Samacor Chrome Limited v Chrome mining and Ferochrome Production Assets of International Ferro Metals (SA) (Pty) Ltd and Another (LM004APR16) [2016] ZACT 57 (15 July 2016)

80 Reportability
Competition Law

Brief Summary

Competition — Merger approval — Acquisition of chrome mining and ferrochrome production assets — Samancor Chrome Limited's acquisition of assets from International Ferro Metals (SA) (Pty) Ltd and Sky Chrome Mining (Pty) Ltd approved unconditionally by the Competition Tribunal — Tribunal found no substantial lessening of competition in relevant markets, with merged entity's market shares remaining below thresholds — Positive employment effects anticipated post-acquisition despite prior retrenchments at target firms.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


These proceedings concerned an intermediate/large merger (as treated by the competition authorities) before the Competition Tribunal of South Africa, in which the Tribunal was required to determine whether to approve a proposed acquisition and, if so, whether any conditions were warranted on competition or public interest grounds.


The acquiring firm was Samancor Chrome Limited (“Samancor”), a vertically integrated producer of ferrochrome operating in both upstream chrome ore mining/beneficiation and downstream smelting. The target firms were the chrome mining and ferrochrome production assets of International Ferro Metals (SA) (Pty) Ltd (“IFMSA”) (at the time in business rescue) and Sky Chrome Mining (Pty) Ltd (“Sky Chrome”), in which Samancor proposed to acquire 80% of the share capital.


The matter followed an investigation by the Competition Commission (“the Commission”), which assessed the merger’s competitive and public interest effects. The Tribunal heard the matter on 25 May 2016, issued an order on the same date approving the transaction unconditionally, and later furnished reasons on 15 July 2016.


The dispute’s general subject-matter was whether the proposed acquisition would likely substantially prevent or lessen competition in relevant markets for chrome ore and ferrochrome, whether any vertical foreclosure concerns arose (including in relation to electrode paste as an input), and whether the merger raised public interest concerns, particularly regarding employment in the context of IFMSA’s prior retrenchments under business rescue and Samancor’s contemporaneous labour restructuring process.


2. Material Facts


Samancor was described as a vertically integrated ferrochrome producer, conducting chrome ore mining in several South African provinces and operating three smelting plants. It also participated in a 50/50 joint venture (the Ferroveld Partnership) producing electrode paste, an input used in ferrochrome production.


IFMSA, controlled by an Australian-incorporated parent, had been in business rescue since 26 August 2015. Its primary assets—its chrome mining and ferrochrome production operations—were stated to be non-operational at the relevant time. IFMSA owned the Lesedi chrome mine in the North West province, adjacent to one of Samancor’s mines. Sky Chrome, also ultimately controlled within the same corporate group as IFMSA, owned an opencast chrome ore mine that had ceased operations in June 2014.


The proposed transaction entailed Samancor acquiring IFMSA’s chrome mining and ferrochrome production assets and acquiring 80% of Sky Chrome’s shares. Samancor’s stated rationale was that the IFMSA assets, if returned to operation, represented an attractive investment opportunity. IFMSA’s position was that a third-party disposal was the only reasonable prospect for rescuing the business and assets and that a sale offered the best prospects for creditors and employees.


On the competition side, the Commission identified two horizontal overlaps: an upstream overlap in the mining and production of chrome ore, and a downstream overlap in the production and supply of ferrochrome. The Commission also identified two vertical relationships: chrome ore production as an upstream input into ferrochrome production, and the production/distribution of electrode paste (through Ferroveld) as an input into ferrochrome production.


For chrome ore, the Commission considered market shares using total South African production in 2013–2014 (including internal consumption by vertically integrated firms). On that basis, the merged entity’s share was found to be less than 30%, with an accretion of less than 1%. Competitors included Glencore, Assmang, Hernic Ferrochrome, Rustenburg Minerals Development Company, and others. The merging parties also estimated that if only open market sales (excluding in-house sales) were considered, the merged share would be significantly lower than on the total production approach.


For ferrochrome, the Commission assessed an international market using 2013–2014 production figures and found the merged entity would have a post-merger share of less than 15%, with competitors including Glencore, Assmang, Hernic Ferrochrome, and others.


On public interest and employment, it was common cause in the reasons that IFMSA’s business rescue process led to the retrenchment of all IFMSA employees, affecting 723 employees, recorded in a collective agreement with labour constituencies. The retrenchment process commenced on 7 September 2015 and concluded on 5 November 2015. Some limited-duration contracts were later concluded with certain former employees for care and maintenance, metal recovery, and administrative functions.


Concerns were raised by trade unions. Solidarity initially sought a two-year job-loss moratorium but later withdrew that request and indicated the merger would have positive employment effects. UASA reported that Samancor was engaged in a section 189 process (Labour Relations Act process) contemplating retrenchments, but accepted in discussions with the Commission that these contemplated retrenchments were not caused by the merger transaction. UASA sought a condition to protect certain Samancor employees for two years post-implementation. NUMSA alleged Samancor intended to move furnace operations and close a plant, sought undertakings against retrenchments and relocation, and contended that IFMSA employees retrenched in November 2015 should be re-employed when operations recommenced.


Where disputes arose, the reasons reflect that Samancor denied that its section 189 process was merger-related, attributing it to market conditions including declining Chinese demand for chrome and ferrochrome. Samancor also denied having shut down furnaces in Mpumalanga or having long-term plans to do so. The Business Rescue Practitioner explained that retrenchments at IFMSA were undertaken to preserve the company, citing cost pressures and stating that the CCMA found retrenchments the only viable option at the time to preserve the company and ensure severance payments.


At the Tribunal hearing, the merging parties confirmed the 723 retrenchments at IFMSA (approximately 320 in mining and 405 in smelting). They further indicated that Samancor’s initially contemplated retrenchments (in excess of 1,900) had been reduced, and that forced retrenchments at Samancor would reduce to approximately 320 (approximately 60 in smelting/head office and approximately 260 in mining), largely due to restructuring measures and, to an extent, in contemplation of the merger. They estimated that recommissioning IFMSA’s smelting operations could require approximately 300 employees post-merger once ramped up, expected in the course of September 2016, but that mining-side job opportunities were harder to quantify due to dependencies on obtaining necessary DMR approvals.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the proposed transaction was likely to substantially prevent or lessen competition in any relevant market, given the identified horizontal overlaps in chrome ore and ferrochrome and the identified vertical relationships relating to upstream inputs (chrome ore and electrode paste).


A further central question was whether the merger raised public interest concerns—with emphasis on employment effects—that warranted the imposition of conditions, including whether retrenchments at IFMSA and Samancor were sufficiently connected to the merger to justify intervention.


The issues involved an application of established competition-law standards to facts (market shares, competitive constraints, and foreclosure incentives/ability) as well as an evaluative assessment of public interest considerations and the evidentiary linkage (or lack of linkage) between the merger and job losses.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On competition, the Tribunal adopted and agreed with the Commission’s analysis that the transaction created horizontal overlaps in the upstream chrome ore market and the downstream ferrochrome market, but that the available indicators did not point to a substantial lessening of competition.


In the chrome ore market, the Tribunal accepted the Commission’s market share assessment showing a post-merger share below 30% with a minimal accretion. The Tribunal also noted the presence of several competitors identified by the Commission. The reasons further reflected that when considering only third-party/open market sales (excluding internal consumption), the merged entity’s estimated market share would be materially lower, reinforcing the conclusion that market power was unlikely to be materially increased by the merger.


In the ferrochrome market, the Tribunal accepted the Commission’s view that the relevant competitive assessment was international in scope, and that the merged entity’s post-merger share would be less than 15%. The presence of substantial competitors in that market supported the conclusion that the merger was unlikely to alter competitive constraints in a way that would substantially prevent or lessen competition.


On the vertical aspects, the Tribunal accepted the Commission’s findings that foreclosure concerns were unlikely. In relation to chrome ore as an upstream input, the Commission found that Samancor’s chrome ore competitors had alternative customers other than IFMSA, including export opportunities. This reduced the plausibility of a foreclosure strategy causing competitive harm.


In relation to electrode paste, the Tribunal accepted the Commission’s analysis that the merged firm was unlikely to succeed in input foreclosure because Samancor could not consume all electrode paste produced by the Ferroveld Partnership. The Tribunal also noted that IFMSA had already sourced its electrode paste requirements from the Ferroveld Partnership pre-merger, which further undermined the notion that the merger would change input access in a manner harmful to competition.


On public interest and employment, the Tribunal addressed the union concerns and the background that IFMSA’s retrenchments occurred in the context of business rescue. The Commission’s investigation concluded that IFMSA employees were retrenched as a consequence of business rescue rather than the merger, and that Samancor was selected as preferred bidder only later in November 2015, after the IFMSA section 189 process had already begun. The Tribunal agreed with this sequencing-based inference and accepted that the IFMSA retrenchments were unlikely to be linked causally to the merger.


Regarding retrenchments within Samancor, the Commission found these were driven by market conditions rather than by the merger transaction. The Tribunal accepted this assessment. The Tribunal also accepted the Commission’s view, derived from the merging parties’ strategic documents, that it was unlikely Samancor would close furnace operations post-merger in the manner alleged by NUMSA, because such a move would contradict the commercial rationale and strategy presented for the merger.


The Tribunal took further assurance from the hearing, during which it questioned the merging parties on employment issues, including the retrenchments at IFMSA, the Samancor restructuring, and the likely jobs to be created upon restarting IFMSA operations. The Tribunal recorded its satisfaction with the responses provided, and concurred with the Commission’s overall conclusion that the merger would not raise significant public interest concerns warranting conditions, including the types of job protection undertakings sought by certain unions.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Competition Tribunal approved the proposed transaction unconditionally.


No behavioural or structural conditions were imposed, and the reasons reflected the Tribunal’s concurrence with the Commission that the merger was unlikely to substantially prevent or lessen competition and was unlikely to result in significant public interest concerns.


The reasons provided do not record any distinct costs order.


Cases Cited


No cases were cited in the published reasons.


Legislation Cited


Labour Relations Act (reference to section 189 retrenchment process)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the published reasons.


Held


The Tribunal held that the acquisition by Samancor of IFMSA’s chrome mining and ferrochrome production assets, together with the acquisition of 80% of Sky Chrome’s shares, was unlikely to substantially prevent or lessen competition in any relevant market, despite horizontal overlaps in chrome ore and ferrochrome and vertical relationships relating to key inputs.


The Tribunal further held that the transaction was unlikely to give rise to significant public interest concerns, including in relation to employment, because the IFMSA retrenchments occurred in the context of business rescue and were not shown to be caused by the merger, and because Samancor’s retrenchment process was assessed as market-driven rather than merger-driven. The merger was therefore approved without conditions.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The Tribunal applied the principle that a merger should be prohibited or conditioned only if it is likely to substantially prevent or lessen competition in a relevant market, assessed through factors including the extent of horizontal overlap, market shares and accretion, and the presence of effective competitive constraints from identified rivals.


In assessing vertical effects, the Tribunal applied the principle that foreclosure concerns depend on the merged firm’s ability and incentive to foreclose rivals, and on whether such conduct would likely be effective given alternative sources or customers. The Tribunal accepted that where upstream rivals have alternative outlets (including exports), and where the merged firm cannot practically absorb total upstream output (here, electrode paste production), a theory of input foreclosure is less persuasive.


On public interest (employment), the Tribunal applied the principle that employment-related intervention in merger control depends on whether job losses are sufficiently linked to the merger as opposed to independent causes such as business rescue processes or general market conditions. The Tribunal’s acceptance of the Commission’s timing-based and documentary assessment reflected an approach that distinguishes retrenchments caused by the merger from retrenchments occurring for non-merger reasons, and treats only the former as potentially justifying merger conditions.

About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Competition Tribunal
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Competition Tribunal
>>
2016
>>
[2016] ZACT 57
|

|

Samacor Chrome Limited v Chrome mining and Ferochrome Production Assets of International Ferro Metals (SA) (Pty) Ltd and Another (LM004APR16) [2016] ZACT 57 (15 July 2016)

COMPETITION
TRIBUNAL OF SOUTH
AFRICA
Case
No:
L
M004Apr
1
6
I
n
the matter between
:
Samancor
Chrome
Lim
i
ted
Acqu
i
ring
F
i
rm
and
The
chrome
mining
and
ferrochrome
production
T
arget
F
i
rms
assets
of
I
nternational
Ferro
Metals
(SA)
(Pty)
L
td
(in
business
rescue)
Sky
Chrome Mining (Pty) Ltd
Panel

: AW Wessels (Presiding Member)
:
M
ondo
M
azwai
(Tribunal Member)
: lmraan Valodia
(Tribunal Member)
Heard
on
: 25 May 2016
Order
issued
on

:25 May 2016
Reasons
issued
on
:
15 July 2016
Reasons
for Decision
Approval
1.
On 25
M
ay
2016, the Competition Tribunal
(t
h
e
''Tribunal") unconditionally approved an acquisition by Samancor
Chrome Lim
i
ted
(
"
Samancor'')
of
the
chrome
mining
and
ferrochrome
production
assets
of
I
nternational
Ferro Metals
(SA)
(Pty)
Ltd
("IFMSA")
(in
business
rescue)
and
Sky
Chrome
Min
i
ng
(Pty)
Ltd
("Sky
Chrome").
2.
The reasons for the approval of the
proposed transaction follow.
Parties
and their
activities
Acquiring
firms
3.
The
primary
acquiring
firm
i
s
Samancor,
a
company
i
ncorporated
i
n
accordance
with
the
l
aws
of
the
Republic
of
So
u
th
Africa.
Samancor
i
s
co
n
trolled
by
Sama
n
cor
Chr
o
m
e
H
oldings
(Pty)
L
t
d
("Sama
n
cor
H
o
l
di
n
g
s
"),
which
i
s
i
n
tum co
n
trolled
b
y
Tenis
Chrome
L
i
m
ited
(''Tenis
Chr
o
m
e"),
a
company
i
n
corporated
i
n
accordance with the
l
aws
of the Republic of
M
auriti
u
s.
Terris Chrome
i
s
co
n
trolled
by
Terr
i
s
Stain
l
ess
L
i
m
ited
(''Terris
S
tain
l
ess"'),
wh
i
ch
is
i
n
tum
controlled
by
Terris
Mi
n
i
n
g
L
i
mited
(''Terris
M
i
n
i
n
g
").
Terris
Mining
is
controlled by [..
.
]
[1]
,
wh
i
ch
i
s
i
n
tum
controlled
b
y
[
.
.
.
].
4.
Samancor
is
a
vertically
i
ntegrated
producer of ferrochrome.
I
t is
i
nvolved
i
n
the
(upstream)
min
i
ng
and
beneficiation
of
chrome
ore
and
the (downstream) smelting of ch
r
ome
ore to produce ferrochrome.
5.
Samancor's
chrome
ore
mining activities are
undertaken
at
mines
l
ocated
i
n
the
Mpumalanga,
Limpopo
and
N
orth
West
provinces
and
i
ts
smelting operations are carried out
through three separate plants wh
i
ch
are situated in the
Mpumalanga
and Limpopo provinces.
6.
Samancor
i
s
further
i
nvolved
i
n a
50/50 joint venture
with
E
l
kem
Carbon AS
of
Norway
("Ferroveld
Partnersh
i
p
").
This jo
i
nt
venture
produces electrode paste which is used
in ferrochrome production.
Target
firms
7.
The
primary
target
firms are
the
chrome
mining
and
ferrochrome
production assets
of
IFMSA
as well as Sky
Chrome.
8.
I
F
M
SA
is controlled by International
Ferro
M
etals
Lim
i
ted
(AUS) ("JFML"), a company
i
n
corporated
in accordance with the
l
aws
of Australia.
9.
I
FMSA
h
as
been
i
n
business rescue proceedings si
n
ce
26 August 2015
.
I
ts
primary
assets
(i
.
e
.
i
ts
chrome
mini
n
g
and
ferrochrome
p
r
oduction
assets) are
currently
non-operational.
10.
Sky
Chrome
is
controlled
(80%)
by
Purity
Metals
Holdings
Limited
(BVI)
("Purity"),
a
company
incorporated
i
n
accordance
with
the
l
aws
of Switzerland. Pur
i
ty
i
s wholly
co
n
trolled
by
I
FML.
11.
Prior
to
I
FMSA
b
e
i
ng
placed
u
n
der
care
and
mai
n
tenance,
i
t
was
a
vertical
l
y
i
ntegrated
producer of ferrochrome,
i
.
e.
i
t
was
involved
in
the mi
n
i
ng
and beneficiation of chrome ore and the smelting of chrome ore to
produce
ferrochrome
.
12.
I
FMSA owns
the Lesedi chrome mine
i
n
the
N
orth
West provi
n
ce,
wh
i
ch
i
s
adjacent
to
one
of
Samancor's
chrome
mines. Sky
Chrome
owns
an
opencast
chrome ore
mi
n
e
which
ceased operati
n
g
i
n
J
u
ne
2014.
Proposed
transaction and rationale
13.
I
n terms
of
the
p
r
oposed
transaction,
Samancor
i
ntends
to
acqu
i
re
the chrome
mini
n
g
and
ferrochrome
production
assets
of
I
FMSA,
as
well
as 80% of the share capital of Sky
Chrome
.
14.
Samancor
submitted that
the
acquisition of the
I
FMSA
assets,
i
f
returned to operation,
r
epresents
an attractive
i
nvestment
opportunity.
15.
IFMSA
submitted
that
the
only
reasonable
prospect
for
rescu
i
ng
i
ts
business a
n
d
assets was through
a disposal to a th
i
rd
p
arty.
Accord
i
ng
to
I
FMSA
a sale also
r
epresents
the most
favou
r
able
prospects for creditors and
employees
.
Competition
analysis
16.
The Competition Commission
(
"
Commission")
found that there is a
horizo
n
tal
overlap
between
the
activities
of
the
merg
i
ng
parties
i
n
the following two
markets
:
(i)
i
n
the
(upstream)
market
for
the
mi
n
i
ng
and
production of chrome ore; and (ii) in the (downstream)
market for the production and supply of ferrochrome.
17.
The Commission also found that the
proposed transaction gives rise to two
vertical relationships: (i) in relation
to the (upstream)
production
of chrome
ore
that
is
used
in the
(downstream)
manufacture of ferrochrome;
and
(ii)
i
n
relation
to
the
production
and
distrib
u
tion
of
electrode
paste
by
Samancor
(through
the
Ferroveld
Partnersh
i
p),
which
i
s
an essential
i
nput in
the production of ferrochrome.
Mining
and production of chrome ore
18.
The
Commission considered
market
shares based on the total production
of
chrome ore
i
n
2013-2014
i
n
South Africa
.
[2]
On
this approach the merged ent
i
ty
would
have
a
market
share
of
l
ess
than
30%,
with
a
market
share
accretion
of
l
ess
than
1
%
as
a
result
of
the
proposed
transactio
n
.
The Commission
further
found
that
the merging parties'
competitors
i
n
th
i
s
market
i
nclude
Glencore,
Assmang,
Hernic Ferrochrome,
Rustenburg Minerals Development Company
and others
.
19.
I
f one
considers only sales
to
third
parties
or
open market
sales (i.e. excluding  all
i
n-house
sales),
the
merging
parties
estimated
that
the
merged
ent
i
ty's
market
share
would
be
significantly
l
ower
than that stated above.
[3]
Production
and supply of ferrochrome
20.
The
Commission
found
that
the
merged
entity
will
have
a
post-merger
market
share
of
l
ess
than
15%
i
n
the
i
n
ternational
market
for
the
production
and
supply of ferrochrome.
[4]
Competitors
in
th
i
s
market
i
nclude
Glencore, Assmang,
H
ernic
Ferrochrome and
others.
Vertical
relationships
21.
The
Commission fou
n
d
that
Samancor's
competitors
i
n the
production
of chrome ore have a
l
ternative
customers
other
than
I
FMSA,
i
ncluding
export opportunities.
22.
I
n
relation to
electrode
paste,
the
Commission found
that
the
merging parties are
un
li
kely
to
engage
in a
successful
i
n
put
foreclosure strategy since Samancor can
n
ot
consume
all
the electrode
p
aste
produced by
the
F
erroveld
P
artnersh
i
p.
The
Commission
further
noted
that
I
FMSA
pre­ merger already sourced all of
i
ts
electrode paste requ
i
reme
n
ts
from the Fer
r
oveld
Partnersh
i
p.
23.
Based
on
the
above
the
Commission
concluded
that
the
proposed
transaction
i
s unl
i
kely
to substantially
l
essen
or prevent
competition
I
n any
relevant market. We concur with the
Commission's conclusion.
Public
i
n
terest
24.
We
n
ext
d
i
scuss
the
employment
effects
associated
with
the
proposed transaction.
Employment
25.
As
stated
above,
I
FMSA
h
as
been
i
n
busi
n
ess
rescue
p
r
oceedings
since 26 August 2015.
26.
The
merging
parties
submitted
that
as
a
res
u
l
t
of
the
business
rescue proceedin
g
s
at
I
F
M
SA,
the Busi
n
ess
Rescue Pract
i
tioner
h
ad to
retre
n
ch
all of
I
FMSA's
employees
.
A total of 723 employees were affected
by
th
i
s
process, wh
i
ch
was
recorded
i
n
a
collective
agreement with the
l
abour
constituents. Th
i
s
retrenchment process commenced on 07 September 2015
and
was
concl
u
ded
on
05
November
2015.
27.
The
mergi
n
g
parties
also
i
ndicated
that
li
m
i
ted
durat
i
on
contracts were concl
u
ded
with
certain
of
the
previous
employees  of
I
FMSA
i
nvo
l
ved
i
n
care
and maintenance and metal recovery activities, as well as a small
staff of office and admin personnel.
28.
The
mergi
n
g
parties
further
subm
i
tted
that
the
proposed
transaction
will not
h
ave
a
material
adverse
effect
on
employment
at
I
FMSA
because
I
FMSA
has already been through a full retrenchment process as a result of
the
business
rescue
proceedings and
not
as
a
result
of
the
proposed
merger. T
h
e
merg
i
n
g
parties furthermore
i
n
d
i
cated
that the
proposed transaction will
give
rise
to
overall
pos
i
tive
employment
effects
g
i
ven
that the merged
ent
i
ty
will
requ
i
re
employees
once
it recomme
n
ces
operations at
I
FMSA.
29.
The
Commission
received
n
otices
to formally
participate from
three
trade
u
n
i
ons,
namely Solidarity, the Un
i
ted
Association of South Africa ("UASA") and the National Union
of Metalworkers of South Africa ("NUMSA")
.
30.
Solidarity
i
nit
i
ally
requested
the
Commission
to
i
mpose
a
two-year
moratorium
on
job
l
osses
as
a
resu
l
t
of the
p
r
oposed
transaction
.
I
t however
subsequently
withdrew
i
ts request
and
su
b
m
i
tted
that
the
proposed merger will have positive effects on employment.
31.
UASA
i
n
formed
the Commission that
Samancor
i
s
currently engaged
i
n a
section
189
of
the
Labour Relations Act
process
("section
189 process"),
where
certain retrenchments
are
contemplated. According
to
the
Commission,
UASA
h
owever
accepted
during
a
meeting
with
i
t
that
the
retrenchments currently contemplated
within
Samancor are
n
ot
occasioned
by
the
curre
n
t
merger
transaction.
The
Commission
further
n
oted
that
the
representatives
of
U
ASA
i
n
formed
i
t
that they are
n
ot
opposed
to
the proposed transaction since they are of the opi
n
i
on
that
the
proposed transaction will save or create more
jobs
i
n
Samancor.
32.
UASA submitted
to the Commission that
Samancor
i
nformed
i
t that
shou
l
d
this
proposed
merger
be
approved,
the
contemplated
retrenchments
of
Samancor
employees as
a
result
of
operational requ
i
reme
n
ts
may be m
i
tigated
i
n
that only 70 employees
may be retrenched since the proposed
acquisition of IFMSA's assets will create new job
opportunities. UASA therefore requested the Commission to recommend
the imposition
of a condition that will ensure that the employees of
Samancor who survive the current section 189 process be protected for
a period
of at least two years after the implementation of the
proposed transaction.
33.
NUMSA alleged that Samancor
has  the
i
nte
n
t
to
move its
furnace
I
smelting operations to
Br
i
ts
i
n the
North West
province
and
close
down
i
ts
Mpumalanga
plant.
NUMSA
therefore
requested
an
undertaking from the
merging
parties
in
relation to
there
being
no
retrenchments
at
Samancor
and that the Samancor furnace operations
will
n
ot be
moved to the JFMSA site.
34.
NUMSA
further
raised
a
concern
around
the
Business
Rescue
Practitioner's decision
to carry
out retrenchments at
I
F
M
SA
i
nstead
of selling the company
as a going concern to
avoid retrenchments.
NUMSA
submitted
that
the
I
FMSA
employees
who
were
retrenched
on
05 November
2015
(when
the
retrenchment
process was
concluded)
should
be
re-employed
by
Samancor
once
i
t
commences
production
at
I
FMSA
'
s
furnace  operations
.
35.
Samancor
in
response to
the
allegations
and
concerns
raised,
submitted
that
i
ts
current
section
189
process
i
s
n
ot
re
l
ated
to
the
proposed transaction
but
is
occasioned by
market
conditions
l
ed
primarily
by
the
decl
i
ning
Ch
i
nese
demand
for
ch
r
ome
and
ferroch
r
ome,
i.e.
there
i
s
no nexus
between the proposed transaction
and
the
current section 189
process
at
Samancor since
these
retrenchme
n
ts
are
the
resu
l
t
of operational
requ
i
rements.
36.
Samancor
at
the
time
of
the
i
nvestigation
submitted that
i
t
was
not
i
n the
position
to
provide
the
Commission
with
exact
figures
on
potential
retrenchments
at
Samancor
since the
consultation
process
was
still
underway and would
be completed
in May 2016
.
Samancor
stated that
at
the
initial
stages
of
the
section
1
89
process, the
company
had
i
dentified
1
700
employees
at
i
ts
min
i
ng
operations
and
289
employees
at
i
ts
smelting operations  for  possible  retrenchments,
i.e.  a total  of  1989 employees.
3
7.The
merging
parties
also
subm
i
tted
that
the
p
r
oposed
transaction
may
i
n
the
long
run yield
positive
employment
o
u
tcomes
once
the
I
FMSA
assets are operational;
h
owever,
this
i
s
an assessment
that
h
ad
n
ot
been
carried out.
38.
I
n
relation
to
NU
M
SA's
co
n
tention
regarding
the
future
use
of
furnaces, Samancor
submitted that
it
h
as
not
shut
down any
of
i
ts
furnaces
i
n
Mpumalanga
and
did not
h
ave
any
l
ong-term
plans to shut down any of its furnaces
as
it
requ
i
res
these
i
n
i
ts
downstream
activities
for
ferrochrome production.
39.
The Business Rescue Practitioner
submitted that the basis for carrying
out
retrenchments at
IFMSA
was
an
attempt
to
preserve
the
company
and
ensure
that
i
t
returns
to
production
and
create jobs
i
n
the future. He provided details
regarding the
runn
i
ng
costs of the b
u
siness
at the re
l
evant
time and the
portion
of that
dedicated
to
employee
salaries. The
Business
Rescue
Practitioner
furthermore submitted
that
the
Commission
for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration
("CCMA") found that
retrenchme
n
ts
were
the
only viable option
in the
circumstances,
in order
to
preserve the
company and ensure that employees
receive their severance pay.
40.
The
merging
parties
u
l
timately
submitted
that
the
proposed
transaction does
not result
i
n
any
n
egative
public
i
nterest
concerns
and that
no
conditions are therefore warranted as part of the approval.
41.
The
Commission
noted
that
Samancor
i
s
acquir
i
ng
the
assets
of
I
FMSA
and not any
I
FMSA
employees and after investigation concl
u
ded
that the
I
FMSA
retrenchments
were
carried
out
as
a
resu
l
t
of
the
target
firm
being under business
rescue proceedings
.
The Commission
furt
h
er
found that
i
t
is
un
li
ke
l
y
that
Samancor
had
i
n
fluenced
the
Business
Rescue Pract
i
tioner's
decision
to
retrench
the
I
F
M
SA
employees since
Sarnancor
was
on
l
y
chosen
as
a
preferred
bidder
duri
n
g
November
2015,
two
months
after the section 189
process at IFMSA had commenced. In light of this the Commission
concluded that the retrenchments at IFMSA
are unlikely to be linked
to the proposed transaction.
42.
In relation
to
the
retrenchments
occurring with
i
n
Samancor
the
Commission found
that
these
retrenchments
were
occasioned
by market
conditions and not by
the proposed transaction.
43.
The Commission also found,
based on
the merging parties' strategic
documents,
that
it
is
un
li
kely
that
Samancor
will
close
down
i
ts
furnace operations
post-merger (as suggested
by NUMSA), since th
i
s
wou
l
d be at
odds with the merging parties' commercial rationale
I
strategy.
44.
I
n relation
to
potential
jobs
to
be created
by the proposed transaction,
the Commission noted
that there will be
jobs
created in
the short term from the
I
FMSA
smelting
operations side
because
there
are
no
licence
requirements that Samancor has to satisfy. The Commission further
noted
that
i
f Samancor
i
s granted
a licence to
mine at
I
FMSA's
mine
i
t
will need more employees
to
work
i
n
those
mines
and that too
will
have a
positive employment effect
i
n relation
to the merged entity's mini
n
g
operations.
45.
The Tribunal
i
nformed
the abovementioned
unions of the
heari
n
g
i
n case
they wished
to
make further written and/or
oral submissions. The Tribunal
received
responses
from
Solidarity
and
UASA
i
n
dicating
that they did
not
wish to
make
any
further
subm
i
ssions
i
n this
matter.
We
also
n
ote
that
a
non-un
i
onised
employee
representative
at
I
FMSA,
namely Tommy
Parker,
was however present at the hearing
to
observe the proceedings.
46.
The Tribu
n
al
questioned the
merging
parties at the hearing regarding
inter
alia
the
retrenchments
that
took
place
at
IFMSA,
the
current
retrenchments
at Samancor and the
l
i
kely
number of
jobs
to be created as a result of the
proposed transaction.
47.
The
representatives
of
the
merging
parties
confirmed
that
a
total
of
723
employees
were
retrenched
at
I
F
M
SA,
of
wh
i
ch
roughly
320
employees
worked
at the min
i
ng
operations and roughly 405 employees worked
at
the smelting
operations.
[5]
48.
They
also
indicated
that
i
n
contemplation
of
the
proposed
merger
i
t
was
possible to scale
back
the
i
nitial
retrenchments at Samancor
[6]
to
an extent but that the
majority
of the
savings
in
jobs
at
Samancor
was
the result
of
certain
restructurings
that
took
place
at
Samancor.
As
a
resu
l
t
of
these
i
mp
l
emented
measures,
the total
number
of forced
retrenchments
at
Samancor will
reduce
to approximately 320 employees
(approximately
60
people at the smelting
operations
and
h
ead
office
and
approximately
260 employees
at
the min
i
ng
operations).
[7]
49.
With
regards
to
potential
jobs being
created
at
the
I
FMSA
smelting operations, the
merging
parties
i
n
dicated
that
it
will
take
some time to ramp those operations up
until
they
are at their full operation. They said
that it is only expected that that will
be in
the
course of September 2016.
They
gave
a
rough
estimate that
approximately
300
employees
could
be
required
at
the
I
FMSA
smelting operations post-merger.
[8]
50.
They
however
i
n
dicated
that
i
t
was
more
d
i
fficult
to
quantify
potential
job opportunit
i
es
i
n
relation
to
the  min
i
ng
operations,
since
i
t
depended
on
certain
synergies
that
cou
l
d
be
assessed
only
once
the
n
ecessary
DMR
approvals
are
obtained.
[9]
They
nevertheless
confirmed
that
there
"will
be opportunities
on
the smelter
as
well as on the mine
side
on the one hand for our [Samancor] people that we retrenched, on the
other end
for
ex
/FM employees.
"
[10]
51.
We were
satisfied with the
responses
provided
by
the merging parties
to
the
employment
issues
and
concur
with
the
Commission's
finding that
the
proposed
merger would
not give
rise
to
any
signif
i
cant
publ
i
c
i
nterest
concerns.
Conclusion
52.
I
n l
i
ght
of the above, we concl
u
de
that the proposed transaction
i
s
un
like
l
y
to
substantially
prevent
or
l
essen
competition
i
n
any
relevant
market. Further,
we
agree
with
the
Commission's
assessment
that
proposed
transaction
is
u
nlikely
to resu
l
t
i
n
significant public
i
n
terest
concerns. We therefore approve the proposed transaction
uncon
d
i
tionally.
15
Ju
l
y
2016
Date
_______________________
Mr
AW Wessels
Ms
Mondo Mazwai and Professor
l
mraan
Valodia concurri
n
g
Tribunal
Researcher
:
l
peleng
Selaledi
F
or
the merging parties
:
Paul
Cleland
of Werksmans Attorneys
F
or
the Commission
:
Amanda
M
fuphi
[1]
Certain
information
claimed
as
confidential
by
the merging part
i
es
has
been
removed
from
the
public
version of our
Reasons
for Decision
.
[2]
This
i
ncludes
chrome consumed internally by the vertically integrated firms (for
purposes of ferrochrome production).
[3]
Also
see
Transcrip
t
,
pages
11
to
1
5
.
[4]
P
roduction
figures for 2013
-
2014
were used.
[5]
Transcript
,
page
28.
[6]
The
initial anticipated number of retrenchments
at
Samancor was in excess of
1
900.
[7]
Transcript
,
pages
29 and 30
.
[8]
Transcrip
pages 28
and
29
.
[9]
Transcrip
page 29
.
[10]
Transcrip
page 33
.