South Africa: Competition Tribunal permits competitor intervention in merger involving Media24 and Paarl Media

Following an intervention application which was heard by the Competition Tribunal (“Tribunal”) last week, the Tribunal has granted Caxton and CTP Publishers and Printers (“Caxton”) intervention status in the merger involving Media24 (Pty) Ltd (“Media24”), Paarl Media Group (Pty) Ltd, Paarl Media Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Paarl Coldset (Pty) Ltd (collectively referred to the “merger parties”).

The Tribunal has ordered that the intervention will include the control structure of Naspers Limited (”Naspers”), the interests (both direct and indirect) of the Naspers’ shareholders in printing and publishing and the competition effects of such interests in relation to the proposed merger.  In addition, the scope of Caxton’s intervention also includes whether the proposed merger will enhance coordination in the media industry and the effect of the proposed merger on the public interest.  Caxton is also entitled to submit proposed conditions, if any, to the Tribunal.

In addition, the Tribunal, in terms of a directive, ordered the merger parties to disclose all interests of Naspers Beleggings Limited, Keeromstraat 30 Beleggings Limited, Wheatfields 221 (Pty) Ltd, Sholto Investments BVI, De Goedgedacht.

The matter is of significant importance in ensuring South African merger control remains sacrosanct.  Merger control in South Africa  is, as in other jurisdictions,  an important mechanism to assess the impact of transactions on competition, however, it can only be effective if adequate and accurate information is provided by the merging parties to the SACC.  The content of a merger filing is usually vetted by the merging parties’ respective competition lawyers.

Disclosure of all shareholders’ interests (both direct and indirect) is of particular importance in respect of the control structures involved in the proposed transaction, in order to ensure that the Commission is able to conduct a proper assessment of the proposed transaction, taking into account the competitive landscape and the dynamic concomitant impact of the proposed transaction, by properly taking into account the relevant shareholders.  It is important that the merging parties are transparent in all of their dealings with the competition authorities and that the Commission is apprised of all the information during the merger investigation in order to conduct a proper investigation to avoid having the Tribunal send the merger back for further investigation and analysis to the Commission, as was ordered by the Tribunal in the Aspen/ Pfizer matter and more recently, in this decision of the Tribunal.

In addition, the merging parties are obliged to sign the respective Statements of Information (also referred to as the Form CC4(1) and Form CC4(2)) in respect of every merger which is filed with the Commission.  The Form CC4(2) explicitly states that the person authorised to submit the information confirms the accuracy, truthfulness and completeness of the information submitted to the Commission and that such person understands that it is an offence in terms of the Competition Act to provide any manner of false information.

The Tribunal’s directive clearly casts doubt as to whether the content of the original merger filing met the above criteria .

The matter does, however, demonstrate the importance of valid intervention by competitors, despite the intervention regime becoming somewhat tainted due to interventions by government and unions on the basis of alleged “public interest”  concerns.

 

 

Tribunal overrides Commission’s lean toward merger veto

south_africa

Tribunal decides against Commission’s recommendation of prohibition of resin merger

The Competition Commission (“Commission”) recommended to the Competition Tribunal (“Tribunal”) to prohibit the proposed acquisition of resin manufacturer Arkema Resins SA (Pty) Ltd (“Arkema”) by specialised coatings company Ferro Industrial Products (Pty) Ltd (“Ferro”).

The acquiring firm, Ferro, operates in the industrial chemicals sector and its activities comprise powder coatings, plastics, enamels and ceramics, glass colours, spectrum ceramics and resin.

Arkema, the target firm, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Arkema Afrique SAS, which in turn is wholly-owned by Paris-listed company Arkema. Arkema is also involved in the manufacture of unsaturated polyester resin which is used in the manufacture of swimming pools, truck bodies, baths, etc.

The merging parties argued that the Commission’s recommendation to the Tribunal was fundamentally flawed as it failed to take into account certain key considerations, such as the constraint of imports on domestic suppliers, the fact that post-transaction, there were two alternative domestic suppliers to the merging parties and that the merging parties argued that Arkema was not in fact a competitive constraint to Ferro in certain key market segments.

Following a two-week long hearing, the Tribunal approved the merger subject to conditions which involve a pricing formula to customers in the mining segment, a toll-manufacturing agreement and a two-year moratorium on retrenchments.

Nortons Inc. acted for Ferro in this matter.

Competition Tribunal members re-appointed by President

south_africa 

President Zuma re-appoints three Tribunal members

The President of the Republic of South Africa has made his decision to re-appoint Competition Tribunal Chairperson Norman Manoim for a second term now that his term has come to an end. Along with Mr Manoim, the President has also re-appointed full-time panel members Yasmin Carrim and Andreas Wessels for a further five years at the Tribunal.

For the past decade, the Tribunal has comprised three full-time panel members and up to eight part-time panel members can be appointed. For the first time, a fourth full-time panel member has been appointed, namely Ms Mondo Mazwai.

Two panel members who were not re-appointed are part-time panel members Professor Merle Holden and Dr Takalani Madima. The President has not announced whether two additional part-time panel members will be appointed to the Tribunal panel.

 

Minister’s grip over antitrust authorities further strengthened

South Africa takes on more price regulation in planned amendment to Competition Act

BDLive’s Carol Paton reports that Economic Development Minister Ebrahim Patel – with whose involvement in competition policy AAT readers are well aware from reading our site – has further strengthened his grip on the country’s competition authorities.  He is said to be drafting amendments to the Competition Act in relation to dominant firms’ “excessive pricing” practices.  The amendments are to be introduced to Parliament in 2015.
The article quotes Mr. Patel’s Sunday interview, in which he said:

“The past five years indicated that we are serious about dealing with cartels. But the challenge that we have had is that the economy still has many formal monopolies or upstream producers who are able to impose high prices on downstream manufacturers. We have got to move with greater urgency to tackle the structural challenges.  Giving a dominant player the right to set its own price results is an unfairness. In the Sasol example, part of the remedy is for the firm to work with the competition authorities to develop a soft version of price regulation.”

Price regulation is an absolute taboo in U.S. antitrust law, and even under more interventionist and public-policy influenced EU standards, explicit price regulation is not practiced in the bloc’s 28 member states.
Sasol, the giant South African oil company, is said to be aware of the government’s plans, saying: “setting prices, in particular of traded goods, invariably leads to unsatisfactory outcomes.  South Africa’s joining the World Trade Organisation in 1995 took us forward to opening the economy to compete internationally, with prices being brought in line with international prices. Regulating prices to below gate price, is unlikely to lead to building long-term competitive industries.”

Patel not mincing words, diluting competition-law factors in mergers

south_africa

Economic Development Minister of South Africa, Ebrahim Patel, recently stated that the Competition Commission (“Commission”), South Africa’s key competition authority, will be asked to focus on jobs, industrialisation and small business development in lieu of ‘pure’ antitrust-law issues.

Patel stated that government would require the Industrial Development Corporation to focus on supporting black industrialists, and on the competition authorities to promote economic transformation “not as a by-product of but an explicit objective of competition policy.” According to Patel, competition bodies are in a position to contribute directly to the state’s objective of creating a more equal economy, where workers shared in the benefits of growth. His department is allegedly already in talks with the construction industry on a restitution package to redress collusion and price fixing. The end result, he stated, would be that larger companies will provide funds to support small producers and local suppliers.

Patel’s controversial views have already influenced Commission merger decisions and can clearly be seen in the recent Afgri/AgriGoupe case, where the authority entered into an agreement with the foreign buyer of the local grain and poultry company Afgri, requiring the new owners to contribute R90 million ($9m) to a fund to support small-hold farmers with training and loans.

Based on Mr. Patel’s latest pronouncements, South Africa is on a path to politicizing antitrust law and making pure competition considerations a secondary objective to public-interest considerations.

Competition agencies to split up, abandon dual roles

Dual role of Commission prompts constitutionality questions

As Portia Nkani reports in the Botswana Gazette, the country’s two competition-law authorities are slated to be separated in the near future.  Botswana – a COMESA member state – has both a Competition Commission and Competition Authority.  Concerns over the dual roles of the Competition Commission (it is, since January 2011, both the strategy-setting administrative entity supervising the Authority and a quasi-judicial agency) have reportedly led to the structural change in organization.

The Chairman of the Competition Commission, Dr Zein Kebonang purportedly has voiced support for the decision to separate the two functions and agencies, saying “that regular contact between Commission and CA officials could give raise to reasonable appreciation of bias. ‘The independence and impartiality of Commissioners cannot be guaranteed when it doubles up as a board and as a tribunal. Besides relational bias, the likelihood of informational bias is also far too great. Sitting as a Board, the Commission acquires prior knowledge of disputes that are to be adjudicated before it as a tribunal. Undoubtedly, prior knowledge of a dispute may operate in the minds of the Commissioners and thus deprive the parties that appear before them a proper hearing,'” he has written in a position paper.

Procedural fairness demands that investigative and adjudicative functions must be kept separate. This is desirable because competition law and policy must be implemented in an objective, impartial and transparent manner. Unless the Competition Commission and the Competition Authority are afforded independence from each other, they are unlikely to objectively decide matters presented before them and the risk of bias will forever be present,’” he said, adding that public confidence and trust can only be enhanced if the adjudicative and administrative function were separated.

The initial call for the split of the authorities was made by lawyers for panel-beating companies under investigation last year (see article here):

Sadique Kebonang, counsel for one of the parties, had argued that the relationship between the agencies was “too intimate”: “The main test here is what the ordinary man out there perceives the two entities to be.”

Dawn raids, early in the morning

south_africa

Auto-body repair centres raided by SACC

Earlier this morning, the South African Competition Commission (“Commission”) has conducted dawn raids at the offices of Precision and Sons (“Precision”), Eldan Auto Body (“Eldan”) in Pretoria West, as well as the Vehicle Accident Assessment Centre (“VAAC”) in Centurion.

Precision and Eldan’s business activities include panel beating, spray painting and towing of vehicles. Precision is an approved auto body repairer to Original Equipment Manufacturers (“OEMs”) such as Cadillac, Dodge, Chrysler, Fiat, Kia, Chevrolet, Toyota and Honda, while Eldan is an approved auto body repairer to OEMs such as Jeep, Fiat, Mitsubishi, Toyota, Honda and Nissan.

The VAAC is an assessment centre which renders vehicle assessment services to customers of both Precision and Eldan.

The Commission has indicated that the dawn raid operation forms part of its ongoing investigation into collusive conduct in the market for auto body repairs. The Commission has also indicated that it has reasonable grounds to believe that information relevant to this investigation is located on the premises of the two companies.

Sections 46 to 49A of the South African Competition Act of 1998 (“Competition Act”) empowers the Commission to conduct surprise search and seizure visits and to carry out so-called “dawn raids” to a firm’s business premises in order to inspect documents and interview staff where an infringement of competition law is suspected.

The Commission is empowered to enter any such premises when a judge or a magistrate has issued a warrant. Although a warrant is usually an essential requirement to ensure that a dawn raid is conducted in accordance with the law, the Competition Commission does have the power to enter and search a premises without a warrant, in exceptional circumstances. The Commission has confirmed that it has duly obtained the warrants which authorise it to search the offices of Precision, Eldan and VAAC from the North Gauteng High Court.

If the Commission has reason to believe that a firm is in contravention of provisions of the Competition Act, or is in possession of information relating to a matter that is under investigation, the Commission’s investigators have the authority to enter into the firm’s premises in order to inspect and request copies of documents, ask for information in relation to any documents, take notes and interrogate employees, search and examine computer data and remove evidence from the premises. In particular, officials may examine files, reports and emails. The Competition Commission is entitled to confiscate computer hard drives. They may also take copies of documents.

Following a four-year dawn raid “drought”, the immediately-previous dawn raid initiated by the Commission had been conducted in April 2014 at the offices of Unilever South Africa (Pty Ltd) and Sime Darby’s respective South African offices, in relation to the Commission’s investigation into alleged collusive conduct in the product markets for the manufacture and supply of edible oils and baking fats to both wholesale and retail customers.

Has national antitrust enforcer abdicated to COMESA?

swaziland

Swaziland Competition Commission all but shuttering its doors

Since the creation of its competition-law authority in 2007, COMESA member state Swaziland has seen only 2 (two) enforcement matters, according to a report by the Observer.  Even by COMESA’s statistical standards, 2 matters in 7 years amounts to a record low.

Over in the virtual world, the SCC’s web site reflects the agency’s real-life inactivity: The last update appears to have been made in March 2012, a full two years ago; many, if not most, hyperlinks to “news” are broken or lead the viewer to blank pages; PDF document downloads often fail for no obvious reason.

As to the two discernible cases undertaken by the agency, the Observer article quotes Swaziland Competition Commission (SCC) Advocacy and Communications Officer Mancoba Mabuza as follows:

[T]he first enforcement matter the commission dealt with was The Gables (Pty) Ltd versus Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd where the secretariat conducted an investigation into allegations made by The Gables against Pick n Pay.

[T]he second enforcement case involved Eagles Nest (Pty) Ltd and Usuthu Poultry (Pty) Ltd which was investigated by the secretariat and at the conclusion of the investigation; the report was shared with the parties to the matter as the finding was adverse to the parties.

“The matter was then taken to court where the commission successfully defended the case in the court of first instance and the parties then appealed the matter. In a judgement delivered on May 30, the parties’ appeal was dismissed and that the commission will be adjudicating on this matter soon,” he said.

 

Costly COMESA courthouse, ZA investigates Visa provider & holds ground on Sasol fine

south_africa

Lots AAT news this Monday, from Sudan/COMESA to South Africa

Visa facilitator backed by one branch of government & investigated by another

In substantive antitrust news, the South African Competition Commission is reported to be investigating alleged abuses of market dominance by VFS Global in the visa support services market to foreign embassies.

VFS is a worldwide outsourcing and technology services specialist for diplomatic missions and governments.

The firm has now drawn the potential ire of the Commission, as it is now apparently the only outlet for foreigners to apply for South African visas and work permits, as well as for South African citizens to obtain entry visas for multiple countries abroad.

The irony here that we at AAT perceive is that the monopoly position of VFS appears to be based on the new immigration regulations imposed by the ZA government itself (notably the Department of Home Affairs) earlier in 2014: According to a report, the company had recently opened the doors of its multiple offices across the country — “The Pretoria (Gauteng), Rustenburg (North West) and Kimberley (Northern Cape) centres were the first to open on Monday, 2 June. It is envisaged that the last office will be opened on 23 June.”

The investigation – to be confirmed by the Commission this week, as it potentially launches a full-on formal inquest – was purportedly initiated by a competitor complaint from company Visa Request, claiming damage to its competing business flowing from the governmentally-imposed dominant position of VFS’s (allegedly pricier) services…

Commission stays course on Sasol

In more ZA news, Competition Commissioner Tembinkosi Bonakele is staying the agency’s strong course on the excessive-pricing fine imposed on Sasol, which is said to be appealing its R543 fine that had been upheld by the country’s Competition Tribunal, and which Commissioner Bonakele thinks “should be bigger”…

In our prior AAT reporting on the Sasol abuse-of-dominance case we said:

The S.A. Competition Tribunal is hearing the excessive-pricing portion (which was not settled) of the Commission‘s claims against the refining & steel giant this month.  The relevant legal underpinning of the case is the provision against excessive pricing by a dominant firm.  Precedent has declared prices excessive that “bear no reasonable relation to the economic value of the good or service” at issue.  Pheeew.  Facts.  Economics.  Nice.  Looks like a coming battle of the experts to me…

By comparison, in the U.S., antitrust law of course does not forbid “excessive pricing.”  While setting and reaping apparently high prices may be indicative of monopoly power, such acts are not in themselves anti-competitive or illegal in the States.  In Verizon v. Trinko, the U.S. Supreme Court held famously that:

The mere possession of monopoly power, and the concomitant charging of monopoly prices, is not only not unlawful; it is an important element of the free-market system. The opportunity to charge monopoly prices—at least for a short period—is what attracts “business acumen” in the first place; it induces risk taking that produces innovation and economic growth.

Interestingly, there is a notable history of failures in the area of ‘excessive pricing’ complaints in South Africa, as well, despite the statutory legitimisation of the cause of action.  In the prior ArcelorMittal and Telkom cases, the Commission and/or Tribunal lost in the end, either at trial or on appeal to the Competition Appeal Court.  That Court had found, in the ArcelorMittal case, that the antitrust watchdogs could not use the ‘excessive pricing’ provision of the statute to combat perceived anti-competitiveness in the “market structure rather than price level.”

Today, Bonakele is quoted as follows:

“These are different times.  I can promise you this matter is not going to disappear. Sasol is out of touch if it believes it can win the matter on the basis of technical legal arguments. This issue has to be resolved either through competition law or through government policy.

The issue in this case is fundamental to the development of our economy. We are dealing with resources that should be available to promote that development. The government plays an important role in the country’s industrialisation, and I believe it will be very interested in the progress of this case.”

COMESA’s costly courthouse

While the COMESA organisation has had trouble in the virtual world this year, its real-world endavours appear to be prospering: Its shiny new courthouse, built to the tune of over $4 million (equivalent to only 8 merger filing fees), has opened its doors.  The country’s Minister of Justice, Mohamed Bushara Dosa, last week handed over to the COMESA Secretariat-general the Khartoum-based court premises.

The court will notably hear antitrust and merger cases that are appealed from the organisation’s Competition Commission.

 

https://i0.wp.com/news.sudanvisiondaily.com/media/images/29d17065-0634-951e.jpg
The glimmering COMESA court house in Sudan, built to the tune of $4.1 million

Beer cartels: First fine sought in Mauritius leniency matter

mauritius

madagascar

Precedential leniency case yields initial fine

The Competition Commission of Mauritius (“the Commission”) has recommended fines of approximately €487,000 and €158,000 be imposed on Phoenix Beverages Ltd (PLB) and Stag Beverages, respectively, for their involvement in a cartel.

This is the country’s first cartel investigation to be made public, and the first time a party has used its leniency programme.

Phoenix and Stag have been accused by the Commission of colluding to divide the Mauritian and Madagascan beer markets between the two manufactures. The alleged agreement between the parties involved Stag leaving the Mauritian market, allowing Phoenix to dominate the country’s beer market.

Phoenix applied for leniency prior to the 24 May 2014 deadline and consequently received reduced fine.  Both companies assisted the Commission with its investigation.

The Executive Director of the CCM, Mrs. Kiran Meetarbhan, said:

“Many jurisdictions have developed programs that offer leniency because of the many benefits that flow from having them. In line with international best practices, the CCM has not lagged behind in developing a leniency program that has been reinforced so as to grant full amnesty to the first reporting firm in addition to offering judicial security to informants.

This investigation triggered our first leniency application since the CCM’s inception. This is also the first cartel investigation which I have launched in my capacity as Executive Director for which I have recommended financial penalties in addition to other measures to address competition concerns.

I wish to commend the main parties’ approach in this investigation which has revealed a true spirit of cooperation.  Leniency programs create powerful incentives to enterprises to race to self-report at an early stage. Evidence can thus be obtained more quickly, and at a lower direct cost, compared to other methods of investigation, leading to prompt and efficient resolution of cases. This case provides a perfect example of the manner in which a leniency application coupled with the active cooperation of the main parties have led to the successful completion of the investigation within a remarkable three months’ timeline.

The fine[] recommended on Phoenix Beverages Ltd takes into account its leniency application, absent which, the fines would have been higher. Phoenix Beverages Ltd took advantage of the amnesty provisions, which lapsed on 24th May 2014. We cannot stress enough the importance of the leniency programme with regards to collusive agreements.

Several factors help to free an economy from the malicious effects of a collusive agreement including a strong political support towards fighting cartels and a resilient commitment to equip the competition agency with the appropriate legislative framework and adequate financial resources. The Government has signified its intention to further empower the Competition Commission in order to better fight cartels. This was announced by the Prime Minister in his address to the Nation this year.”