SUMMARY OF STAGECOACH HOLDINGS PLC AND
SB HOLDINGS LIMITED: A REPORT ON THE MERGER SITUATION
In December 1994 Stagecoach Holdings plc (Stagecoach) acquired a 20
per cent holding in the shares of S B Holdings Limited (SBH). Under the
reference (Appendix 1.1) we have to decide whether, as a result of this
transaction, a merger situation qualifying for investigation has been
created and, if so, whether that situation operates or may be expected
to operate against the public interest.
SBH was created to take over the municipal bus operation of Strathclyde
Regional Council in 1993. In the year to end-March 1994 the company generated
turnover of 58.2 million and an operating profit of 2.7 million.
SBH is owned by its employees and directors, apart from Stagecoach's
20 per cent shareholding. In October 1994 SBH acquired the whole of the
share capital of Kelvin Central Buses Limited (Kelvin). That transaction
has been the subject of another reference to us, on which we are reporting
separately. SBH now has a fleet of some 1,300 buses operating mainly
in Glasgow and the outlying towns to the north and east of the Glasgow
conurbation.
Stagecoach, whose origins are in the private sector, has grown rapidly
since deregulation of the bus industry in 1986, chiefly by acquiring
former public sector companies either on their initial privatization
or subsequently. It was floated on the Stock Exchange in April 1993 and
is now the largest bus operator in the UK, where it has some 5,700 buses.
Stagecoach's world-wide turnover is now 400 million a year, of which 360 million
is in the UK.
We conclude that a merger situation qualifying for investigation has
been created. First, contrary to the two companies' submissions we believe
that, as a result of the transaction, Stagecoach has the ability to exercise
material influence over SBH's policy. Secondly, the share of supply test
is satisfied in a substantial part of the UKthe region of Strathclydein
that SBH supplies 51 per cent of bus services in this region and subsidiaries
of Stagecoach supply 10 per cent.
SBH is by far the largest operator in the area with over two-thirds
of the market in several districts in and around Glasgow. Surrounding
the area, however, there are subsidiaries of three substantial operators,
each larger than SBH. The presence of powerful adjacent operators constitutes
the main safeguard against any attempt by SBH to abuse its dominant position.
Stagecoach, the biggest of these three, was about to enter into active
competition with SBH before acquiring its 20 per cent stake. The merger
situation has eliminated the likelihood of competition between Stagecoach
and SBH and deterred another of the adjacent operators from entering
into further competition with SBH for the time being. The remaining constraints
will not in our view put enough pressure on SBH to maintain services
and keep down fares.
There are unlikely to be any benefits to the public interest such as
to offset the detriment to competition, and we conclude that the merger
situation is against the public interest. We recommend by way of remedy
that Stagecoach should be required to divest itself of its shareholding
in SBH.
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Last Revised 04/99
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