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8 OCTOBER 2018 COMPETITION IN THIS ISSUE THE COMPETITION LAW RISKS OF EARLY In South Africa, merger implementation is prohibited until such time as competition approval is received. Between signing of the transaction agreements and completion of the deal, a stand still obligation is imposed on both merger parties to remain independent. Purchasers however, keen to capitalise on transaction-related gains, often begin integration planning as early as possible after signing. Although there is no competition law bar against early integration planning, any steps taken must fall short of de facto merger implementation. 1 COMPETITION ALERT 8 October 2018

Although there is no competition law bar against early integration planning, any steps taken must fall short of de facto merger implementation. In South Africa, merger implementation is prohibited until such time as competition approval is received. Between signing of the transaction agreements and completion of the deal, a stand still obligation is imposed on both merger parties to remain independent. Purchasers however, keen to capitalise on transaction-related gains, often begin integration planning as early as possible after signing. Although there is no competition law bar against early integration planning, any steps taken must fall short of de facto merger implementation. The Competition Commission argued that the Bonheur representatives attending the KLF meetings conducted themselves in a manner that amounted to an exercise of control. This begs the question as to what behaviour would constitute de facto implementation of a merger. A merger is defined as an acquisition of control over the whole or part of the business of another firm. It follows therefore, that prior implementation should relate to acts which establish the purchaser as a controller over the target firm prior to receiving competition approval. De facto acts of control include, for example, the purchaser exercising voting rights at board meetings and/or influencing the strategic business direction of the target firm (in relation to and for example, pricing policies, new product launches and marketing plans). However, experiences in South Africa suggest that acts which fall short of taking effective control, can also be labelled as de facto prior implementation. In 2008 in the merger involving Bonheur 50 General Trading (Pty) Ltd (Bonheur) and Komaitland Forests (Pty) Ltd (KLF), a share sale agreement between the parties recorded that, during the interim period, Bonheur representatives could attend KLF management committee meetings in an observer status, and whilst the representatives were permitted to speak at meetings, they were prohibited from voting, and exercising any control or influence over the management of KLF. Bonheur had legitimate reasoning for its presence at KLF management committee meetings, including among others, the need to retain the commitment of the transaction funders. The Competition Commission (Commission) argued that the Bonheur representatives attending the KLF meetings conducted themselves in a manner that amounted to an exercise of control. Although Bonheur denied that there was any exercise of control, the merger parties settled the matter with the Commission and paid an administrative penalty of R500,000. Again in 2008, the issue of prior implementation arose in a matter involving Netcare Hospital Group (Netcare) and Community Hospital Group. In order to CHAMBERS GLOBAL 2011 2018 ranked us in Band 2 for competition/antitrust. Chris Charter ranked by CHAMBERS GLOBAL 2018 in Band 1 for competition/antitrust. Andries le Grange ranked by CHAMBERS GLOBAL 2014 2018 in Band 4 for competition/antitrust. 2 COMPETITION ALERT 8 October 2018

CONTINUED The merger parties conceded that certain of the above conduct may arguably comprise acts of prior implementation and agreed to pay an administrative penalty of R1 million. rescue the business of the target firm, Netcare commenced involvement in the target firm by providing funding and financial assistance, implementing IT systems, and involving itself in pricing aspects. It was in terms of the aforesaid involvement only, that Netcare was found to have acquired de facto control of the target firm, prior to competition approval. The parties settled the matter with the Commission and paid an administrative penalty of R500,000. In August 2018 a subsidiary firm of the South African Textile and Clothing Workers Union (TCIA) notified the Commission of its acquisition of control over the clothing and manufacturing division of Seardel Group Trading Proprietary Limited (Seardel). Whilst the Commission was investigating the merger and during the Commission s site visit to the premises of Seardel, it became apparent to the Commission that TCIA was involved in, and may have directed, the operations and affairs of Seardel. At the time, Seardel was experiencing a significant loss of orders and customers, which may have resulted in Seardel s closure and the retrenchment of its staff. The Commission concluded that the following factors supported its findings of prior implementation: (i) TCIA had access to strategic information and interacted and negotiated with Seardel suppliers and/ or customers; (ii) TCIA negotiated certain customer arrangements in order to ensure that the business would be able to continue operating going forward; (iii) TCIA was involved in the employment contracts of Seardel staff; (iv) the CEO of TCIA attended meetings relating to Seardel; (v) the business name of Seardel was changed and TCIA was involved in communicating the name-change to customers; and (vi) TCIA and Seardel undertook joint marketing and signage. The merger parties conceded that certain of the above conduct may arguably comprise acts of prior implementation and agreed to pay an administrative penalty of R1 million. Click here to read GCR s South African chapter on Antimonopoly & Unilateral Conduct, authored by Competition s Lara Granville & Albert Aukema and, Naasha Loopoo. 3 COMPETITION ALERT 8 October 2018

CONTINUED Given the greyness of this area of the law, merger parties are encouraged to seek competition law advice when planning their integration steps. In draft guidelines published in 2017, the Commission sets out examples of acts that it considers to be de facto implementation of a merger. These acts include for example, an exercise of voting rights, the appointment of even one director to the board of a target firm, influence over strategic business decisions (identifying target markets, developing new products or services, taking charge of placing orders, amending procurement policies, and involvement in customer relations), co-ordinating competitive behaviour, the earlier receipt of profits or other payments in connection with the performance of the target firm, implementing name changes, and marketing the merging firms as a single entity. It is debateable whether the isolated implementation of certain of the aforementioned acts in fact amount to an acquisition of control. But what is clear, is that the Commission adopts a strongly conservative approach to what behaviour may amount to prior implementation. The Commission cautions that the above instances of prior implementation are not an exhaustive list and are intended to be mere guidelines only. Every case will be determined on its own set of facts. In fairness to the Commission, it is hugely difficult to calibrate appropriate legal standards of acts of prior implementation, which are neither underinclusive nor overinclusive. Whilst competition authorities (one would hope) are mindful that many forms of pre-merger integration planning are reasonable, necessary and legitimate, too conservative an interpretation of permissible and impermissible conduct may unduly jeopardise the ability of the merger parties to protect their prospective investment and achieve efficiencies. Given the greyness of this area of the law, merger parties are encouraged to seek competition law advice when planning their integration steps, lest out of fear for the unclear law, they suspend all activity jeopardising transaction-related gains, or out of a robustness in approach, they implement a collection of steps or even one such step, which is then labelled an act of prior implementation. Susan Meyer and Nazeera Mia CDH s latest edition of Doing Business in South Africa CLICK HERE to download our 2018 thought leadership 4 COMPETITION ALERT 8 October 2018

OUR TEAM For more information about our Competition practice and services, please contact: Chris Charter National Practice Head T +27 (0)11 562 1053 E chris.charter@cdhlegal.com Albert Aukema T +27 (0)11 562 1205 E albert.aukema@cdhlegal.com Lara Granville T +27 (0)11 562 1720 E lara.granville@cdhlegal.com Naasha Loopoo T +27 (0)11 562 1010 E naasha.loopoo@cdhlegal.com Nazeera Mia T +27 (0)21 481 6337 E nazeera.mia@cdhlegal.com Andries Le Grange T +27 (0)11 562 1092 E andries.legrange@cdhlegal.com Kitso Tlhabanelo T +27 (0)11 562 1544 E kitso.tlhabanelo@cdhlegal.com Susan Meyer T +27 (0)21 481 6469 E susan.meyer@cdhlegal.com Duduetsang Mogapi Associate T +27 (0)11 562 1068 E duduetsang.mogapi@cdhlegal.com Veronica Cadman Executive Consultant Competition T +27 (0)11 562 1131 E veronica.cadman@cdhlegal.com Craig Thomas Associate T +27 (0)11 562 1055 E craig.thomas@cdhlegal.com BBBEE STATUS: LEVEL TWO CONTRIBUTOR This information is published for general information purposes and is not intended to constitute legal advice. Specialist legal advice should always be sought in relation to any particular situation. Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr will accept no responsibility for any actions taken or not taken on the basis of this publication. JOHANNESBURG 1 Protea Place, Sandton, Johannesburg, 2196. Private Bag X40, Benmore, 2010, South Africa. Dx 154 Randburg and Dx 42 Johannesburg. T +27 (0)11 562 1000 F +27 (0)11 562 1111 E jhb@cdhlegal.com CAPE TOWN 11 Buitengracht Street, Cape Town, 8001. PO Box 695, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa. Dx 5 Cape Town. T +27 (0)21 481 6300 F +27 (0)21 481 6388 E ctn@cdhlegal.com 2018 7273/OCT COMPETITION cliffedekkerhofmeyr.com