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Principles of Merger Analysis. The Antitrust Masters Course V September 30, 2010 Andrea Agathoklis, Department of Justice Norman A. Armstrong, Jr., Federal Trade Commission Phillip A. Proger, Jones Day. Agenda. A Look Back to Look Forward: The History of Merger GLs in the US and Elsewhere
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Principles of Merger Analysis The Antitrust Masters Course V September 30, 2010 Andrea Agathoklis, Department of Justice Norman A. Armstrong, Jr., Federal Trade Commission Phillip A. Proger, Jones Day
Agenda • A Look Back to Look Forward: The History of Merger GLs in the US and Elsewhere • Overview of the New Horizontal Merger GLs • Applying the New Merger GLs: a Hypotheticals-driven Approach
U.S. Timeline • 1890: Sherman Act • 1914: Clayton Act • 1950: Cellar-Kefauver Amendments to Clayton Act • 1968: First Merger Guidelines • 1976: Passage of HSR Act • 1982: Baxter • 1992 : Rill • 1997: Efficiencies • 2010: Third major revision since 1968 (1982, 1992)
Lessons • Why did we need merger GLs to begin with? • Why did their evolution occur in this fashion?
The Basics • Multi-month cooperative effort between the FTC and DOJ • Following release of a draft in April 2010, the agencies reviewed public comments and, to some extent, incorporated them into the final version • Intended to reflect current agency practice and provide transparency into the principal analytical techniques and practices used by the agencies
The Basics • Formulaic analytical approach of 1992 GLs is disavowed • Market definition no longer automatically the first step • Rather, each merger will be approached on an individual basis depending on specific facts and circumstances • Tools used to analyze a merger may include: the actual effects in consummated mergers; ‘natural experiments’; market shares and concentration; HHIs (albeit at different thresholds); the extent of head-to-head competition; and, evidence of a disruptive “maverick” firm
The Basics • Embrace of certain economic concepts: • Diversion ratios (i.e., evaluating closeness of competition of the merging parties products by measuring the number of sales that are diverted from one party’s product to the other’s in the event of a price increase) • Upward pricing pressure test • Elimination of 35% market share safe harbor
The Basics • Focus on coordinated effects by examining • Previous instances of collusion in the industry; transparency of competition on both price and non-price terms; product homogeneity; size and frequency of sales or contracts; market elasticity of demand; and, characteristics of the buyers (including size) • Other “new” concepts mentioned in the GLs: power buyers; monopsony power; and partial-acquisitions
Evidence of Adverse Competitive Effects • Sources of Evidence • Merging Parties’ documents will always carry the most weight • Third Parties’ (customers / consultants) • Types of Evidence • Actual effects observed in consummated mergers • Direct comparisons based on experience • Market shares in a Relevant Market • Head-to-head competition • Disruptive role of a merging party (the “maverick”)
Importance of Price Discrimination on Merger Analysis • Presence of price discrimination influences market definition, the measurement of market shares, and/or the evaluation of competitive effects • Protecting against adverse competitive effects of a given transaction against one customer, whereas another customer may not experience the same negative effect • Typically, two requirements: • Differential pricing; and • Limited opportunities for arbitrage (indirect purchasing)
Product Market Definition • How do you define a substitute? • Hypothetical monopolist test • SSNIP
Geographic Market Definition • What are the geographic bounds of the relevant market? • Impact of Suppliers • Impact of Customers
Market Shares • Counting noses • Calculating market shares • Analyzing market concentration • HHIs
Unilateral Effects • Differentiated products • Auctions markets • Homogenous products and reductions in output or capacity • Diminished innovation or reduced product variety
Coordinated Effects • Will the transaction alter the way companies behave? • What kind of markets are most vulnerable to coordinated effects?
Entry • Timeliness • What is “rapid” • Likelihood • Sufficiency
Efficiencies • Merger specific • Verifiable and cognizable • That is, they must reverse any potential harm caused by transaction • Examples • Shifting production among facilities formerly owned separately to reduce the incremental cost of production: can be quantified • R&D: perhaps but not subject to verification • Procurement, management, or capital cost: unlikely