The European Union is likely to approve IntercontinentalExchange Inc.'s (ICE) planned takeover of NYSE Euronext (NYX) without conditions, according to a person familiar with the discussions.

The planned $10.1 billion exchange tie-up appeared not to raise enough competitive concerns to require remedies, with Monday bringing the deadline for any such concessions to be submitted to EU antitrust examiners, the person said.

The EU stance on the deal is seen to remove the last major regulatory hurdle facing the deal, a year after the European Commission blocked NYSE's proposed merger with German exchange group Deutsche Boerse AG (DB1.XE, DBOEF). In the U.S., the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice earlier this year allowed the deal to proceed.

While the NYSE-Deutsche Boerse deal raised concerns in the EU around one exchange company controlling nearly all trade in futures and options linked to European interest rates, overlap between ICE and NYSE is limited to contracts on soft commodities and some U.S. stock indexes.

The European Commission must decide whether to start an in-depth review of the deal by June 24. Representatives for ICE and NYSE, which aim to close their deal later this year, declined comment Monday.

The lack of remedies sought by the EU on the deal was earlier reported by Reuters.

Shareholders for ICE and NYSE approved the deal earlier this month. Shares of ICE settled 3.3% higher at $178.87 Monday, and shares of NYSE were 2.6% higher at $41.55. Shares of NYSE and ICE have gained 73% and 39%, respectively, since the transaction was announced Dec. 20.

EU antitrust officials in recent weeks have queried commodity traders and rival exchanges about the potential impact of the deal, which would create the world's second-largest exchange company by valuation, after Chicago-based CME Group Inc. (CME).

Questionnaires sent by EU examiners focused on ICE and NYSE's respective markets in commodities like sugar, cocoa and coffee, as well as derivatives linked to the values of stock-market benchmarks, according to people familiar with the queries. Seeking input from market participants on aspects of a merger is a typical part of the EU deal review process.

ICE and NYSE run the main markets for soft commodities in the U.S. and U.K., respectively. While similar, the exchanges' contracts reflecting prices of coffee, cocoa and sugar track different varieties of the commodities and offer different points of delivery.

Both exchange companies also list futures linked to stock indexes, with NYSE's U.S. futures platform listing contracts on MSCI Inc. benchmarks and ICE's market listing futures on the Russell Investments family of stock indexes.

Even combined, however, ICE and NYSE's stock-index futures markets are far smaller than those run by CME Group Inc., which maintains exclusive rights to trade contracts on the S&P 500 stock index and the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Less than 160,000 equity index contracts changed hands on ICE and NYSE's U.S. markets on an average day last month, compared to an average 2.8 million contracts traded on CME's platform each day.

Regional competition authorities in the U.K., Spain and Portugal agreed to turn over examination of the proposed deal to the European Union in April.

The deal still requires approval from the group of regulators that oversee NYSE's European markets. In the U.S., the deal awaits a ruling by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

- Michelle Price in London contributed to this article.

Write to Jacob Bunge at jacob.bunge@dowjones.com

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