I'm really pleased to announce the blog's first guest post - from Ben Hamlin, Barrister (Ben@hamlin.law). Our shiny new Commerce Amendment Act 2022 has got most attention for its (welcome) rewrite of s36 along Australian lines, but as Ben explains, there are other provisions which you need to be on top of. Ben's written about the increased penalties which will apply from May 5 to parties who breach s47 (anti-competitive mergers or acquisitions). As it happens, the Commerce Commission has been more active in recent years in opening s47 inquiries: Ben reviews the history and draws the lessons. Enjoy!
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Increasing penalties for anti-competitive mergers
Merger activity is booming, so practitioners in that field might
be forgiven if they had overlooked the forthcoming increase in penalties for
mergers that contravene section 47 of the Commerce Act.
The increase is worth noting, but also provides an
opportunity to reflect on merger enforcement in recent years.
The potential penalties for mergers are on the up
The first substantive provisions of the Commerce Amendment Act
2022 come into force on 5 May 2022, including an increase in the corporate financial
penalties associated with mergers that substantially lessen competition. From 5
May onward, the maximum penalty will be the greater of:
(i)
$10 million:
(ii)
either,—
(A) if it can be readily
ascertained and if the court is satisfied that the contravention occurred in
the course of producing a commercial gain, 3 times the value of any commercial
gain resulting from the contravention; or
(B) if the commercial gain cannot
readily be ascertained, 10% of the turnover of the person and all its
interconnected bodies corporate (if any) in each accounting period in which the
contravention occurred.
As is often the way, the change in merger penalties barely
rated a mention in the passage of the Commerce Amendment Act 2022. At the third
reading Hon Andrew Little, speaking in the place of Hon David Clark, noted:[i]
Another important way that the
Act protects the competitive process is through its prohibition against anti-competitive
mergers or acquisitions. For this prohibition to be effective, it needs to be
able to deter entities that may benefit significantly, in commercial terms,
from the merger. The bill ensures this can happen by increasing the monetary
penalty the courts can impose if entities are found to have contravened the
prohibition.
This change brings the penalty into line with contraventions
of Part 2 of the Act, and broadly into line with the penalties for a breach of
the equivalent provision in Australia.[ii] The increase from $5,000,000
to $10,000,000 is also broadly in line with inflation since the penalty was set
in 1990.[iii]
So far, very orthodox: deterrence through ensuring that the
potential benefits are outweighed by the potential penalties.
Does an increase in non-notified merger investigations
suggests inadequate deterrence?
An interesting further justification was provided in the
Cabinet paper approving the decision to increase the penalty. The Courts have
cautioned against placing much weight on cabinet papers when interpreting
legislation.[iv]
Any judges reading may wish to avert their eyes.
The paper noted that: [v]
“Since the beginning of 2018, the
Commerce Commission has undertaken investigations into eight possibly anti-competitive
mergers for which clearance or authorisation was not sought. This suggests that
the current penalties for anticompetitive mergers are not acting as a
sufficient deterrent.”
Does it? As the readers of this blog will be aware, the
penalty is only part of the optimal deterrence equation. The probability of
detection and prosecution is equally, if not more, important.
The Commission’s merger enforcement 2010/11 to present
The Commission’s published merger
statistics show that there was indeed a real spike in s47 investigations.[vi] In the seven years between
2010/11 and 2016/17 there were a total of 11 section 47 investigations decided.
Yet in the two years 2017/2018 and 2018/2019 a further 11 section 47
investigations were decided.
Financial
year |
10/11 |
11/12 |
12/13 |
13/14 |
14/15 |
15/16 |
16/17 |
17/18 |
18/19 |
19/20 |
20/21 |
21/22 HY |
Total |
|||||||||||
Clearances (s 66) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
Total applications decided |
10 |
10 |
8 |
12 |
14 |
12 |
7 |
9 |
11 |
9 |
8 |
10 |
120 |
|||||||||||
Unconditional clearance |
8 |
8 |
6 |
9 |
11 |
9 |
3 |
5 |
8 |
9 |
6 |
6 |
88 |
|||||||||||
Clearance with divestment |
2 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
1 |
2 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
0 |
2 |
1 |
14 |
|||||||||||
Declined |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
1 |
3 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
10 |
|||||||||||
Withdrawn |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
8 |
|||||||||||
Section 47 investigations |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
Number decided |
1 |
3 |
2 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
7 |
4 |
1 |
2 |
0 |
25 |
|||||||||||
Table 1
Source: Commerce Commission Merger Determination and Enforcement Statistics -
December 2021
What could have caused the jump? It is difficult to
distinguish correlation and causation. But many competition law tragics will
remember a heady period where the Commission blocked five transactions in 13
months: Sky/Vodafone February in 2017, Aon/FPIS in March 2017, the NZME/Fairfax
Authorisation was declined in May 2017, Vero/Tower in July 2017, and Trade Me/Limelight
in March 2018. Appeals were filed against three of the decisions (Sky/Vodafone,
NZME/Fairfax, Vero/Tower), but two were withdrawn and the NZME/Fairfax appeal proceeded
unsuccessfully.
It is possible that blocking a number of high profile
mergers in quick succession caused some parties to avoid clearance. In any
event, the increase in section 47 investigations did not escape the Commission’s
attention. In August 2018, the Commission announced its priorities for
2018/2019, and ‘non-notified mergers’ was among them. The Commission’s then
Chair was quoted as saying:[vii]
“New Zealand is one of a few
jurisdictions with a voluntary merger clearance regime and the Commission is
seeing an increase in non-notified mergers. Over the past 2 years we have
opened five investigations into non-notified mergers. The success of a
voluntary regime relies on the credible threat of enforcement proceedings so we
will act quickly in these cases to prevent adverse impacts on competition in
markets.”
Opening investigations is, of course, the easiest part of
the process, and does not mean any competition issue exists. Competition
investigations can start, stop, or spend a long time in between, and are often
a black box to the outside world. Up until July 2017, little information
appears to have been published unless a section 47 investigation resulted in
litigation.
Fortunately, in July 2017, the Commission had announced that
it intended publish a record of section 47 investigations on its website, to
ensure the public and market were aware of investigations into potentially
anti-competitive transactions.[viii] As a result, the
Commission’s case register records outcomes for 11 section 47 investigations
since the beginning of 2018.
A breakdown of them is instructive:
- In three cases, the Commission considered there was either no issue, or insufficient evidence to establish a competition issue: Bondor NZ/The Long Group, Bejier Ref AB/Heatcraft NZ/Kirby NZ, and Glenninburg Holdings/Wallace Group GP.
- In four cases, the Commission closed its investigation following a divestment or change in transaction. In Vero Insurance NZ/Tower Insurance, no further action was taken after Vero divested the 19.9% of Tower it had bought during its attempted takeover of Tower. In Fulton Hogan/Stevenson, no further action was taken after Fulton Hogan agreed not to acquire Stevenson’s Huntly quarry. In David Ferrier/Cavalier Wool Holdings no further action was taken after David Ferrier sold down his interest NZ Wool Dumping. In Datix/RL Solutions, no further action after Datix divested several customer contracts.
- In four cases, the Commission commenced proceedings. In Platinum Equity/OfficeMax Holdings, a settlement was reached after litigation was commenced. Platinum purchased OfficeMax but divested its WINC NZ business. In Wilson Parking NZ/Penrith Holdings, a settlement was reached after litigation was commenced. Wilson Parking offered an enforceable undertaking to divest the assets it had acquired. In First Gas/Gas Net, an agreed civil pecuniary penalty was imposed. And most recently, in Objective Corporation/Master Business Systems, a civil pecuniary penalty is to be imposed following settlement.
Without going into the merits of any of these individual
cases, the outcomes overall suggest that the Commission was right to have some concerns
but appears to have been able to address them. While headlines tend to focus on
declines and penalty cases, divestures can equally represent a significant
outcome for competition. In some cases, such as Platinum Equity/OfficeMax
litigation, or the recent Ampol/Z Energy clearance, the entire existing New
Zealand business is divested. It is also clear that some deals are ultimately
stopped because of competition concerns, which can see investigations halted or
clearance applications withdrawn.[ix]
This burst of section 47 activity may not be permanent. The Commission’s
register indicates that while three section 47 investigations were commenced in
mid-2020, there have been none commenced since August 2020 despite a veritable
boom in merger activity. Instead, the 2021/2022 year appears to be one for the
books in terms of merger clearances, with 15 applications decided in the first
three quarters.
One possible explanation for this is that the Commission’s
announced focus on non-notified mergers, followed up with investigations, has
resulted in the pendulum swinging back towards parties seeking clearance. The increased
probability of detection may have been what was missing, rather than the size
of the penalties.
Conclusions
One busy year is not enough to draw firm conclusions, and we
are working with small numbers in any event. But I would suggest three
conclusions can be drawn, for what they are worth, from the data we have.
First, the Commission’s decision to regularly publish data
on its merger work, and the decision to make section 47 information public on
its register, assists in analysis and understanding of the Commission’s work in
context. 10 years ago, a practitioner would need to rely on insider knowledge, intuition,
or a lengthy series of OIA requests, to attempt to understand what was going
on.
Second, the Minister was right that there was an increase in
section 47 investigations, but it does not necessarily follow that a penalty
increase was needed for that reason alone. If in the future there is a decrease
in voluntary notifications, perhaps because of the cluster of blocked
transactions, then the appropriate response might be more investigation. That may
require resourcing and appropriate enforcement tools, rather than another
increase in penalties.
Third, the Commission’s performance should be assessed in
context. The Commission has not declined a clearance since Trade Me/Limelight,
more than four years ago. But that does not mean that the Commission has not been
busy enforcing New Zealand’s merger laws in other ways. Anyone viewing New
Zealand as a soft touch could be in for a surprise.
And from 5 May, it is potentially a much larger one.
Ben Hamlin, Barrister.
Disclosure: Ben Hamlin was Deputy General Counsel,
Competition, later Chief Legal Adviser, Competition, at the Commerce Commission
between February 2017 and March 2022. His views are his own.
[i]
Commerce Amendment Bill, Third Reading, 17 March 2022.
[ii]
See section 76 of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth).
[iii] The RBNZ Inflation Calculator indicates that
a basket of goods worth $5 in Q2 1990, when the Commerce Amendment Act 1990 was
passed, would be worth $9.60 in Q4 2021, the most recent available data.
[iv]
See for example, A Labour Inspector v Southern Taxis Ltd [2021] NZCA 705
at [51].
[v]
Cabinet Paper “Review of Section 36 of
the Commerce Act and Other Matters: Policy Decisions” (18 February 2020) at
[56], available online here.
[vii]
Commerce Commission “Commission releases 2018/19 priorities” (press release, 9
August 2018) available online here.
[viii]
Dr Mark Berry, “Opening remarks” (Competition Matters 2017, Wellington, 21 July
2017).
[ix]
For example, the recent Cargotec/Konecranes and Aon/Willis Towers Watson
mergers were both cancelled because of competition concerns.
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