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Following the ACCC announcement earlier this year on their proposed reforms to Australia’s merger review regime, the Competition Taskforce of the Treasury has now released its Merger Reform Consultation Paper and commenced consultation regarding potential changes to Australia’s merger review rules and processes.
Interested parties are invited to comment on the proposed reform up until 19 January 2024.
Australia’s current merger review regime consists of a voluntary informal clearance process, which applies to the vast majority of transactions, as well as a much less common formal statutory merger authorisation approval process.
The Taskforce is seeking consultation on three possible options for reform of the current informal clearance process, based on key elements of global merger regimes.
The consultation paper notes that merger transactions that involve foreign investment (which are a significant proportion of mergers considered by the ACCC) are also subject to a mandatory notification and suspensory framework under Australian foreign investment approval processes and that any amended merger review process would need to work alongside the foreign investment regime, including a potential referral process.
Currently, the relevant test applied in determining whether a merger is anti-competitive (in breach of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth)) is whether the acquisition is likely to have the effect of substantially lessening competition.
In addition to the potential amendments to the merger review process, Treasury is also consulting on three reforms proposed by the ACCC to the ‘substantial lessening of competition’ test:
The broader Competition Review goal of seeking to ensure that Australia’s competition laws, policies and institutions remain fit‑for‑purpose for the modern economy is uncontentious.
More contentious is whether a more onerous approval process is needed when mergers are already subject to increasing level of regulation – and indeed several high profile mergers are being blocked already, which suggests the current regime has significant “teeth”. It is a question of striking the right balance, with many market participants concerned that increasingly complex, expensive and pervasive regulatory approval requirements are lengthening deal timeframes and increasing execution risk.
For many reasons, transactions have become slower, more challenging and more expensive to implement. Time kills deals, and the delay associated with working through those processes has significantly raised execution risk. Mandatory merger review processes and the resulting surge in reviews could be expected to exacerbate these challenges.
The vast majority of transactions do not raise competition concerns. There is debate as to whether changes from the existing regime would provide incremental benefit which justifies a more onerous review process. The Taskforce consultation paper acknowledges some of these challenges, including the difficulty of setting appropriate thresholds for compulsory notification, which can result in an excessive number of transactions subject to review and impose unnecessary cost on merger parties and relevant authorities.
The ACCC has expressed the view over time that the onus it bears in a Court process to establish a substantial lessening of competition is too onerous, citing mergers where the Court has not accepted the ACCC’s position. Others maintain that in fact there was no substantial lessening of competition in those cases, and that is why the Court accepted that position. They note that blocked mergers tend to be litigated only where there are strong arguments that there is no substantial lessening of competition, so it is not surprising that the ACCC has not been successful in that very small number of cases which reach the Courts.
Under the current system, there have been a number of transactions that the ACCC has declined to approve just this year, including the Qantas / Alliance Airways and Transurban / Eastlink transaction and the TPG Telecom / Telstra spectrum sharing and related arrangements. We encourage interested parties to make submissions with a view to ensuring that we continue to have a balanced regime, which appropriately supports the economic benefits of merger activity as well as competitive markets.
Interested parties are invited to comment on the proposed changes up until 19 January 2024. Details regarding how to respond can be accessed on the Treasury website here.
Regional Head of Practice – Competition, Regulation and Trade, Australia, Sydney
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
© Herbert Smith Freehills 2024
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