March UK Ltd and the home shopping
and home delivery businesses of GUS plc: A report on the merger
situation
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Summary
On 25 September 2003, the Secretary of State for Trade and
Industry referred to the CC for investigation and report (under
the merger provisions of the Fair Trading Act 1973) the acquisition
of the home shopping and home delivery businesses of GUS plc
(GUS) by March UK Ltd (March), a body corporate under the
control of Sir David and Sir Frederick Barclay, who also control
Littlewoods Ltd (Littlewoods). We were asked to report by
23 December 2003. Our terms of reference are at Appendix 1.1.
The last time that we or our predecessors considered home
shopping was in 1997, when the Monopolies and Mergers Commission
produced a report (Cm 3761) on the proposed merger between
The Littlewoods Organisation plc and Freemans plc (a subsidiary
of Sears plc).
Littlewoods, which was acquired by Sir David and Sir Frederick
Barclay in November 2002, owns a number of subsidiary companies
that operate principally in the areas of home shopping (including
agency and direct mail order), home delivery and high street
retailing.
GUS is a broadly-based retail and business services group,
which, at the start of this year, controlled three major businesses:
Experian, a large information services company; Burberry,
a high street retailer (in which it had a controlling shareholding);
and the Argos Retail Group, a business that incorporated catalogue
retailing, home shopping—again including agency and
direct mail order—and home delivery.
On 27 May 2003, GUS entered into a sale and purchase agreement
with March—a newly incorporated UK company controlled
by Sir David and Sir Frederick Barclay and under the Chairmanship
of David Simons, who was also Chairman of Littlewoods. Under
the agreement, March agreed to acquire, inter alia, all of
the issued share capital of the GUS subsidiaries that made
up its UK home shopping and home delivery businesses, in return
for £550 million, which was paid partly in cash (£410
million) and partly in the form of convertible loan stock
(£140 million) payable in three years.
Having established our jurisdiction in this case, we began
our inquiry by analysing the operations of Littlewoods and
March, and concluded that the parts of their businesses with
the potential to give rise to competition concerns were home
shopping and home delivery within the UK.
We then proceeded to examine both of these activities in
detail. For home shopping, we concluded that the relevant
economic market for our inquiry was a wide one in which the
companies owned by Littlewoods and March were constrained
by competition from other forms of home shopping and high
street retailing; and that the geographic market should be
the UK. For home delivery, we concluded that the relevant
economic market for our inquiry was all UK-wide business-to-consumer
(B2C) services delivering parcels in the weight range between
350 g and 32 kg—though we accepted that the degree of
competition might vary at different levels within that range.
We then went on to consider whether the acquisition operates,
or may be expected to operate, against the public interest.
On home shopping, we considered:
(a) the implications for consumers, particularly
those who were credit constrained;
(b) prices, particularly in agency mail order;
and
(c) the longer-term prospects for the continuation
of agency as a retail channel, given its rate of decline in
recent years.
On home delivery, we looked at:
(a) the implications of the merger for customers,
including those of Littlewoods’ and March’s home
delivery businesses, Business Express Network Limited and
Reality Group Limited;
(b) the prospects for others entering the B2C market
from outside, or for those already within it expanding their
operations; and
(c) the potential offered by the process of liberalization
within the postal service that is now under way.
We also examined the synergies and other benefits that might
be expected to result from the acquisition and from the eventual
integration of Littlewoods and March, and to whom they might
be expected to accrue.
On home shopping, we reached the unanimous conclusion that
the merger situation that has been created may be expected
to benefit customers and may not be expected to lead to a
significant lessening of competition when compared with the
expected alternative scenario, which is the former GUS businesses
being wound down or otherwise ceasing to be effective competitors.
On home delivery, four of us concluded that the merger cannot
be expected to lead to a significant lessening of competition,
by comparison with the expected alternative of a declining
and disappearing Reality. Having regard to the benefits to
consumers that we identified, we all concluded that the merger
as a whole does not, and may 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 merger situation and the companies involved |
| Chapter 4 |
The market—home shopping |
| Chapter 5 |
The market—home delivery services |
| Chapter 6 |
The views of March UK Ltd and Littlewoods Ltd |
| Chapter 7 |
Views of other parties |
| |
List of signatories |
Volume 3 |
Appendices |
| (The numbering of the appendices indicates
the chapters to which they relate) |
| 1.1 |
The reference and background |
| 3.1 |
Undertakings given by March UK Ltd and LW Investments
Ltd to the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry |
| 3.2 |
Equation and reality: combined balance sheets |
| 3.3 |
Logistics services agreement |
| 4.1 |
NOP survey commissioned by the CC |
| 4.2 |
Consumer survey by OXERA submitted by USDAW |
| 4.3 |
Ownership and usage of agency mail-order catalogues |
| 4.4 |
‘Life-style/lifestage’ classification systems |
| 6.1 |
March’s and Littlewoods’ comments on the
Kempson research, November 2003 |
| 6.2 |
March’s and Littlewoods’ analysis of the
Families and Children Survey |
| 7.1 |
Otto: comments on OXERA survey |
| 7.2 |
Redcats: comments on OXERA survey |
| 7.3 |
N Brown: comments on NOP survey |
| 7.4 |
N Brown: comments on OXERA survey |
| 7.5 |
Members of Parliament |
| Glossary |
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