Federal News
DOJ and States Challenge HPE Juniper Merger
March 16, 2026
The Department of Justice (DOJ), alongside senior officials from the Department of Defense (DoD) and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), engaged with Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) prior to approving its $14 billion merger settlement with Juniper Networks in 2025. This merger, framed as a strategic move to counter competition from Huawei in wireless networking, faces ongoing legal challenges from a coalition of state attorneys general led by Oregon's Attorney General Rayfield. The coalition alleges the settlement is tainted by improper lobbying and fails to mitigate anticompetitive risks, potentially impacting innovation and pricing in the wireless networking market.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should be aware of potential shifts in the competitive landscape for wireless networking technologies, as legal disputes may affect contract awards and vendor availability.
- The merger's scrutiny highlights increased regulatory attention on large technology consolidations with national security implications, signaling possible future procurement restrictions or compliance requirements.
- Contractors and vendors in wireless networking and related IT infrastructure should evaluate risks associated with this merger's outcome and consider diversification strategies.
- Agencies involved in defense and intelligence communications may experience changes in vendor relationships or contract terms depending on the merger's final legal status.
When two of the biggest players in wireless networking merge, prices go up and innovation slows down. Wireless touches everything, from your home internet to the small business down the street.
— Attorney General Rayfield
Agencies
Department of Defense, Central Intelligence Agency, Department of Justice, Oregon Department of Justice, California Attorney General's Office
Vendors
Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Juniper Networks, theGROUP DC, Focal Point Strategy Group, Catalyst