Getty Images is walking away from its $3.7 billion merger with Shutterstock after UK regulators demanded concessions the companies won’t accept. The deal – which would have created a stock photo and content licensing giant – cleared US antitrust review in February but hit a wall when the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority said Shutterstock must sell its editorial business, including paparazzi agencies Backgrid and Splash. Getty says it’s “not required” to accept those terms, according to an SEC filing released Tuesday.

Getty Images just pulled the ripcord on what would have been one of the biggest consolidations in digital content licensing. The company filed paperwork Tuesday with the SEC announcing plans to terminate its January 2025 merger agreement with Shutterstock, bringing an abrupt end to a deal that promised to reshape the $4 billion stock photography and video market.

The reason? A regulatory collision between two major markets. While the US Department of Justice handed down “unconditional antitrust clearance” in February, according to Shutterstock’s investor disclosures, the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority took a harder line. In May, the CMA said it would only approve the combination if Shutterstock agreed to sell its entire global editorial operation – including celebrity photo agencies Backgrid and Splash.

That proved to be a poison pill. Getty’s SEC filing makes clear the company believes it has no legal obligation to accept conditions that fundamentally alter the deal’s structure. The editorial business wasn’t some throwaway asset – it was a core part of what made the merger attractive, giving the combined entity dominance in both commercial stock content and timely news imagery used by media organizations worldwide.

The transatlantic split in regulatory thinking is striking. US antitrust enforcers, despite being historically aggressive under the current administration, saw no competition concerns worth blocking over. But UK regulators – operating under a different framework that emphasizes maintaining multiple competitors in concentrated markets – determined that combining Getty and Shutterstock’s editorial operations would harm competition for celebrity and news photography licensing.

This isn’t Getty’s first rodeo with complex deals. The company, backed by private equity since 2008, has been navigating massive shifts in how images get created and consumed. First came the disruption from crowdsourced microstock platforms. Then social media changed how news organizations source visuals. Now generative AI threatens to upend the entire licensing model, with tools capable of creating custom images on demand.

That AI pressure was part of what made the Shutterstock merger appealing. Both companies have been racing to integrate AI-generated content into their libraries while defending their traditional businesses built on photographer relationships and exclusive rights. Shutterstock has partnered with OpenAI and other AI companies, compensating contributors when their work trains generative models. Getty has taken a more litigious approach, suing AI companies for allegedly using its copyrighted images without permission.

Combined, the two would have controlled an estimated 70-80% of the commercial stock content market, according to industry analysts who spoke to trade publications when the deal was announced. That scale would have given them more negotiating power with both customers and the AI companies increasingly competing for the same use cases.

The UK’s editorial divestiture demand would have stripped away much of that strategic logic. Backgrid and Splash aren’t just celebrity photo agencies – they’re critical infrastructure for entertainment and news media, supplying paparazzi shots and red carpet images to publications worldwide. Forcing a sale would mean Getty couldn’t leverage that content alongside Shutterstock’s massive commercial library.

Now both companies are back to square one, competing independently in a market being reshaped by forces neither fully controls. Getty will continue operating as a standalone entity, while Shutterstock keeps its editorial assets intact but misses out on the scale that might have helped it weather AI disruption.

The regulatory divergence also sends a signal to other tech and media companies eyeing transatlantic mergers. Getting US approval is no guarantee of UK clearance, and vice versa. As competition authorities on both sides of the Atlantic take harder lines on consolidation, particularly in digital markets, companies can’t assume what flies in one jurisdiction will work in another.

For the stock content industry, the failed merger means the market stays fragmented for now. That could benefit smaller competitors like Adobe Stock and newer AI-native players, who won’t have to compete against a combined Getty-Shutterstock behemoth. But it also means both legacy giants face AI disruption without the combined resources and scale they were counting on to mount a defense.

The Getty-Shutterstock collapse is more than just a failed merger – it’s a preview of how global M&A deals will increasingly face divergent regulatory scrutiny across major markets. For the stock content industry, it means the competitive landscape stays fragmented just as AI-generated imagery threatens to disrupt the entire licensing model. Both companies now face that existential challenge independently, without the combined scale and resources they were banking on. And for dealmakers everywhere, it’s a reminder that clearing one major regulator doesn’t guarantee you’ll clear them all.