COMPETITION TRIBUNAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No: 04/LM/Jan12
In the matter between:
VUKILE PROPERTY FUND LIMITED Acquiring Firm
And
SANLAM LIFE INSURANCE LIMITED
IN RESPECT OF CERTAIN RENTAL ENTERPRISES Target Firm
Panel : Andreas Wessels (Presiding Member)
Medi Mokuena (Tribunal Member)
Merle Holden (Tribunal Member)
Heard on : 22 February 2012
Order issued on : 22 February 2012
Reasons issued on : 12 March 2012
Reasons for Decision
Approval
1] On 22 February 2012 the Competition Tribunal (“Tribunal”) approved the
large merger involving Vukile Property Fund Limited and certain rental
enterprises of Sanlam Life Insurance Limited. Our reasons for approving
the transaction are set out below.
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Parties to the transaction
2] The primary acquiring firm is Vukile Property Fund Limited (“Vukile”).1
Vukile is not controlled by any firm; it is a public company incorporated in
terms of the laws of the Republic of South Africa and listed on the
Johannesburg Securities Exchange and the Namibian Stock Exchange. In
South Africa it controls MICC Property Income Fund Limited and MICC
Properties (Pty) Ltd and in Namibia it controls MICC Properties Namibia
(Pty) Ltd.
3] Being a property fund, the acquiring firm owns retail, commercial and
industrial properties throughout South Africa2 and in Namibia.
4] The primary target firm is Sanlam Life Insurance Limited (“Sanlam Life”) in
respect of certain rental enterprises. Sanlam Life is controlled by Sanlam
Limited (“Sanlam”)3 which is not controlled by any particular person, juristic
or otherwise. Sanlam lists the Public Investment Corporation Limited and
Ubuntu-Botho Investments (Pty) Ltd as some of its major shareholders.
Sanlam is the holding company within the Sanlam Group and controls a
large number of companies.
5] The transferred properties comprise retail, office and industrial properties
situated in Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, the Free State and the Western
Cape.
Proposed transaction
6] In terms of the proposed transaction and as detailed in the Agreement for
Sale and Purchase between the parties, Vukile intends to acquire from
Sanlam Life several rental enterprises, comprising of properties, fixed
assets, rights and obligations in respect of leases and operating contracts
and all other assets necessary to operate the enterprises as going
concerns (collectively referred to hereinafter as “the transferred
1 http://www.vukileprops.co.za/
2 Vukile owns properties in Limpopo, Gauteng, Mpumalanga, the North West Province,
KwaZulu-Natal, the Western Cape, the Eastern Cape and the Free State.
3 http://www.sanlam.co.za/wps/wcm/connect/Sanlam_EN/sanlam/home
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properties”).
Rationale for transaction
7] According to Vukile, this transaction is in line with its objective of building a
quality portfolio of properties with strong contractual cash flows. Vukile
also already manages the properties that will be acquired and therefore
has a level of insight into the properties thereby lessening the risk involved
in this acquisition.
8] This transaction provides Sanlam with an opportunity to dispose of the
transferred properties.
Competition analysis
9] The Competition Commission (“Commission”) found that the activities of
the merging parties overlap in that they both own office property in the
broader Johannesburg, Midrand, Pretoria and Cape Town geographic
areas.
10]The Commission went on to analyse the post-merger market shares of the
merging parties in specific geographic areas on the basis of gross lettable
areas and information obtained from the South African Property Owners
Association (SAPOA). The Commission ultimately concluded that the post-
merger market shares of the merging parties remain relatively low in all
relevant markets and that the proposed transaction therefore raises no
competition concerns form a horizontal perspective.
11]There is no reason for us to in this matter take a definitive view on the
exact parameters of the relevant markets in question. We are satisfied that
sufficient competition remains post-merger in any alternative relevant
market in which there is an overlap between the activities of the merging
parties.
12]There is also a vertical overlap in the activities of the merging parties
arising from the fact that Vukile provides property management services to
Sanlam Life. The Commission however found that Vukile managed the
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transferred properties pre-merger and will continue to do so post-merger
and that the vertical overlap therefore will not lead to any foreclosure
concerns. We agree with this assessment.
13]In light of the above we conclude that the proposed transaction is unlikely
to substantially prevent or lessen competition in any of the relevant
property markets affected by the proposed transaction.
Public interest
14]The merging parties confirmed that the proposed transaction will have no
adverse effects on employment and will not result in any retrenchments or
job losses.4 Furthermore, the proposed deal raises no other public interest
concerns.
Conclusion
15]We find that the proposed merger is unlikely to lead to a substantial
prevention or lessening of competition in any relevant market.
Furthermore, the proposed transaction raises no public interest concerns.
We therefore approve the proposed merger without conditions.
____________________ 12 March 2012
A Wessels DATE
M Mokuena and M Holden concurring
Tribunal researcher: Songezo Ralarala
For the merging parties: Andries le Grange of Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr
Attorneys
For the Commission: Bheki Masilele and Lindiwe Khumalo
4 See, for example, page 11 of the record.
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