Publication
Tariff uncertainty and M&A deals
The current tariff environment presents merger and acquisition opportunities in some sectors and jurisdictions.
Global | Publication | April 4, 2016
Obtaining competition law clearance for mergers, acquisitions and joint ventures is now pervasive across the globe. Almost every jurisdiction now has a merger control notification regime and harsh consequences can flow if clearance is not obtained before a transaction closes.
From a regulatory perspective, significant financial penalties can be imposed for failure to file and completed transactions can even be wound back.
From a commercial perspective, filing requirements affect bid strength, including the necessity of including conditions precedent on the subject. It can also create deal risk should completion be delayed while a regulator (or regulators) deliberate or, indeed, where they block it.
Most merger control notification regimes around the world are mandatory. In other words, a merger filing must be made where certain thresholds are met or exceeded. Very few regimes (being really only the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Singapore) have a voluntary regime.
In this article we briefly remind our Australian readers about the voluntary regime that exists in Australia and then contrast that by explaining how the mandatory regimes in most of the rest of world generally operate. We also outline the risks and pitfalls presented by those mandatory regimes, especially when they capture transactions that have seemingly little connection to the jurisdiction.
The Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) (CCA) prohibits mergers or acquisitions that would have the effect, or likely effect, of substantially lessening competition in any market.
The CCA provides a non-exhaustive list of the factors to be taken into account when assessing whether or not a transaction would be likely to substantially lessen competition. The ACCC also publishes detailed merger guidelines that identify the approach it will take when analysing whether or not the acquisition will likely have such an impact (Merger Guidelines).
While parties are not obliged to notify the ACCC of a transaction, failure to do so may result in the ACCC conducting an independent investigation, which can be disruptive. If the ACCC ultimately has concerns, it can take legal action to obtain a court order to block or unwind the relevant transaction (or part of it).
Therefore, where a merger or acquisition could have competition law implications in Australia, the usual course is for parties to seek an informal merger clearance from the ACCC prior to completion. The ACCC’s Merger Guidelines set out the manner in which it will assess any informal notification of a proposed acquisition. The threshold for notification of a proposed acquisition is:
This threshold provides a good indication as to whether the parties should notify and seek informal clearance from the ACCC on the proposed acquisition. However, it is a guideline only. Sometimes parties choose to notify certain transactions due to the nature of the industry, others are less cautious and may not even notify when the threshold is exceeded.
Australia does have a mandatory notification regime for transactions involving foreign investment that exceed certain thresholds. Statistically, Australia’s record in approving foreign investments remains one of the best in developed nations with less than 0.1% of the applications received by the Foreign Investment Review Board rejected each year. Since 2001, only four significant business acquisition applications have been rejected by the Australian Government.
To learn more about the foreign investment filing regime, please see our publication, accessible here. It covers recent reforms to the regime which came into effect on 1 December 2015.
Although they vary, jurisdiction to jurisdiction, merger control rules typically require mandatory notification where the two following criteria are met:
In most cases, if the above thresholds are met, merger control filings are required irrespective of whether the transaction presents substantive competition impact.
Where the transaction does not present a substantive competition impact, the process is more one of formality than in-depth assessment. Nonetheless, even a low-impact transaction can take a significant amount of time to process in some jurisdictions.
In order to determine whether or not a relevant “merger” or “concentration” will be taken to occur, it is necessary to look to the “controlling” owners.
Rules vary from country to country on determining who the “controlling” owners will be. In jurisdictions such as the European Union (EU), its Member States and the People’s Republic of China (PRC), the notion of control is not limited to positive control rights (through majority shareholder or board representation) but also includes negative control rights (typically through veto rights over the annual budget or business plans, the appointment of key personnel or any other matter relating to the commercial and strategic conduct of the target). In other jurisdictions, the approach is broadly similar, although there are safe harbours depending on equity and voting rights thresholds.
Foreign merger control obligations can arise as soon as two parties to the transaction are materially active abroad, even if the actual transaction has no nexus with the country in question. The regulators that aggressively enforce its thresholds for foreign-to-foreign mergers are mainly the EU (and the individual EU Member States), the PRC, Korea, Pakistan, Taiwan and Turkey. As such, if an acquirer of “control” and the target each have the threshold amount of turnover/assets in the relevant jurisdiction, a filing obligation will likely arise, even if the transaction in question relates to subsidiaries offshore.
This can often be a perverse outcome and one that can catch acquirers by surprise, particularly in consortium-type transactions. However, it is a reality
In most jurisdictions, a transaction in not permitted to close (or be otherwise implemented) before merger control clearance is obtained. Significant financial penalties may be imposed for failure to comply with this restriction. Damage to reputation of merger parties may also flow, including jeopardising the company’s relationship with the regulator.
In some jurisdictions, a failure to notify a reportable transaction may lead to an order to unwind the transaction. Such risks are higher in case of transactions raising a substantive issue in the relevant jurisdiction.
As a result, and particularly where the transaction does not raise significant competition impacts, there is little downside to filing as the approval process can generally be managed within an adequate timeframe.
Merger control notifications and competition concerns identified may impact deal imperatives, bid strategy, structure and risk and change the approach to the drafting of the transaction documentation. Therefore clearances must be considered at the outset and the following three steps followed as closely as possible.
Step 1: Assess where mandatory notifications might be required.
Step 2: Consider competition impacts (especially for voluntary merger control regimes).
Step 3: Allocate risks of merger control.
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Publication
The current tariff environment presents merger and acquisition opportunities in some sectors and jurisdictions.
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