ARRIVA Plc and Lutonian Buses Ltd: A report on the
merger situation
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Summary
On 10 July 1998, the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry referred
to us (see Appendix 1.1) for investigation and report the acquisition
by ARRIVA plc (ARRIVA) of enterprises under the control of Lutonian Buses
Ltd (Lutonian). The effect of the merger is to increase ARRIVA's share
of bus miles in Bedfordshire (including the town of Luton) and Hertfordshire-which
we conclude constitutes a substantial part of the UK-from about 52 per
cent to about 54 per cent, satisfying the requirements for our investigation
under the Fair Trading Act 1973 (the Act).
In 1997, ARRIVA was the third largest operator of bus services in Great
Britain, its operations in Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire being carried
out primarily by its subsidiary ARRIVA the Shires Ltd (ARRIVA the Shires).
Within the borough of Luton, at the time of the merger ARRIVA the Shires
(together with its Challenger operation) accounted for 82 per cent of
the market, measured in terms of bus miles, and Lutonian for 13 per cent.
Between them, therefore, they accounted for almost all commercial bus
mileage in Luton. Lutonian operated services entirely within Luton, where
it had a number of minibus routes, serving streets where ARRIVA the Shires
did not initially operate but overlapping with the services of ARRIVA
the Shires on the main routes out of Luton town centre. It also charged
lower fares than ARRIVA the Shires.
In October 1997, ARRIVA the Shires introduced its own low-cost minibus
oper-ations-named Challenger-on exactly the same routes as the six most
profitable Lutonian routes, its services being timed to run shortly in
front of those of Lutonian, and its fares being below those of Lutonian,
hence further below those of ARRIVA the Shires' other services with which
it also overlapped. During its brief period of operation, Challenger was
run at a significant loss, and with no effective plan for achieving profitability.
Although there may have been other responses open to Lutonian, in our
view, based on the evidence we have received, it was primarily due to
the unduly aggressive competition from Challenger that the owners chose
to sell. We regard the purpose of Challenger as having been to drive Lutonian
out of the market or to restrict its competitive development rather than
to offer long-term competitive benefits to bus passengers in Luton.
In our view, Lutonian had been an effective competitor, providing a
spirit of enter-prise and competition, and a degree of innovation and
choice in the Luton market, which was valued by passengers. The merger
has resulted in the removal of the only independent competitor to ARRIVA
the Shires on intra-urban bus services in Luton. There has been, as a
result of the merger, a clear loss of a separate competitor and the elimination
of competition on many services in Luton (for which the current operation
of the Lutonian brand under ARRIVA's control does not compensate). Lutonian
had a record of establishing new routes for previously unserved areas,
and an objective to continue this. The merger has, therefore, resulted
also in the loss of Lutonian as a potential competitor in providing other
commercial services elsewhere in Luton.
We believe that there is insufficient prospect of competition from new
entry to provide a sufficient constraint to discourage ARRIVA from taking
advantage of its enhanced market power in Luton following the merger.
The main barrier to entry is, in our view, the prospect of retaliation
by the incumbent who, by controlling Lutonian, now occupies all the main
niches in the Luton bus market. In this case, the merger, following closely
upon the operation of Challenger, is itself likely to have reinforced
the reputation of ARRIVA the Shires for responding aggressively to competition,
so reinforcing such a barrier to entry.
We believe that the loss of competition and potential competition on
commercial services in Luton may be expected to result in higher fares
and/or lower choice and/or less innovation on routes and services and
poorer levels of service. We do not believe that any benefits from the
merger are sufficient to offset the adverse effects identified. We have,
therefore, concluded that the merger may be expected to operate against
the public interest.
We considered whether controls on such matters as fares or frequencies,
or measures to encourage new entry, would be sufficient to remedy those
adverse effects. In our view, they would fail to address adequately the
loss of future benefits of competition, service and innovation which Lutonian
as an independent operator might have been expected to con-tinue to provide.
We believe the detriments we have identified would be effectively remedied
only by requiring ARRIVA to divest Lutonian (which since the merger has
been maintained as a separate subsidiary) to a purchaser approved by the
Director General of Fair Trading (DGFT).
In order to facilitate such a divestment and to assure potential acquirers
that unduly aggressive conduct by ARRIVA in Luton would not be allowed
to hinder their establishment within the Luton bus market, divestment
would need to be linked with behavioural controls. In our view, such measures
should be designed to ensure that, in the short term, there would be no
action by ARRIVA that would hinder the ability of the divested business
to establish a financially viable operation in competition with ARRIVA;
in the longer term, appropriate measures to protect the divested business
from predatory or unduly aggressive conduct should apply. In implementing
such controls, attention may need to be given (to the extent the DGFT
thinks appropriate) to such matters as fare levels, the timing, introduction
and frequency of services, and other competitive relationships between
the respective operators.
Full text
Contents
|
Part I
|
Summary and Conclusions
|
| Chapter 1 |
Summary |
| Chapter 2 |
Conclusions |
Part II
|
Background and evidence
|
| Chapter 3 |
The merger situation and the companies involved |
| Chapter 4 |
The market |
| Chapter 5 |
Views of third parties |
| Chapter 6 |
Views of ARRIVA plc |
| |
List of signatories |
Appendices
|
|
| (The numbering of the appendices
indicates the chapters to which they relate) |
| 1.1 |
The reference and conduct of the inquiry |
| 3.1 |
ARRIVA: profit and loss accounts, 1993 to 1997 |
| 3.2 |
ARRIVA: balance sheets, 1993 to 1997 |
| 3.3 |
ARRIVA the Shires: profit and loss accounts, 1995 to
1997 |
| 3.4 |
ARRIVA the Shires: balance sheets, 1995 to 1997 |
| 3.5 |
Economic analysis of Challenger services and its implications |
| 3.6 |
Lutonian: profit and loss accounts, 1995 to 1998 |
| 3.7 |
Lutonian: balance sheets, 1995 to 1997 |
| 4.1 |
Comparative fares within Luton |
| 4.2 |
National market share by year in the bus industry since
1989 |
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