Afgri Operations Ltd v Pride Milling Company (Pty) Ltd (51/LM/Jul11) [2012] ZACT 16; [2012] 1 CPLR 152 (CT) (16 January 2012)

78 Reportability
Competition Law

Brief Summary

Competition Law — Merger Control — Approval of merger subject to divestiture conditions — Mystic Blue Trading 62 (Pty) Ltd proposed acquisition of the Rhino Group — Competition Tribunal approving merger with conditions requiring divestiture of certain retail and wholesale businesses to remedy anti-competitive effects — High market shares in relevant geographic areas identified as likely to substantially lessen competition — Conditions deemed adequate to restore competition in affected markets.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were merger control proceedings before the Competition Tribunal of South Africa concerning the approval of a proposed acquisition, ultimately granted subject to conditions.


The acquiring side was Mystic Blue Trading 62 (Pty) Ltd (referred to as “Newco”), a wholly owned subsidiary within the Masscash/Massmart corporate group (ultimately linked to Wal-mart Inc). The target side was the Rhino Group, comprising 16 Rhino stores located predominantly in KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape (collectively referred to as the Rhino Group stores).


The matter came before the Tribunal after an investigation by the Competition Commission. The Tribunal heard the matter on 14 December 2011, issued an order approving the merger on 20 December 2011, and subsequently issued reasons on 29 February 2012. The order approved the acquisition with divestiture conditions that had been agreed to by the merging parties and the Commission. The Tribunal’s reasons indicate that, given this agreement, the remaining task was to determine whether the agreed conditions were sufficient to remedy the merger’s anti-competitive effects.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned whether the transaction, as notified, was likely to result in a substantial lessening or prevention of competition in certain local grocery and liquor markets, and whether divestiture conditions would adequately address those concerns.


2. Material Facts


Newco was described as a newly formed entity and, in itself, did not provide services. The acquiring corporate structure was set out to show that Newco was part of the Masscash/Massmart grouping, with Massmart being a subsidiary of Wal-mart Inc. The Tribunal recorded the internal divisions of the broader group and noted that, for purposes of the competitive assessment, the relevant activities related to Masscash’s involvement in the wholesale and retail/hybrid supply of grocery and liquor, with a focus on customers in lower income categories.


The target business consisted of 16 Rhino stores, largely in KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape. Rhino’s stores were active in the sale of grocery and liquor products, and Rhino was described as a family controlled company. The Tribunal recorded that Rhino’s stores were exclusively engaged in the retail of grocery, save for one store that traded as a wholesale store, namely Matat Wholesalers.


The transaction structure was that Masscash, through Newco, would acquire the entire issued share capital of each of the firms comprising the Rhino Group stores, resulting in Masscash obtaining sole control over the Rhino business.


The Tribunal recorded the commercial rationale advanced by the parties. Masscash stated that the acquisition supported its strategy of expanding its grocery retail presence in urban and peri-urban areas. Rhino’s shareholders viewed the transaction as an opportunity to realise a return on investment, linked to the absence of a family succession plan.


On the Commission’s market investigation, the Tribunal recorded product and geographic distinctions relevant to competition. The Commission distinguished between the wholesaling and retailing of grocery products, and noted the existence of hybrid wholesale stores with retail components that compete with retail stores. In liquor, while licensing differentiates wholesale and retail, the Commission found that market participants often did not adhere strictly to that distinction; however, for purposes of this transaction, the Commission took into account only retailing of liquor, given how it assessed overlaps in the parties’ activities and licensing positions.


The Commission further considered the Living Standard Measure (LSM) segmentation and found that both Masscash and Rhino targeted lower income consumers in LSM 2–6.


The Commission identified geographic overlaps in retail grocery and liquor in Nongoma, Ulundi, Mtubatuba, Mthatha, Lusikisiki, and Matatiele, and defined the relevant retail geographic market as a 1.5 km radius around the main taxi ranks in the overlapping towns, based on the shopping patterns of consumers who use public transport and the clustering of retailers. For grocery wholesaling, the overlap was only in Matatiele, and the Commission defined the relevant geographic market as Matatiele and a surrounding 120 km radius, reflecting delivery distances.


On market shares, the Commission found that only certain areas reflected high post-merger combined shares, namely retail grocery in Nongoma (72.4%), retail liquor in Matatiele (56.4%) and Nongoma (51.6%), and wholesale grocery in Matatiele (64%). The Commission concluded that these markets were highly concentrated and likely to result in a substantial lessening or prevention of competition absent a remedy.


The divestiture conditions, as recorded by the Tribunal, required the merging parties to sell the retail and liquor businesses of the Rhino Group in Nongoma (KwaZulu-Natal) and the wholesale and liquor businesses of the Rhino Group in Matatiele (Eastern Cape) to independent third parties.


On public interest, the merging parties submitted that the transaction would not have a significant effect on employment, and no contrary finding is recorded in the reasons.


The Tribunal did not identify material disputes of fact in its reasons; rather, it proceeded on the Commission’s delineation of markets, overlaps, and market share outcomes, together with the parties’ acceptance of the proposed divestiture remedy.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the Tribunal was required to determine were whether the proposed merger was likely to lead to a substantial lessening or prevention of competition in the relevant markets identified, and—given that approval was granted with agreed conditions—whether the divestiture conditions were adequate to remedy the anti-competitive effects arising from the merger.


The dispute predominantly concerned the application of competition-law standards to economic and market facts, including market definition (product and geographic), the assessment of concentration and market shares, and the selection and adequacy of a structural remedy (divestiture) to restore competitive constraints in specific localities.


A further issue, treated briefly, concerned public interest, specifically whether the transaction would have any significant effect on employment.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Tribunal’s reasoning proceeded from the Commission’s market delineation and competitive assessment. It accepted the Commission’s distinction between retail and wholesale grocery markets, while acknowledging that some wholesale outlets may have a retail component that competes with retail stores. It also accepted that grocery products comprised a broad basket of goods, including food and certain non-edible consumables.


For liquor, the Tribunal recorded the Commission’s view that, while licensing regimes distinguish wholesale and retail, market conduct often does not follow that separation. Nonetheless, for the purposes of the overlap analysis in this merger, the Commission focused on retail liquor. The Tribunal did not indicate disagreement with that approach.


In geographic terms, the Tribunal accepted the Commission’s definition of local retail markets as centred on consumer transport patterns and retail clustering, namely a 1.5 km radius around main taxi ranks in the towns where the parties’ activities overlapped. For wholesale grocery in Matatiele, it accepted a broader radius (120 km) aligned to the delivery footprint of the target’s wholesale operation.


Applying these market definitions, the Tribunal relied on the Commission’s findings that, among the overlapping areas, only Nongoma and Matatiele presented post-merger market shares that were sufficiently high to indicate problematic concentration. It recorded that the Commission concluded these markets were highly concentrated and likely to yield a substantial lessening or prevention of competition.


The Tribunal then turned to remedy. It noted that the divestiture conditions—requiring the sale of Rhino’s relevant businesses in Nongoma and Matatiele—were agreed between the merging parties and the Commission. The Tribunal framed its task as assessing whether those agreed conditions were sufficient to cure the identified competition concerns. It accepted the Commission’s view that the divestitures would restore post-divestiture competition in the affected markets, specifically retail grocery and liquor in Nongoma, and wholesale grocery (and the relevant liquor activity) in Matatiele.


On public interest, the Tribunal recorded the parties’ submission that the transaction would not significantly affect employment and did not identify a public-interest basis to prohibit or further condition the merger beyond the structural remedy aimed at competition concerns.


In conclusion, the Tribunal agreed with the Commission that the relevant markets in Nongoma and Matatiele were highly concentrated and likely to lead to a substantial lessening or prevention of competition, and it expressed satisfaction that the divestiture conditions were adequate to address those effects.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Tribunal approved the acquisition by Mystic Blue Trading 62 (Pty) Ltd of the Rhino Group subject to conditions.


The conditions required divestiture, namely that the merging parties sell the Rhino Group’s retail and liquor businesses in Nongoma (KwaZulu-Natal) and the Rhino Group’s wholesale and liquor businesses in Matatiele (Eastern Cape) to independent third parties, as set out in the conditions attached to the reasons as Annexure “A”.


No costs order is recorded in the reasons.


Cases Cited


No external case law citations are recorded in the reasons.


Legislation Cited


No specific legislation is expressly cited in the reasons.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court are expressly cited in the reasons.


Held


The Tribunal held that, on the Commission’s assessment accepted by the Tribunal, the merger would result in highly concentrated markets in retail grocery and retail liquor in Nongoma and in wholesale grocery (and associated liquor activity) in Matatiele, such that the transaction was likely to lead to a substantial lessening or prevention of competition in those local markets absent a remedy.


It further held that the agreed divestiture conditions were sufficient to remedy the identified anti-competitive effects and therefore approved the merger subject to those conditions.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The Tribunal applied the principle that a merger may be approved subject to conditions where a remedy—here, divestiture to independent third parties—is adequate to address a merger’s likely anti-competitive effects in properly defined product and geographic markets.


The Tribunal proceeded on the principle that competitive effects must be assessed with reference to market definition (including differentiation between retail, wholesale, and hybrid formats), relevant customer targeting (here, lower-income consumers as proxied by LSM categories), and local geographic constraints reflecting consumer shopping patterns (such as concentration of retail activity around transport nodes).


The Tribunal also reflected the principle that where evidence indicates high post-merger market shares and high concentration in specific local markets, a structural remedy may be required to prevent a substantial lessening or prevention of competition, and that the adequacy of such a remedy is assessed by whether it is capable of restoring competitive conditions in the affected areas.


On public interest, the Tribunal applied the principle that merger proceedings also consider public-interest factors such as employment, and where the parties indicate no significant employment effect and no contrary finding is made, public-interest concerns may not necessitate additional conditions beyond those addressing competition.

COMPETITION TRIBUNAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No: 35/LM/Apr11
In the matter between:
Mystic Blue Trading 62 (Pty) Ltd Acquiring Firm
And
The Rhino Group Target Firm
Panel : Norman Manoim (Presiding Member)
Yasmin Carrim (Tribunal Member)
Andreas Wessels (Tribunal Member)
Heard on : 14 December 2011
Order issued on : 20 December 2011
Reasons issued on : 29 February 2012
Reasons for Decision
APPROVAL
[1] On 20 December 2011 the Competition Tribunal (“Tribunal”) approved the
acquisition by Mystic Blue Trading 62 (Pty) Ltd of the Rhino Group with
conditions. In brief the conditions required the merging parties to sell the
retail and liquor businesses of the Rhino Group in Nongoma, Kwazulu
Natal Province as well as the wholesale and liquor businesses of the
Rhino Group in Matatiele, Eastern Cape Province.
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[2] The divestiture conditions were agreed to by the merging parties and the
Commission. We therefore only need to consider whether these conditions
are sufficient to remedy the anti-competitive effects arising from the
proposed merger.
PARTIES TO THE TRANSACTION
[3] The primary acquiring firm is Mystic Blue Trading 62 (Pty) Ltd (“Newco”), a
wholly owned subsidiary of Luzupu Trading (Pty) Ltd t/a Masscash Retail
(“Masscash Retail”). Masscash Retail is a wholly owned subsidiary of
Masscash (Pty) Ltd (“Masscash”), a subsidiary of Massmart Holdings Ltd
(“Massmart”). Massmart is a subsidiary of Wal-mart Inc.
[4] The primary target firms are 16 Rhino stores, mostly based in Kwazulu-
Natal and the Eastern Cape. These stores are collectively referred to as
the Rhino Group stores.
DESCRIPTION OF THE TRANSACTION
[5] In this transaction, Masscash, thorough Newco, intends to acquire the
entire issued share capital of each of the various firms comprising the
Rhino Group stores (“Rhino”). On completion of the proposed transaction,
Masscash will have sole control over the Rhino business.
ACTIVITIES OF THE PARTIES
[6] Newco is a newly formed entity and as such it does not provide or render
any service. The Wal-mart Group trading companies are divided in to four
divisions, namely:
• Massdiscounters – comprises of retail stores trading under the
named Game and Dion Wired;
• Masswarehouse – comprises of Makro chain of large wholesale
club outlets;
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• Massbuild – comprises of Builders Warehouse, Builders Express
and Builders Trade Depot; and
• Masscash - predominantly wholesale outlets supplying grocery
products, liquor and general merchandise and includes stores such
as CBW (trading as CBW, Browns or Weirs), Finro, Jumbo and
Shield. Masscash also comprises of retail/hybrid outlets which sell
grocery products, liquor and general merchandise under the names
Buy-Rite, Sunshine, Mikeva, Cambridge, DF Astor Savemoor and
Score.
[7] The Rhino stores are active in the sale of grocery and liquor products.
Rhino is a family controlled company.
RATIONALE FOR THE TRANSACTION
[8] According to Masscash, this transaction will enable it to realise its strategy
of expanding its presence in the retailing of grocery in urban and peri-
urban areas. For Rhino, the proposed transaction presents an opportunity
for its shareholders to realise a return on their investment and sell the
business, due to lack of a succession plan within the family.
THE RELEVANT MARKET AND IMPACT ON COMPETITION
[9] In defining the relevant product market the Commission made a distinction
between the wholesaling and retailing of grocery products. Grocery
products encompass food, cigarettes, health and beauty products and
non-edible consumables such as detergents and house care products.
According to the Commission, the factors that distinguish a wholesale
store from a retail one include the location of the store, the format of
display as well as the nature of the sale of the products.
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[10] In relation to wholesale stores the Commission found that these stores
are located outside of the main hub (although this differs from town to
town), have fewer till points, sell on credit and customers buy in bulk. The
Commission, however, also found that there are number of wholesale
stores that are hybrid in nature, i.e. they have a retail component and that
retail component competes with other retail stores. The merging parties
submitted to the Commission that although Massmart’s stores relevant for
this transaction are predominantly wholesale, they also derive limited
revenue from retail sales.
[11] In respect of retail stores, the Commission found that these stores are
generally located in town centres, offer no credit facilities, have more till
points than wholesale stores and sell mainly single items to people who
buy for their own consumption. Rhino’s 16 stores being acquired are all
exclusively engaged in the retail of grocery with the exception of one store
which trades as a wholesale store, namely, Matat Wholesalers.
[12] In respect of liquor products, the Commission found that although the
National Liquor Authority allows for the distinction between the retailing
and wholesaling of liquor (in that separate licences are required for each
trade), market players hardly adhere to this distinction. In this regard the
Commission’s field investigation as well as interviews with customers and
competitors revealed that although Rhino owns a retail licence, it also sells
liquor in bulk. For purposes of this transaction the Commission only took
into account the retailing of liquor as the merging parties’ activities do not
effectively overlap in the wholesale of liquor and Rhino only has a retail
licence while Masscash has a licence for both retail and wholesale of
liquor.
[13] The Commission has further, in identifying the relevant product market,
taken into account the Living Standard Measure (“LSM”) 1 categories of the

taken into account the Living Standard Measure (“LSM”) 1 categories of the
1 According to the Commission the LSM is a widely used tool that segments the South African
market according to various characteristics such as owning a car and/or major appliances.
The LSM is often used as a proxy for a household’ purchasing power and stores target
different LSM groups in terms of their position, offerings and advertising.
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customers whom the merging parties target. In this regard the Commission
found that Masscash and Rhino are involved in the wholesaling and
retailing of grocery products to lower income consumers in the LSM 2-6
categories. The Commission concluded that the relevant product markets
are as follows:
• The market for the retail of grocery, including the retail
component of wholesale stores, aimed at low income
consumers;
• The market for the wholesale of grocery aimed at low income
consumers; and
• The market for the retail of liquor targeting low income
consumers.
[14] In respect of the relevant geographic market for the retail of grocery and
liquor, the merging parties’ activities overlap in the following areas:
Nongoma, Ulundi, Mtubatuba, Mthatha, Lusikisiki and Matatiele. The
Commission found that the merging parties and their competitors operate
in city centres close to the taxi ranks as most of their customers use public
transport. The Commission therefore defined the relevant geographic
market for the retail of grocery and liquor as being 1.5 km radius
surrounding the main taxi ranks in the towns where the parties’ activities
overlap.2
[15] In relation to the wholesale of grocery, the merging parties’ activities
overlap only in Matatiele. The Commission defined the relevant
geographic market as being in Matatiele and the surrounding 120km
radius as Rhino’s Matat Wholesale delivers as far as this area.
2 The 1.5km distance was given as an answer by the merging parties and their competitors
when they were asked by the Commission to give an approximate parameter value within
which they believed most retailers were concentrated.
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Market shares
[16] Out of all the areas in which the activities of the merging parties overlap,
the Commission found that the combined post-merger market shares of
the parties are high in respect of only the following:
• Retail of grocery in Nongoma - 72.4%;
• Retail of Liquor in Matatiele and Nongoma – 56.4% and 51.6%
respectively; and
• Wholesale of grocery in Matatiele – 64%.
[17] Based on the above market shares, the Commission came to the
conclusion that the markets for retailing of grocery and liquor in Nongoma
as well as the wholesaling of grocery and the retail component of liquor in
Matatiele are highly concentrated and likely to result in a substantial
lessening or prevention of competition. Accordingly, the Commission
proposed that the Rhino stores in these two towns be divested to
independent third parties in order to address the concerns. The merging
parties did not object to the divestiture conditions proposed by the
Commission. The conditions mean that post divestiture competition in
respect of retailing of grocery and liquor in Nongoma and the wholesaling
of grocery and the retail component of liquor in Matatiele will be restored.
PUBLIC INTEREST
[18] The merging parties submitted to the Commission that the proposed
transaction will not have any significant effect on employment.
CONCLUSION
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[19] We agree with the Commission that the markets for the retail of grocery
and liquor in Nongoma as well as the wholesaling of grocery and the retail
component of liquor in Matatiele are highly concentrated and are therefore
likely to lead to a substantial lessening or prevention of competition. We
are satisfied that the divestiture conditions proposed are adequate to
remedy the anti-competitive effects arising from the proposed transaction.
For this reason we approved the transaction subject to the conditions
agreed upon on 20 December 2011. A copy of these conditions is
attached to these reasons as Annexure “A”.
____________________ 29 February 2012
Norman Manoim Date
Yasmin Carrim and Andreas Wessels concurring.
Tribunal researcher: Ipeleng Selaledi
For the merging parties: Chris Charter of Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Inc.
For the Commission: Nomveliso Ntanjana and Dr. Nicholas Ngepah
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