Coloplast A/S and SSL International plc: A report
on the merger situation
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Summary
On 14 January 2002 the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry referred
to us the completed acquisition by Coloplast A/S of the continence care
business of SSL International plc. We were asked to report by 13 May 2002.
Our terms of reference are set out in Appendix 1.1.
Coloplast A/S was founded in 1957 and is a Danish company that develops,
manufactures and markets ostomy products, continence care products, wound
dressings, skin-care products, breast forms, special dressings and special
textiles for women. It has a wholly-owned UK subsidiary, Coloplast Limited,
that distributes ostomy care, continence care and wound care products
in the UK.
SSL International plc was formed in 1944 and took its current name in
1999 following a merger with London International Group. In addition to
its continence care business, which was sold to Coloplast, SSL manufactures
and markets medical and consumer healthcare (including family planning)
products, footcare products, over-the-counter drugs and surgical products.
On 29 September 2001 Coloplast A/S acquired, for £80 million,
the continence care business of SSL International plc involving the design,
packaging, marketing, supply and distribution of intermittent catheters,
incontinence sheaths and leg and night bags for collection of urine (urobags)
and ancillary activities. As part of the transaction an agreement giving
SSL exclusive distribution rights in the UK for sheaths supplied by the
Mentor Corporation (Mentor), a US company, was novated in favour of Coloplast
A/S. This included exclusive distribution rights in the UK for Mentor's
market-leading silicon Clear Advantage sheath.
The overwhelming majority of intermittent catheters, sheaths and urobags
used in the UK are supplied under the National Health Service (NHS). The
market is divided into two sectors-hospitals and the community.
The hospitals sector represents about 10 per cent of the total cost
to the NHS of continence care products. However, it has an importance
for manufacturers going beyond this. First, there is a widespread belief
that hospital sales can serve as a gateway to community sales, because
users of incontinence products in hospitals often continue to use those
same products once in the community. Second, hospital trials and the use
of products within hospitals provide a route by which companies can increase
recognition and acceptance of their products by clinicians. Manufacturers
bid in response to periodic open tenders by the Purchasing and Supply
Agency (PASA) to have their products included on the National Contract
for hospitals in England, and under similar arrangements in other parts
of the UK.
The community sector accounts for about 90 per cent of the total cost
to the NHS of continence care products, which are obtained through pharmacies
or Dispensing Appliance Contractors (DACs). In order for dispensers to
be remunerated for appliances supplied under prescription in England and
Wales, the appliances must be listed in the Drug Tariff. Manufacturers
apply to the Department of Heath (DoH) for listing of their products and
negotiate to establish the price at which they will be included. Subsequent
price increases are controlled under an agreement between the DoH and
the Association of British Health-care Industries. There are similar arrangements
in Scotland and Northern Ireland.
We concluded that the relevant product markets are defined narrowly,
with intermittent catheters, sheaths and urobags in separate product markets
from each other, from other continence care products and from other treatments
for incontinence. The products included in those markets are those that
are listed on the Drug Tariff, or on the National Contract, and the equivalent
arrangements in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. We concluded that
the geographic market for these products is the UK.
As a result of the acquisition the market share in the UK of Coloplast
A/S and its subsidiaries (Coloplast) rose from 34 to 92 per cent for sheaths,
from 6 to 58 per cent for urobags and from 19 to 26 per cent for intermittent
catheters.
In our view the greatest effect on competition is in the market for
sheaths, where, in addition to giving Coloplast a very high market share,
the acquisition has resulted in the elimination of Coloplast's main competitor
and given it control of the market-leading brands of latex and non-latex
sheaths. All other suppliers of sheaths have small market shares, which
they have failed to grow over several years, and we saw no evidence that
would lead us to expect that they would become large players in the near
future. New entrants face manufacturing, marketing and regulatory barriers.
We found no similar combination of factors in the markets for urobags
and for intermittent catheters.
A number of Coloplast's competitors also expressed concern over its
acquisition of additional DAC outlets and of the Thackray nursing service.
We concluded that the impact of these does not give rise to competition
concerns in relation to the retail or wholesale of continence care products
in the UK, and in the absence of such concerns we do not judge that it
should give rise to concerns over vertical integration. We do not expect
that Coloplast will seek to curtail the independence of Thackray nurses
and their ability to recommend products of other manufacturers, which
would not appear to be in its commercial interest.
We considered the effects on the public interest in relation to the
supply of sheaths both to hospitals and to the community.
The price at which sheaths are supplied to NHS hospitals arises from
tendering pro cesses, and the purchasing power of PASA and the equivalent
bodies in other parts of the UK depends upon the availability of substitutes
from alternative suppliers. Due to concerns over latex allergy, PASA told
us that provided, as it expected, a full range of sizes was available
in non-latex sheaths, it would not envisage a need to include any latex
sheaths on the National Contract following the next tender round for which
it will be inviting bids in March/April 2003. We judge that the options
open to PASA at that time will not be sufficient to offer a realistic
alternative to inclusion of Coloplast non-latex sheaths on the National
Contract. As a result we expect that the acquisition will, through its
impact on competition, result in the cost of non-latex sheaths to NHS
hospitals in the UK being higher than would otherwise have been the case.
Despite the effect of the merger on competition in sheaths, we do not
expect the acquisition to lead to higher prices for sheaths in the community.
Prices are in effect controlled through the arrangements by which pharmacies
and DACs are remunerated under the Drug Tariff in England and Wales, and
under equivalent arrangements in Scotland and Northern Ireland. Nor do
we expect any adverse effect on innovation quality and service. Whilst
we do not believe that some degree of product rationalization can be ruled
out, we do not expect the rate of product withdrawal as a result of the
merger to be detrimental to the public interest.
We do not believe that the detriment identified in paragraph 1.13 will
be outweighed by any benefits to the public interest. We therefore conclude
that the acquisition by Coloplast of the continence care business of SSL
is expected to operate against the public interest.
We believe that it would be possible to impose a price cap on the supply
of Coloplast non-latex sheaths to NHS hospitals until the expiry of the
Mentor agreement in 2007, so as to ensure that prices do not rise in the
interim. However, we take the view that amending the Mentor agreement
in relation to Clear Advantage to facilitate competition in the supply
of non-latex sheaths offers a better approach providing that it can be
achieved without unreasonable economic damage to Coloplast. We further
take the view that changes to the Mentor agreement would best be achieved
through negotiation between Coloplast and Mentor. The aim of the negotiations
should be to secure either divestment of the Clear Advantage brand, leaving
Coloplast with the right to source the silicon sheaths but market them
under a different name, or divestment of the Clear Advantage brand and
product, which would involve terminating the Mentor agreement with respect
to the silicon sheaths. Either of these would appear to us to represent
an acceptable way to address the detriment that we have identified.
We accordingly recommend that Coloplast be required to give an undertaking
to the Director General of Fair Trading (DGFT) that it will use its best
endeavours to negotiate an agreement with Mentor accordingly. We further
recommend that should no agreement acceptable to the DGFT be in place
within six months of the date of publication of this recommendation, then
the DGFT take such other action as he deems appropriate, having regard
to the specific nature of the detriment we have identified, the need for
speedy resolution in view of the impending hospital tender round, the
effect of the acquisition by Mentor of the urology business of Sims Portex
announced on 6 May 2002, and the need for any action to be proportionate.
A price control remedy, together with an undertaking not to renew the
Mentor agreement beyond 2007, will continue, despite its drawbacks, to
be among the options available for consideration.
Full text
Contents
|
Part I
|
Summary and Conclusions
|
| Chapter 1 |
Summary |
| Chapter 2 |
Conclusions |
Part II
|
Background and evidence
|
| Chapter 3 |
The companies and the merger |
| Chapter 4 |
The market for continence care products |
| Chapter 5 |
Views of the main parties |
| Chapter 6 |
Views of third parties |
| |
List of signatories |
Appendices
|
|
| (The numbering of the appendices indicates
the chapters to which they relate) |
| 1.1 |
The reference and background |
| 3.1 |
Coloplast A/S: financial statements |
| 4.1 |
Types of urinary incontinence |
| 4.2 |
Major participants in the continence care industry |
| 4.3 |
Continence care product details |
| Glossary |
|
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