24/05/22

Ten key takeaways of the draft revision for the EU merger control procedure

Following its evaluation of procedural and jurisdictional aspects of EU merger control, on 6 May 2022 the European Commission published drafts for a revised Merger Implementing Regulation (including Form CO and Short Form CO drafts) and a revised Notice on Simplified Procedure. The Commission also launched a public consultation to gather stakeholder feedback on the drafts, particularly on whether they are fit for purpose (i.e. to streamline and simplify merger control proceedings for those cases not raising competition concerns).

These are the ten key aspects of the draft reform package:

1. More cases will be open for simplified procedure as a default

The draft Notice on Simplified Procedure amends the category of transactions for which the Commission will "typically" apply the simplified procedure by two alternative types of vertical transactions:

2. New flexibility clause to cover additional unproblematic transactions

A new flexibility clause will enable the Commission to apply the simplified procedure (at the request of the parties) in the following cases:

3. List of safeguards and exclusions broadened

The draft Notice on Simplified Procedure provides for more details regarding the circumstances in which the Commission may refuse to apply the simplified procedure. In particular, the draft foresees that only one of the exclusion circumstances is enough for the Commission normally not to apply the flexibility clause. Compared to the current version of the Notice on Simplified Procedure, the draft Notice also introduces two new exclusion categories:

4. Introduction of a "super-simplified procedure"

For transactions without any horizontal overlap between the parties' activities or any vertical relationship, or for cases which concern the acquisition of joint control over a joint venture that has no activity and no assets in the EEA at all, the draft Notice on Simplified Procedure foresees that the companies are invited to formally notify without any pre-notification contact (the parties, however, are expected to submit a case team allocation request at least one week before the formal notification).

5. "Hybrid" decisions

If in a transaction, which has to be filed under the normal Form CO procedure, some markets fulfil the requirements for a simplified procedure (be it under the default system or the flexibility clause system), the Commission will not include a detailed assessment of these markets in its decision, but simply mention the category which justifies simplified treatment, unless safeguards or exclusion reasons indicate otherwise.

6. Full electronic filing as the new standard

Under the current system, notifications generally must be submitted as paper documents, including copies (these requirements are to some extent suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but the Commission will require a signed paper document at some point in the process for its file). The new system would in principle only allow electronic notifications, including all annexes. Importantly, the procedure will require documents signed by way of Qualified Electronic Signature according to the eIDAS Regulation.

7. Higher standards in the Form CO for companies regarding description of data

The draft Implementing Regulation – like the current one – would require parties to provide information in the Form CO regarding data, which they collect and store in the ordinary course of their business operations that could be useful for quantitative economic analysis. However, the draft Implementing Regulation goes beyond the current one in two respects: first, it enlarges the scope of information to be provided as it foresees information also regarding the "source of the data" (e.g. CRM software or data sets purchased from external providers) and the "usage of the data in the normal course of business" (e.g. as analysis tool for the business strategy). Second, unlike the current Implementing Regulation, the draft stipulates that the information regarding data must be supplied for the Form CO to be considered as complete.

8. "Tick the box" format for Short Form CO

The draft Implementing Regulation would introduce a completely new format for the Short Form CO with many sections in a "tick-the-box" format.

9. Pipeline products

The Commission has used the draft documents to underline formally the particular attention it pays to pipeline products for substantive assessment (pipeline products are vaguely defined as products or services that companies "intend to bring to the market in the short or medium term"). Both the draft Form CO and the Short Form CO contain several specific references to pipeline products. For instance, parties would be required to provide information – for each affected market – on pipeline products, including the pipeline products of their competitors (the type of information requested would include information on the stage of development as well as an estimate of the projected sales and market shares over the next three to five years).

10. Minority shareholding

The draft Form CO requires the parties to explain whether competitors hold significant non-controlling shareholding (i.e. above 10%) in any of the parties to the concentration. The parties must indicate the percentage and the rights attached to the shareholding. This confirms that in its merger review the Commission will continue to consider possible "common ownership" theories of harm (i.e. the possible effects of non-controlling minority stakes in competitors, particularly in oligopolistic markets).

If the parties' combined market share is below 30% on any upstream market and below 30% on any relevant purchasing market (i.e. it is not decisive for this type of vertical transaction whether the market share on the downstream market is above 30% or not).

If the parties' combined market share both on the upstream and downstream market is below 50% and the HHI delta is below 150 and the smaller party (in terms of market shares) is the same both on the upstream and the downstream market.

In case of a horizontal overlap, if the parties' combined market share is above 20% but remains below 25%.

In case of a vertical relationship, if the parties' combined market share both on the upstream and the downstream market is above 30% but remains below 35%.

In case of a vertical relationship, if the parties' combined market share on one market (either the upstream or the downstream market) is below 50% and below 10% on all other vertically related markets.

In case of the acquisition of joint control over a joint venture, if the joint venture's EEA-wide annual turnover is less than EUR 150 million and the total value of asset transfers to the joint venture in the EEA is less than EUR 150 million.

If one party to the concentration has significant non-controlling shareholdings in companies active in the markets where another party to the concentration is active.

If the parties to the concentration combine technological, financial or other resources, or competitively valuable assets, such as raw materials, intellectual property rights (including patents, know-how, designs and brands), a significant user base or commercially valuable data inventories, even if the parties do not operate in the same market.

The public consultation will be open until 3 June 2022 and can be found here: 2022 merger simplification (europa.eu). The final framework is expected to enter into force in 2023.

Dr. Björn Herbers M.B.L. - Partner, Brussels EU Law OfficeRechtsanwalt

Christoff Henrik Soltau LL.M. (King's College London) - Partner, HamburgRechtsanwalt

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