Pre-closing violations in United States v. Flakeboard & SierraPine provide a reminder of practical rules for handling pre-closing activities without hitting antitrust landmines.
On November 7, the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced a proposed settlement imposing fines of $4.95 million on Flakeboard America Limited, SierraPine Limited, and their affiliates (collectively, the parties). The fines were assessed in connection with Sherman Act and Hart-Scott-Rodino Act (HSR Act) violations relating to Flakeboard’s intended acquisition of three U.S. wood product plants from SierraPine.
The DOJ alleged that, prior to obtaining HSR Act approval for Flakeboard’s proposed acquisition of the SierraPine plants, the parties closed one of the plants that competed with Flakeboard, began to transfer all of the plant’s customers to Flakeboard, and exchanged competitively sensitive information about the plant’s customers, which Flakeboard distributed to its sales employees. The parties ultimately abandoned the transaction in light of the DOJ’s concerns about resulting anticompetitive effects. The DOJ complaint indicated that, but for the transaction, SierraPine would have continued to compete against Flakeboard from this plant. The DOJ was concerned that SierraPine would not reopen its plant after the transaction was abandoned, given the significant expense and time needed to do so.
Unlawful Conduct and Fines
The HSR Act prohibits a buyer from taking over any aspect of the operations of a target prior to the expiration of the HSR Act waiting period, a so-called “gun jumping” violation. The idling of plant capacity and exchange of competitively sensitive information between competitors’ sales forces, which could (or did) affect pricing or other competitive indicia prior to obtaining HSR Act approval, clearly falls within this prohibition. The DOJ imposed fines on the parties of $1.9 million each, representing a substantial discount to the available statutory fines.[1]
The Sherman Act prohibits agreements between rivals that may harm competition, i.e., agreements that would harm customers. An agreement to reduce output by idling plant capacity prior to closing, thus denying customers a competitive option (i.e., an independent price), falls within this prohibition. The DOJ alleged a per se violation (i.e., one that is inherently harmful) and sought civil fines of $1.15 million for disgorgement of any profits earned by Flakeboard.
In addition to the DOJ remedy, the parties have potentially exposed themselves to follow-on damages actions by injured indirect and direct purchasers.
Practical Lessons and Guidance
While the Flakeboard/SierraPine conduct, as alleged, certainly was egregious, it would be a mistake to allow this DOJ enforcement action to dampen necessary and lawful pre-closing conduct. Here are some practical, general guidelines on how best to approach pre-closing activities without risking violations for transactions involving direct competitors:
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Contacts
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[1]. Fines of $16,000 per day for each day of a violation may be imposed on each of the merging parties and, separately, on officers or directors involved in the preparation of the filing itself. Fines begin to accrue from the date of the violation, e.g., closing of the plant until HSR Act approval is obtained or the transaction is abandoned. Here, the DOJ considered the period of violation to begin on or about January 17, 2014 (the approximate date of a conversation between the parties regarding shutting down the plant) and to end on August 27, 2014 (when the HSR Act waiting period expired), for a total of 223 days. At $16,000 per day, the total available penalty was $3.568 million per party.