Over Rs 2,000 cr of M&As may come under CCI’s purview
An additional criterion in mergers and acquisitions (M&As) may require digital businesses to secure approval from the Competition Commission of India (CCI), the anti-trust regulator.
The government is set to introduce a minimum threshold “transaction value” of Rs 2,000 crore (around $250 million) for any deal as a criterion for notification to the anti-trust regulator if the entity being acquired has substantial operations in India.
The new criterion is learnt to be part of the proposed amendments to the two-decade-old Competition law, which is expected to be tabled in the ongoing monsoon session of Parliament.
At present, companies in the process of M&A must seek the CCI’s approval in relation to asset size and turnover, as defined in the Competition Act.
Deals at enterprise level require regulatory approval if the asset size is over Rs 2,000 crore or the turnover is above Rs 6,000 crore.
In the case of group level, it should be above Rs 8,000 crore (asset size) and Rs 24,000 crore (turnover), respectively.
The CCI at present provides exemption if the target entity had assets worth less than Rs 350 crore or a turnover less than Rs 1,000 crore in the financial year prior to merger or acquisition.
The transaction/deal value being proposed as a new criterion in addition to the existing ones will be applicable to deals in both the digital and non-digital space.
The amendments, if they are cleared, will cover deals in the digital space, which is usually exempt from notification to the CCI on account of low assets and turnover even if the deal size is large.
Several important deals in the digital space, like Facebook-WhatsApp ($22 billion), FB-Instagram ($1 billion), Microsoft-LinkedIn ($26.2 billion), have escaped CCI scrutiny due to current regulations.
“This is the most significant proposal because it will likely result in M&As in the digital economy to be notified to the CCI.
“M&As in the digital space often escaped scrutiny by the CCI as the value of assets and turnover of the target were below the de minimis exemption thresholds,” said Akshayy S Nanda, partner, competition and data protection, Saraf and Partners.
Nanda said the new rule would be applicable if a party to the transaction had substantial operations in India.
What substantial operations are will be determined through regulation by the antitrust regulator.
The government may widen the scope of anti-competitive agreements to include a party that facilitates an anti-competitive horizontal agreement (cartel agreement). Essentially any third-party entity that facilitates a cartel can be penalised under the competition laws.
This is primarily to punish hub-and-spoke cartels.
The competition law prohibits anti-competitive agreements of two types: Between competitors and between enterprises situated at different levels of production and distribution chain.
There was no provision in the law to punish hub-and-spoke cartels.
“On the enforcement front, there could be a settlement procedure in non-cartel cases like abuse of dominance and vertical restraint and introduction of a ‘leniency plus’ policy allowing an enterprise which files for leniency in one cartel and also helps in discovering a new/separate cartel to receive a reduction in penalty for both the existing and newly discovered cartels,” said Vaibhav Choukse, partner & head of competition law practice, JSA.
The government may propose reducing the overall timeline for approving merger deals to 150 days from 210 days now, while reducing the timeline for companies for notifying deals with CCI to 20 days from the current 30 days.
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