competition authority filings are typically published only after acceptance, so a pre-notification dialogue may already be under way. What the absence does indicate is that structuring Berlin's political conditions into legally enforceable deal terms is proving harder than announcing them. Cohere has a US investor base that is likely to prefer operational flexibility over German infrastructure lock-in, and the deal shape that satisfies both a Canadian cap table and a German sovereignty template is not a standard one. Until a filing lands, Germany's sovereign AI anchor strategy rests on an announced intent rather than a tested legal structure.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When two companies from different countries want to merge, one Canadian (Cohere) and one German (Aleph Alpha), they typically need to notify competition authorities in the countries where they do significant business. In Germany, that means filing paperwork with the Bundeskartellamt, the German competition office. Four weeks after the merger talks became public, that filing has not happened. The German government has attached unusual conditions to this merger: it wants AI development to stay in Germany and data to be stored on German infrastructure. Turning those political demands into legally binding contract terms that also satisfy Cohere's Canadian and US investors is proving complicated. Until the filing lands, Germany's public claim to have an AI sovereignty anchor strategy is an aspiration rather than a transaction.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

German merger filings for cross-border tech transactions are typically preceded by an informal pre-notification phase in which the parties and the Bundeskartellamt's case team reach working agreement on transaction structure and any conditions. This process can take weeks to months before a formal filing is made.

In the Cohere-Aleph Alpha case, an additional complication is that Berlin's publicly stated conditions, German infrastructure sovereignty and German development retention, are not standard competition-law remedies.

Competition authorities assess market concentration, not industrial policy conditions; the legal mechanism for encoding Berlin's sovereignty requirements into a binding transaction is either a separate government contract or an investor agreement, neither of which is straightforward when the acquiring entity has a US-oriented cap table with fiduciary duties to its investors.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    If the merger does file and is approved with Berlin's sovereignty conditions encoded, it becomes a template for how Germany manages sovereign AI asset transitions. If the conditions prove unenforceable or are diluted in the final transaction structure, Berlin's public claim to have sovereignty conditions on AI mergers loses credibility for subsequent deals. The absence of a filing four weeks in suggests the template is not yet proven.

First Reported In

Update #3 · Sovereignty summit, minus the sovereigns

BNN Bloomberg / Reuters· 23 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Cohere-Aleph Alpha merger still unfiled four weeks in
Berlin's sovereignty conditions on the deal remain publicly attached but legally untested. Until a filing lands, the German government's anchor-customer commitment and its infrastructure-sovereignty requirements exist as political intent rather than as a regulated transaction.
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