P&O Princess Cruises plc
and Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd: A report on the proposed
merger
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Summary
On 29 January 2002 the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry referred
to the Competition Commission (CC) for investigation and report (under
the merger provisions of the Fair Trading Act) the proposed merger between
P&O Princess Cruises PLC (POPC) and Royal Caribbean Cruises Limited
(RCCL). We were asked to report by 20 May 2002. Our terms of reference
are at Appendix 1.1.
POPC was incorporated in July 2000 as part of a demerger that split
The Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O) into two
separately-quoted public companies. POPC is the holding company for all
of the cruise lines formerly owned by P&O. It also owns a travel agency
in the UK and land-travel and hotel subsidiaries in the USA.
POPC accounts for about 23 per cent of all cruises taken by UK customers.
Most of them sail on P&O Cruises or Swan Hellenic, two lines that
are focused very largely on the UK, though some choose Princess Cruises,
another POPC line, which is based in Los Angeles and aimed mainly at North
Americans.
RCCL, which is based in Miami, is the world's second largest cruise
operator and owns two lines: Royal Caribbean International and Celebrity
Cruises. It sails to a range of destinations, though its main focus is
the Caribbean. Both its lines are focused mainly on North American customers,
though around 3 per cent of their customers are drawn from the UK.
In May 2000, RCCL acquired a 17 per cent stake in the UK tour operator
and travel agency, First Choice Holidays plc. The two companies also entered
into a joint venture, Island Cruises, which began to offer cruises to
British and European holidaymakers earlier this year.
The proposed transaction will involve POPC and RCCL being combined as
a dual-listed company with its shares being quoted on both the London
and New York Stock Exchanges. Both companies told us that all the cruise
lines that they currently owned would continue to be operated as separate
brands.
We began our inquiry by examining the considerable variety of cruise
holidays that are provided to customers in the UK by operators from a
wide range of countries. Although we were not able to reach a conclusion
on the appropriate product market for our inquiry, we did all agree that
the existence of a wider holiday market, and the availability of cruises
of types other than those operated by POPC and RCCL, both constrained
these companies' actions and limited commercial freedom-whether or not
they were regarded as being in the same market. We also agreed that there
were clear distinctions between the levels of quality and the national
styles provided by different types of cruises, whether or not they constituted
different markets.
We concluded that the geographic market for our inquiry was the UK,
ie cruises taken by passengers drawn from this country, irrespective of
whether they sailed on ships focused mainly on UK, US or European customers,
or of whether they embarked here or flew to an overseas port.
We then examined a number of possible product market scenarios, ranging
from a narrow to a broad definition. Although we found that the proposed
merger might give rise to potential concerns in some of these markets,
we also identified other factors that could offset or mitigate their effects.
The overall conclusion that we drew from our analysis was that the market
for UK cruise customers was characterized by growth, variety and new entry,
and that this could be expected to continue. The number of UK passengers
carried more than tripled between 1990 and 2000 and around one-third of
the berths provided in 2000 were being offered by operators that did not
enter the business until 1995 or later. Furthermore, between one-third
and one-quarter of UK passengers chose ships that were focused mainly
on North American or mainland European customers rather than lines aimed
at the domestic market. So, given this diversity and choice-and the widespread
view among industry commentators that cruising capacity will continue
to grow-we did not conclude that the proposed merger was likely to have
a significant impact on competition.
Accordingly, we concluded that the proposed merger could not be expected
to operate against the public interest.
Full text
Contents
|
Part I
|
Summary and Conclusions
|
| Chapter 1 |
Summary |
| Chapter 2 |
Conclusions |
Part II
|
Background and evidence
|
| Chapter 3 |
The industry background for cruise holidays |
| Chapter 4 |
The companies: history, finance and the proposed merger |
| Chapter 5 |
Analysis of the relevant market |
| Chapter 6 |
Views of main parties |
| Chapter 7 |
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 conduct of the inquiry |
| 3.1 |
The largest cruise companies worldwide, 2001 and 2006 |
| 3.2 |
POPC review of highlights of introduction and withdrawal
of capacity and entry of new operators, 1995 to 2000 |
| 3.3 |
Foreign holiday-making by UK customers, 1991 to 2000 |
| 3.4 |
Ship ratings and categories: active ocean fleet, mid-2001 |
| 3.5 |
Ocean-going cruise vessels: scheduled new buildings,
2002 to 2005 |
| 3.6 |
Orders pending for ocean-going vessels, 2003 to 2006
inclusive |
| 3.7 |
Vessel redeployments |
| 3.8 |
International passenger demand, 2001 to 2007 (end 2001) |
| 4.1 |
POPC: group profit and loss accounts, 1997 to 2001 |
| 4.2 |
POPC: group balance sheets, 1997 to 2001 |
| 4.3 |
POPC: group cash flow statements, 1997 to 2001 |
| 4.4 |
RCCL: consolidated statements of operations, 1997 to
2001 |
| 4.5 |
RCCL: consolidated balance sheets, 1997 to 2001 |
| 4.6 |
RCCL: consolidated statements of cash flow, 1997 to 2001 |
| 5.1 |
Assessing the profitability of an anticipated price rise
by POPC and RCCL |
| 5.2 |
Indicators of the quality of on-board experience for
ships of some cruise operators |
| 5.3 |
Items included in the price of some all-inclusive land-based
operators |
| 5.4 |
Share of passengers transported, by major destinations,
2000 |
| Glossary |
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