United States v. Inco Limited and Falconbridge Limited-Proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement, 41237-41249 [06-6361]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 139 / Thursday, July 20, 2006 / Notices
stating that the proposed project is
likely to jeopardize the continued
existence of UR cutthroat trout and
result in adverse modification of
proposed critical habitat. A reasonable
and prudent alternative was identified
by NMFS to minimize the take of UR
cutthroat trout.
Because of the listing of the UR
cutthroat trout Reclamation determined
that a supplement to the EIS was
necessary. A Notice of Intent to prepare
a supplement to the EIS was published
in the Federal Register (62 FR 67890,
December 30, 1997). A subsequent
notice cancelled the Supplement (63 FR
52286, September 30, 1998) when the
County suspended its plans to develop
the project because, at that time, there
was no process for obtaining a fish
passage waiver from the State of Oregon.
Following a scientific review of the
coastal cutthroat populations in
California, Washington and Oregon, the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
published a final rule in the Federal
Register (65 FR 24420, April 26, 2000)
delisting the UR cutthroat trout. The
Umpqua River Ecologically Significant
Unit (ESU) of the coastal cutthroat trout
was removed from the List of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
because of a determination that the
population, formerly identified as an
ESU of the species, is part of a larger
population segment that previously was
determined to be neither endangered
nor threatened as defined by the
Endangered Species Act. Critical Habitat
designations for this population were
also removed.
A scoping letter to request assistance
in identifying any new information or
effects that should be considered in he
supplemental EIS will be prepared early
this summer and sent to a list of
previously interested parties. Please
contact Robert Hamilton at the address
given in the ADDRESSES section of this
notice, or via e-mail at
Milltownhill@pn.usbr.gov if you wish to
receive a copy of the scoping letter. No
scoping meetings are planned at this
time.
Reclamation welcomes written
comments related to the environmental
effects of the proposed project.
Reclamation’s practice is to make
comments, including names and home
addresses of respondents, available for
public review. Individual respondents
may request that we withhold their
home address from public disclosure,
which we will honor to the extent
allowable by law. There may be other
circumstances in which we would
withhold a respondent’s identity from
public disclosure, as allowable by law.
If you wish us to withhold your name
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and/or address, you must state this
prominently at the beginning of your
comment. We will make all submissions
from organizations or businesses, and
from individuals identifying themselves
as representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses, available
for public disclosure in their entirety.
Dated: July 14, 2006.
J. William McDonald,
Regional Director, Pacific Northwest Region.
[FR Doc. 06–6368 Filed 7–19–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MN–M
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States v. Inco Limited and
Falconbridge Limited—Proposed Final
Judgment and Competitive Impact
Statement
Notice is hereby given pursuant to the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act,
15 U.S.C. 16(b) through (h), that a
Complaint, proposed Final Judgment,
Hold Separate Stipulation and Order,
and Competitive Impact Statement have
been filed with the United States
District Court for the District of
Columbia in United States v. Inco
Limited and Falconbridge Limited, Civil
Action No. 1:06CV01151. On June 23,
2006, the United States filed a
Complaint which sought to enjoin Inco
Limited (‘‘Inco’’) from acquiring
Falconbridge Limited (‘‘Falconbridge’’).
The Complaint alleged that Inco’s
acquisition of Falconbridge would
substantially lessen competition in the
development, manufacture, and sale of
High-Purity Nickel in violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. 18, throughout the
United States. The proposed Final
Judgment, filed June 26, 2006, requires
defendants to divest Falconbridge’s
Nikkelverk Refinery located in
Kristiansand, Norway, and certain
marketing offices and related assets, to
preserve competition in the sale of
High-Purity Nickel. A Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order, entered by the
Court on June 28, 2006, requires
defendants to maintain, prior to
divestiture, the competitive
independence and economic viability of
the assets subject to divestiture under
the proposed Final Judgment. A
Competitive Impact Statement filed by
the United States describes the
Complaint, proposed Final Judgment,
Hold Separate Stipulation and Order,
and the remedies available to private
litigants who may have been injured by
the alleged violations.
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Copies of the Complaint, proposed
Final Judgment, Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order, and Competitive
Impact Statement are available for
inspection at the United States
Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, 325 Seventh Street, NW.,
Room 215, Washington, DC 20530,
(telephone: 202–514–2481), and at the
Clerk’s Office of the United States
District Court for the District of
Columbia, Washington, DC. Copies of
these materials may be obtained upon
request and payment of a copying fee.
Public comment is invited within the
statutory 60-day comment period. Such
comments and responses thereto will be
published in the Federal Register and
filed with the Court. Comments should
be directed to Maribeth Petrizzi, Chief,
Litigation II Section, Antitrust Division,
U.S. Department of Justice, 1401 H
Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington,
DC 20530, (telephone: 202–307–0924).
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations.
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
United States of America Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, 1401 H
Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC
20530, Plaintiff v. INCO Limited, 145
King Street West, Suite 1500, Toronto,
ON, Canada M5H 4B7, and
Falconbridge Limited, 207 Queens Quay
West Suite 800 Toronto, ON, Canada
M5J lA7, Defendants.
Case Number: 1:06CV01151, Judge:
Rosemary M. Collyer, Deck Type:
Antitrust, Date Stamp: 06/23/2006.
Complaint
Plaintiff United States of America
(‘‘United States’’), acting under the
direction of the Attorney General of the
United States, brings this civil antitrust
action to obtain equitable relief against
defendants, Inco Limited (‘‘Inco’’) and
Falconbridge Limited (‘‘Falconbridge’’).
Plaintiff complains and alleges as
follows:
I. Introduction
1. The United States brings this action for
injunctive relief under Section 15 of the
Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to
prevent and restrain Inco and Falconbridge
from violating Section 7 of the Clayton Act,
15 U.S.C. 18. The United States seeks to
prevent the proposed acquisition of
Falconbridge by Inco because that acquisition
would substantially lessen competition in the
development, manufacture, and sale of
refined nickel of sufficient purity and
chemical composition that it can be utilized
in super alloys used for safety-critical
applications (hereinafter ‘‘High-Purity
Nickel’’). The use of High-Purity Nickel is
particularly important in making such
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products as the rotating parts of jet engines,
which are often called ‘‘safety-critial parts.’’
2. Inco and Falconbridge are two of the
world’s leading producers of refined nickel,
a metallic element that is valued for its
resistance to corrosion, stress, and high
temperatures. Inco and Falconbridge are also
by far the world’s two largest producers of
High-Purity Nickel.
3. High-Purity Nickel is primarily
distinguished from other refined nickel
because it contains lower amounts of certain
impurities commonly referred to as trace
elements. In safety-critical parts, for example,
the presence of trace elements can make the
parts less resistant to the extreme stresses
and temperatures under which they operate
and may eventually lead to engine failure.
4. Inco’s proposed acquisition of
Falconbridge would reduce the number of
significant worldwide High-Purity Nickel
suppliers from three to two and create a
company with over 80 percent of the world’s
sales of High-Purity Nickel.
5. Unless the proposed acquisition is
enjoined, competition in High-Purity Nickel
that has benefitted customers will be
substantially reduced. The proposed
acquisition would likely result in higher
prices, lower quality, less innovation, and
less favorable delivery terms in the HighPurity Nickel market.
Falconbridge reported total sales of
approximately $7.7 billion.
11. Falconbridge’s primary nickel mining
and processing facilities are located in
Ontario, Canada, although it also has such
facilities worldwide. Falconbridge’s only
High-Purity Nickel refining operation is
located in Kristiansand, Norway.
Falconbridge’s High-Purity Nickel is shipped
to customers worldwide, including the
United States.
II. The Defendants
6. Defendant Inco is a Canadian
corporation with its principal place of
business in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Inco’s
High-Purity Nickel sales in the United States
are made through its wholly-owned
subsidiary, International Nickel, Inc. (‘‘INI’’).
INI is a Delaware corporation with its
principal place of business in Saddlebrook,
New Jersey.
7. Inco is one of the largest mining
companies in the world. Inco mines,
processes, and refines various minerals,
including nickel. Inco also produces cobalt
and platinum group metals (‘‘PGMs’’) as byproducts of its nickel production. In 2005,
Inco reported total sales of approximately
$4.7 billion.
8. Inco’s main nickel mining, processing,
and refining operations are located in
Canada, although it owns mines and
processing facilities worldwide. Inco’s HighPurity Nickel refining operations are located
in Ontario, Canada, and Wales, United
Kingdom. Inco’s High-Purity Nickel is
shipped to customers worldwide, including
the United States.
9. Defendant Falconbridge is a Canadian
corporation with its principal place of
business in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Falconbridge’s High-Purity Nickel sales in
the United States are made through its
wholly-owned subsidiary, Falconbridge U.S.,
Inc. (‘‘FUS’’). FUS is a Pennsylvania
corporation with its principal place of
business in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
10. Like Inco, Falconbridge is one of the
world’s largest mining companies.
Falconbridge mines, processes, and refines
various minerals, including nickel and
copper. Falconbridge also produces cobalt
and PGMs as by-products of both its nickel
and copper production. In 2005,
IV. The Proposed Transaction
15. Pursuant to a Support Agreement dated
October 10, 2005, Inco stated that it intended
to offer to purchase all of the common shares
of Falconbridge not currently owned by it.
Also pursuant to that Support Agreement,
Falconbridge’s Board of Directors stated that
it had determined that it is in the best
interests of Falconbridge to support the offer,
recommend acceptance of Inco’s offer to
holders of the common shares of
Falconbridge, and use its reasonable best
efforts to permit Inco’s offer to be successful,
on the terms and conditions contained in the
Support Agreement.
16. On October 24, 2005, Inco made a
forinal offer to purchase all of the
outstanding common shares of Falconbridge,
a transaction now valued at over $15 billion
dollars. Inco’s offer to purchase, originally
open for acceptance until December 23, 2005,
has been extended until June 30, 2006.
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III. Jurisdiction and Venue
12. Plaintiff United States brings this
action against defendants Inco and
Falconbridge under Section 15 of the Clayton
Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to prevent
and restrain the violation by defendants of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
13. Defendants produce and sell HighPurity Nickel in the flow of interstate
commerce. Their activities in developing,
producing, and selling High-Purity Nickel
substantially affect interstate commerce. This
Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this
action pursuant to Section 12 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 22; and 28 U.S.C. 1331,
1337(a), and 1345.
14. Venue is proper in this District
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1391(d). Inco and
Falconbridge have consented to venue and
personal jurisdiction in this judicial district.
V. Reduced Competition in the High-Purity
Nickel Market
A. The Relevant Product Market
17. Nickel is a metallic element that is
particularly resistant to high temperatures,
high stresses, and corrosion. Nickel is often
combined with other materials to form alloys
with particular performance characteristics.
These performance characteristics depend on
the amount of nickel and other elements
contained in the particular alloy.
18. As a general proposition, as the amount
of nickel in the alloy increases, the more
resistant the alloy is to heat and stress. The
most common alloy using nickel is stainless
steel, which contains, on average,
approximately 10 percent nickel and is used
in applications demanding the least amount
of the resistence to heat and stress that nickel
provides.
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19. At the other end of the spectrum are
so-called super alloys. Super alloys generally
contain between 50 and 70 percent nickel, as
well as specific amounts of other elements,
including iron, cobalt, and chromium, that
combine to give the alloy specific
performance characteristics. Super alloys are
primarily used in chemical processing plants,
medical applications, industrial power
generation, and various aerospace
applications.
20. Certain products made from super
alloys, such as the rotating parts of jet
engines, are considered safety-critical parts.
For these parts, it is vital that, in addition to
containing the proper amount of nickel, the
super alloy be as free as possible from certain
trace elements that could compromise the
performance of the product and result in
serious problems, like engine failure. For
example, designers of jet engines severely
restrict the maximum amounts of trace
elements that can be contained in superalloys
used to produce moving parts for jet engines.
21. The nickel that meets demanding
safety-critical requirements is High-Purity
Nickel. High-Purity Nickel is refined nickel
of sufficient purity and chemical
composition that it can be utilized in super
alloys used for safety-critical applications.
Only a small portion of the refined nickel
produced in the world has sufficient metal
content and purity to qualify as High-Purity
Nickel.
22. Super alloy makers must use HighPurity Nickel to meet the specifications for
safety-critical parts. Super alloy makers do
not have the in-house capability to remove
sufficient quantities of undesirable trace
elements from non-High-Purity Nickel to
permit them to produce alloys that meet the
specifications for safety-critical parts.
23. A small but significant post-acquisition
increase in the price of High-Purity Nickel
would not cause the purchasers of safetycritical parts to substitute non-High-Purity
Nickel or elements other than nickel so as to
make such a price increase unprofitable.
24. Accordingly, the development,
manufacture, and sale of High-Purity Nickel
is a line of commerce and a relevant product
market for purposes of analyzing this
acquisition under Section 7 of the Clayton
Act.
B. The Relevant Geographic Market
25. All of the High-Purity Nickel sold in
the world is mined, processed, and refined
outside of the United States. Both Inco and
Falconbridge sell High-Purity Nickel
throughout the world. Both companies
import High-Purity Nickel into the United
States and sell that nickel to customers
located throughout the United States.
26. Accordingly, the world is the relevant
geographic market within the meaning of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
C. Concentration
27. The market for High-Purity Nickel is
highly concentrated. Inco and Falconbridge
are by far the two largest producers of HighPurity Nickel sold worldwide and in the
United States.
28. Aside from Inco and Falconbridge, only
three companies have demonstrated any
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ability to produce High-Purity Nickel. One of
these companies consistently produces HighPurity Nickel, but its available capacity is
substantially less than that of either Inco or
Falconbridge and it cannot economically
increase its capacity. The other two
companies are not substantial competitors in
the High-Purity Nickel market. While both
have substantial capacity to make non-HighPurity Nickel and both have produced small
amounts of High-Purity Nickel, their ability
to make High-Purity Nickel, and to make it
on a consistent basis, is very limited.
29. Inco accounts for at least 40 percent of
the worldwide sales of High-Purity Nickel.
Similarly, Falconbridge accounts for at least
40 percent of the worldwide sales of HighPurity Nickel.
30. The market for High-Purity Nickel
would become substantially more
concentrated if Inco acquires Falconbridge.
Combined, Inco and Falconbridge would
account for over 80 percent of worldwide
High-Purity Nickel sales. Using a measure of
market concentration called the HerfindahlHirschman Index (‘‘HHI’’) (defined and
explained in Appendix A), the proposed
transaction will increase the HHI in the
market for High-Purity Nickel by
approximately 3,200 points to a postacquisition level of approximately 6,800,
well in excess of levels that raise significant
antitrust concerns.
D. Anticompetitive Effects
1. The Proposed Transaction Will Harm
Competition in the Market for High-Purity
Nickel.
31. High-Purity Nickel customers generally
view Inco’s and Falconbridge’s High-Purity
Nickel as their only available options and do
not view the products of other producers as
viable alternatives for High-Purity Nickel due
to concerns relating to the other producers’
quality, capacity, and reliability.
32. The vigorous and aggressive
competition between Inco and Falconbridge
in the production and sale of High-Purity
Nickel has benefitted customers. Inco and
Falconbridge have competed directly in
terms of price, quality, innovation, and
delivery terms.
33. The proposed acquisition will
eliminate the competition between Inco and
Falconbridge, reduce the number of
significant suppliers of High-Purity Nickel
from three to two, and substantially increase
the likelihood that Inco will unilaterally
increase the price of High-Purity Nickel to a
significant number of customers.
34. Inco and Falconbridge have the ability
to increase prices to certain customers of
High-Purity Nickel. Some customers must
purchase High-Purity Nickel because they
use it in super alloys used for safety-critical
applications. These customers do not have
the ability to substitute any other product for
High-Purity Nickel. Inco and Falconbridge
are able to determine their High-Purity
Nickel customers’ end-uses and identify
which customers are purchasing High-Purity
Nickel specifically for super alloys used for
safety-critical applications.
35. Inco and Falconbridge can, therefore,
charge customers that are purchasing HighPurity Nickel for super alloys used for safety-
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critical applications a higher price than
customers that are purchasing High-Purity
Nickel for other uses. Without the
competitive constraint of head-to-head
competition between Inco and Falconbridge,
Inco post-merger will have a greater ability to
exercise market-power by raising prices to
companies that purchase High-Purity Nickel
for super alloys used for safety-critical
applications.
36. The other High-Purity Nickel producers
do not have the incentive or the ability,
individually or collectively, to effectively
constrain a unilateral exercise of market
power by Inco after the acquisition.
37. The transaction will therefore
substantially lessen competition in the
market for High-Purity Nickel, which is
likely to lead to higher prices, lower quality,
less innovation, and less favorable delivery
terms for the ultimate consumers of such
products, in violation of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act.
2. Entry Is Not Likely To Deter the Exercise
of Market Power
38. Successful entry or expansion into the
development, manufacture, and sale of HighPurity Nickel is difficult, time-consuming,
and costly. Companies not currently
producing nickel of any kind would require
roughly three to five years and the
expenditure of at least $100 million to build
a refinery to produce a finished nickel
product. In addition to building the refinery,
the new entrant, if not vertically integrated,
would also have to secure nickel feedstock to
refine.
39. The cost of entering the High-Purity
Nickel market is even greater than the cost
of entering the refined nickel market
generally. A new entrant into the High-Purity
Nickel market would have to invest in
additional equipment and processes to
enable it to extract sufficient undesirable
trace elements to produce the nickel required
by makers of super alloys used for safetycritical applications. Further, if not vertically
integrated, a new entrant would have to
secure nickel feedstock of sufficient quality
to be able to refine High-Purity Nickel.
40. Even companies that currently produce
non-High-Purity Nickel would require an
investment of millions of dollars and several
years to modify their facilities and processes
to be capable of producing High-Purity
Nickel. These companies would not invest
the substantial time and money necessary to
modify their facilities and processes to
produce High-Purity Nickel in response to a
small but significant increase in the price of
High-Purity Nickel.
41. Moreover, it is not sufficient simply to
be able to produce High-Purity Nickel. A new
entrant in the High-Purity Nickel market
would have to be able to produce High-Purity
Nickel in sufficient quantities with
sufficiently consistent purity levels that
customers could depend on it to provide the
amounts of High-Purity Nickel needed at the
appropriate time. Achieving such capability
could require a substantial investment in
time and money by a company seeking to
enter the High-Purity Nickel market.
42. Therefore, entry or expansion by any
other firm into the High-Purity Nickel market
would not be timely, likely, or sufficient to
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defeat an anticompetitive price increase in
the event that Inco acquires Falconbridge.
VI. The Proposed Acquisition Violates
Section 7 of the Clayton Act
43. The proposed acquisition of
Falconbridge by Inco would substantially
lessen competition and tend to create a
monopoly in interstate trade and commerce
in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act,
15 U.S.C. 18.
44. Unless restrained, the transaction will
have the following anticompetitive effects,
among others:
a. Actual and potential competition in the
world market, including the United States,
between Inco and Falconbridge in the
development, manufacture, and sale of HighPurity Nickel will be eliminated;
b. Competition generally in the
development, manufacture, and sale of HighPurity Nickel will be substantially lessened;
and
c. Prices for High-Purity Nickel will likely
increase, the quality of High-Purity Nickel
will likely decline, innovation relating to
High-Purity Nickel will likely decline, and
the delivery terms currently offered in the
High-Purity Nickel market will likely become
less favorable to the customer.
VII. Request for Relief
45. Plaintiff requests that:
a. Inco’s proposed acquisition of
Falconbridge be adjudged and decreed to be
unlawful and in violation of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18;
b. Defendants and all persons acting on
their behalf be permanently enjoined and
restrained from consummating the proposed
acquisition or from entering into or carrying
out any contract, agreement, plan, or
understanding, the effect of which would be
to combine Inco with the operations of
Falconbridge;
c. Plaintiff be awarded its costs for this
action; and
d. Plaintiff receive such other and further
relief as the Court deems just and proper.
Dated: June 23, 2006.
Respectfully submitted.
For Plaintiff United States of America:
Thomas O. Barnett,
Assistant Attorney General, D.C. Bar
#426840.
David L. Meyer,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General, for Civil
Enforcement, D.C. Bar #414420.
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations and Civil
Enforcement.
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section, D.C. Bar #435204.
Karen Y. Phillips-Savoy,
Dando B. Cellini,
Jillian E. Charles (D.C. Bar #459052),
James K. Foster, Jr.,
Christine A. Hill (D.C. Bar #461048/inactive),
Tara M. Shinnick,
Robert W. Wilder,
Attorneys, U.S. Department of Justice,
Antitrust Division, Litigation II Section, 1401
H Street. NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC
20530, Tel: (202) 307–0924.
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Appendix A—Herfindahl-Hirschman Index
Calculations
‘‘HHI’’ means the Herfindahl-Hirschman
Index, a commonly accepted measure of
market concentration. It is calculated by
squaring the market share of each firm
competing in the market and then summing
the resulting numbers. For example, for a
market consisting of four firms with shares of
thirty, thirty, twenty, and twenty percent, the
HHI is 2600 (302 + 302 + 202 + 202 = 2600).
The HHI takes into a ccount the relative size
and distribution of the firms in a market and
approaches zero when a market consists of a
large number of firms of relatively equal size.
The HHI increases both as the number of
firms in the market decreases and as the
disparity in size between those firms
increases.
Markets in which the HHI is between 1000
and 1800 points are considered to be
moderately concentrated and those in which
the HHI is in excess of 1800 points are
considered to be highly concentrated.
Transactions that increase the HHI by more
than 100 points in highly concentrated
markets presumptively raise antitrust
concerns under the Horizontal Merger
Guidelines issued by the U.S. Department of
Justice and the Federal Trade Commission.
See Horizontal Merger Guidelines § 1.51.
Final Judgment
Whereas, plaintiff, United States of
America, filed its Complaint on June 23,
2006, and plaintiff and defendants, Inco
Limited and Falconbridge Limited, by their
respective attorneys, have consented to the
entry of this Final Judgment without trial or
adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and
without this Final Judgment constituting any
evidence against or admission by any party
regarding any issue of fact or law;
And Whereas, defendants agree to be
bound by the provisions of this Final
Judgment pending its approval by the Court;
And Whereas, the essence of this Final
Judgment is the prompt and certain
divestiture of certain rights or assets by the
defendants to assure that competition is not
substantially lessened;
And Whereas, plaintiff requires defendants
to make certain divestitures and enter into
the Supply Agreement and provide any
Alternative Acquirer the Third-Party
Feedstock Option for the purpose of
remedying the loss of competition alleged in
the Complaint;
And Whereas, defendants have represented
to the United States that the divestitures, the
Supply Agreement, and the Third-Party
Feedstock Option required below can and
will be made and that defendants will later
raise no claim of hardship or difficulty as
grounds for asking the Court to modify any
of the divestiture provisions contained
below;
Now Therefore, before any testimony is
taken, without trial or adjudication of any
issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
parties, it is Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed:
I. Jurisdiction
This Court has jurisdiction over the subject
matter of and each of the parties to this
action. The Complaint states a claim upon
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which relief may be granted against
defendants under Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 18.
II. Definitions
As used in this Final Judgment:
A. ‘‘Acquirer’’ means LionOre, the entity to
whom defendants shall divest the Divested
Business.
B. ‘‘Acquirer Shares’’ means the issuance
to Falconbridge of no more than 19.99
percent or 49,118,057 of the outstanding
common shares of the Acquirer at the
completion of the purchase and sale of the
Divested Business to the Acquirer.
C. ‘‘Acquisition of Falconbridge’’ means:
(a) the condition that Inco has taken up and
paid for such number of Falconbridge
common shares, validly deposited and not
withdrawn at the expiry time of Inco’s Offer
to Purchase all of the Outstanding Shares of
Falconbridge, dated October 24,2005, as
amended, that, together with any
Falconbridge common shares directly or
indirectly owned by Inco, constitutes at least
50.01% of the Falconbridge common shares
on a fully-diluted basis at the expiry time or
(b) Inco’s acquisition of control of
Falconbridge by any other means.
D. ‘‘Alternative Acquirer’’ means an
Acquirer other than LionOre that is in the
metals mining or processing business and is
able to supply, on a long-term basis,
sufficient Feedstock to assure the United
States, in its sole discretion, that the
Nikkelverk Refinery will remain an
economically viable competitive business.
E. ‘‘Alternative Divested Business’’ means
Falconbridge Nikkelverk AlS, Falconbridge,
U.S., Inc. (‘‘FUS’’), Falconbridge Europe S.A.
(‘‘FESA’’), and Falconbridge (Japan) Limited
(‘‘FJKK’’), including:
1. All tangible assets used in the
development, production, servicing, and sale
of the Nikkelverk Refinery Products,
including but not limited to the Nikkelverk
Refinery; all real property; any facilities used
for research, development, and engineering
support, and any real property associated
with those facilities; manufacturing and sales
assets, including capital equipment, vehicles,
supplies, personal property, inventory, office
furniture, fixed assets and fixtures, materials,
on- or off-site warehouses or storage
facilities, and other tangible property or
improvements; all licenses, permits and
authorizations issued by any governmental
organization; all contracts, agreements,
leases, commitments, and understandings; all
customer contracts, lists, accounts, and credit
records; and other records relating to the
Alternative Divested Business;
2. All intangible assets that have been used
exclusively or primarily in the development,
production, servicing, and sale of the
Nikkelverk Refinery Products, including but
not limited to all patents, licenses and
sublicenses, intellectual property,
trademarks, trade names, service marks,
service names (including the product or trade
name ‘‘SuperElectro’’ or any variation
thereof), technical information, computer
software and related documentation, knowhow, trade secrets, drawings, blueprints,
designs, design protocols, specifications for
materials, specifications for parts and
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devices, safety procedures for the handling of
materials and substances, quality assurance
and control procedures, design tools and
simulation capability, and all manuals and
technical information provided to the
employees, customers, suppliers, agents or
licensees of the Alternative Divested
Business, provided that with respect to any
such intangible assets relating to metal
separation or purification processes, at the
option of the Alternative Acquirer defendants
may retain a non-exclusive, non-transferable,
fully paid-up license(s) to or copy of such
intangible assets;
3. A non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully
paid-up license(s) for the use of the name
‘‘Falconbridge,’’ the duration and terms of
which shall be negotiated by the defendants
and the Alternative Acquirer and limited to
the field of use of the Nikkelverk Refinery
Products, provided that any such license(s)
may be transferable to any future purchaser
of the Nikkelverk Refinery;
4. A non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully
paid-up license(s) for use of any intangible
asset that has been used by both the
Alternative Divested Business and any of
Falconbridge’s non-divested businesses,
provided that such license(s) may be
transferable to any future purchaser of
Nikkelverk Refinery; and
5. All research data concerning historic
and current research and development efforts
conducted at or for the Alternative Divested
Business, including designs of experiments,
and the results of unsuccessful designs and
experiments.
The term ‘‘Alternative Divested Business’’
shall not include tangible or intangible assets
exclusively used in, or personnel exclusively
responsible for, the production or sale of
products other than the Nikkelverk Refinery
Products.
F. ‘‘Alternative Supply Agreement’’ means
an agreement between Inco and the
Alternative Acquirer on the terms described
in Section V(B) by which Inco commits to
supply to the Alternative Acquirer, other
than through a New Third-Party Supply
Agreement, Feedstock to be used in operating
the Nikkelverk Refinery.
G. ‘‘Divested Business’’ means
Falconbridge Nikkelverk A/S, Falconbridge,
U.S., Inc. (‘‘FUS’’), Falconbridge Europe S.A.
(‘‘FESA’’), Falconbridge (Japan) Limited
(‘‘FJKK’’), and Falconbridge International
Limited (‘‘FIL’’), including:
1. All tangible assets used in the
development, production, servicing, and sale
of the Nikkelverk Refinery Products,
including but not limited to the Nikkelverk
Refinery; all real property; any facilities used
for research development, and engineering
support, and any real property associated
with those facilities; manufacturing and sales
assets, including capital equipment, vehicles,
supplies, personal property, inventory, office
furniture, fixed assets and fixtures, materials,
on- or off-site warehouses or storage
facilities, and other tangible property or
improvements; all licenses, permits and
authorizations issued by any governmental
organization; all contracts, agreements,
leases, commitments, and understandings; all
customers contracts, lists, accounts, and
credit records; and other records relating to
the Divested Business;
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2. All intangible assets that have been used
exclusively or primarily in the development,
production, servicing, and sale of the
Nikkelverk Refinery Products, including but
not limited to all patents, licenses and
sublicenses, intellectual property,
trademarks, trade names, service marks,
service names (including the product or trade
name ‘‘SuperElectro’’ or any variation
thereof), technical information, computer
software and related documentation, knowhow, trade secrets, drawings, blueprints,
designs, design protocols, specifications for
materials, specifications for parts and
devices, safety procedures for the handling of
materials and substances, quality assurance
and control procedures, design tools and
simulation capability, and all manuals and
technical information provided to the
employees, customers, suppliers, agents or
licensees of the Divested Business, provided
that with respect to any such intangible
assets relating to metal separation or
purification processes, at the option of the
Acquirer defendants may retain a nonexclusive, non-transferable, fully paid-up
license(s) to or copy of such intangible assets;
3. A non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully
paid-up license(s) for the use of the name
‘‘Falconbridge,’’ the duration and terms of
which shall be negotiated by the defendants
and the Acquirer and limited to the field of
use of the Nikkelverk Refinery Products,
provided that any such license(s) may be
transferable to any future purchaser of the
Nikkelverk Refinery;
4. A non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully
paid-up license(s) for use of any intangible
asset that has been used by both the Divested
Business and any of Falconbridge’s nondivested businesses, provided that such
license(s) may be transferable to any future
purchaser of Nikkelverk Refinery; and
5. All research data concerning historic
and current research and development efforts
conducted at or for the Divested Business,
including designs of experiments, and the
results of unsuccessful designs and
experiments.
The term ‘‘Divested Business’’ shall not
include tangible or intangible assets
exclusively used in, or personnel exclusively
responsible for, the production or sale of
products other than the Nikkelverk Refinery
Products.
H. ‘‘Existing Third-Party Supply
Agreements’’ means existing agreements
between Falconbridge and third parties for
the supply of Feedstock for the Nikkelverk
Refinery that is produced by persons other
than the defendants.
I. ‘‘Falconbridge’’ means defendant
Falconbridge Limited, a Canadian
corporation with its headquarters in Toronto,
Canada, its successors and assigns, and its
subsidiaries, divisions, groups, affiliates,
partnerships, and joint ventures, and their
directors, officers, managers, agents, and
employees.
J. ‘‘Falconbridge International Limited’’
means a corporation organized under the
laws of Barbados and a subsidiary of
Falconbridge responsible, in part, for the
acquisition of Feedstock from third parties.
K. ‘‘Feedstock’’ means nickel-in-matte and
other products and intermediate compounds
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constituting refinery feed sources suitable for
refining at Nikkelverk Refinery.
L. ‘‘Foreign Competition Clearance’’ means
an action or inaction by the European
Commission that results in the termination of
any relevant waiting period, or grant of
approval, clearance or consent, that is
applicable to the acquisition of Falconbridge
by Inco.
M. ‘‘High-Purity Nickel’’ means refined
nickel of sufficient purity and chemical
composition that it can be utilized in super
alloys used for safety-critical applications.
N. ‘‘Inco’’ means defendant Inco Limited,
a Canadian corporation with its headquarters
in Toronto, Canada, its successors and
assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions,
groups, affiliates, partnerships, and joint
ventures, and their directors, officers,
managers, agents, and employees.
O. ‘‘LionOre’’ means LionOre Mining
International Limited, a Canadian
corporation with its headquarters in London,
England, its successors and assigns, and its
subsidiaries, divisions, groups, affiliates,
partnerships, and joint ventures, and their
directors, officers, managers, agents, and
employees.
P. ‘‘New Third-Party Supply Agreement’’
means one or more agreements between the
defendants and the Alternative Acquirer on
the terms described in Section V for the
supply to the Nikkelverk Refinery of
Feedstock that is produced by persons other
than the defendants.
Q. ‘‘Nikkelverk Refinery’’ means the nickel,
copper, cobalt, and precious metals refinery
owned by Falconbridge’s subsidiary
Falconbridge Nikkelverk A/S and located In
Kristiansand, Norway.
R. ‘‘Nikkelverk Refinery Products’’ means
the finished nickel, copper, cobalt, precious
metals, and other products produced at the
Nikkelverk Refinery.
S. ‘‘Supply Agreement’’ means an
agreement between Inco and the Acquirer on
the terms described in Section IV by which
Inco commits to supply to the Acquirer, other
than through a New Third-Party Supply
Agreement, Feedstock to be used in operating
the Nikkelverk Refinery.
T. ‘‘Third-Party Feedstock Option’’ means
one or more of the options available to the
Alternative Acquirer in Section V(A)(3) to
obtain the quantities and quality of Feedstock
supplied pursuant to the Existing Third-Party
Supply Agreements.
III. Applicability
A. This Final Judgment applies to Inco and
Falconbridge, as defined above, and all other
persons in active concert or participation
with any of them who receive actual notice
of this Final Judgment by personal service or
otherwise.
B. Defendants shall require, as a condition
of the sale or other disposition of all or
substantially all of their assets or of lesser
business units that include the Divested
Business, that the purchaser agrees to be
bound by the provisions of this Final
Judgment.
IV. Divestiture
A. In the event that Inco acquires any
shares pursuant to Inco Limited Offer to
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Purchase All of the Outstanding Shares of
Falconbridge Limited dated October 24,
2005, as amended, defendants are ordered
and directed concurrently with Inco’s
Acquisition of Falconbridge, (1) to divest the
Divested Business to the Acquirer in a
manner consistent with this Final Judgment,
and (2) to enter into the Supply Agreement
with the Acquirer. Defendants shall, as soon
as possible, but within one business day after
the Acquisition of Falconbridge, notify the
United States of (1) the effective date of the
Acquisition of Falconbridge and (2) the
effective date that the Divested Business was
divested to the Acquirer.
B. Defendants shall provide the United
States and the Acquirer information relating
to the personnel employed by the Divested
Business or involved exclusively or primarily
in research, development, production,
operation, and sale of the Nikkelverk
Refinery Products or procurement of
Feedstock from third parties for the Divested
Business, to enable the Acquirer to make
offers of employment. Defendants will not
interfere with any negotiations by the
Acquirer to employ any of the defendants’
employees whose responsibilities exclusively
or primarily involve the research,
development, production, operation, or sale
of the products of the Divested Business or
procurement of Feedstock from third parties
for the Divested Business.
C. Defendants shall permit the Acquirer to
have reasonable access to personnel and to
make inspections of the physical facilities of
the Divested Business; access to any and all
environmental, zoning, and other permit
documents and information; access to any
and all financial, operational, or other
documents and information customarily
provided as part of a due diligence process;
and any documents and information the
Acquirer shall consider relevant to any issues
relating to the Supply Agreement.
D. Defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer
that each asset that was operational as of the
date of filing of the Complaint in this matter
will be operational on the date of divestiture.
E. Defendants shall enter into the Supply
Agreement with the Acquirer to provide
Feedstock of the same or substantially the
same quality and volume provided by
Falconbridge to be used in operating the
Nikkelverk Refinery. At the option of the
Acquirer, such Supply Agreement may have
a term of up to ten (10) years. The terms and
conditions of the Supply Agreement must be
commercially reasonable and designed to
enable the Acquirer to compete effectively in
the sale of High-Purity Nickel. The terms and
conditions of the Supply Agreement must be
approved by the United States in its sole
discretion. Inco shall give the United States
30 calendar days notice before exercising any
contract right to cancel or terminate the
Supply Agreement and before implementing
any material change to any term related to
the length of the Supply Agreement, the
volume and quality of the Feedstock, or the
price. In the performance of the Supply
Agreement, defendants shall take no action
the effect of which is to interfere with or
impede the ability of the Acquirer to compete
effectively in the sale of High-Purity Nickel.
F. Defendants shall not take any action that
will impede in any way the permitting,
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operation. or divestiture of the Divested
Business.
G. Defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer
that there are no material defects in the .
environmental, zoning, or other permits
pertaining to the operation of the Divested
Business, and that following the sale of the
Divested Business, defendants will not
undertake, directly or indirectly, any
challenges to the environmental, zoning, or
other permits relating to the operation of the
Divested Business.
H. Nothing in this Final Judgment shall be
construed to require the Acquirer as a
condition of any license granted by or to
defendants pursuant to Sections II (G)(2)–(4)
to extend to defendants the right to use the
Acquirer’s improvements to processes used
in the production of Nikkelverk Refinery
Products.
I. Unless the United States otherwise
consents in writing, the divestiture pursuant
to Section IV of this Final Judgment shall
include the entire Divested Business and the
Supply Agreement, and shall be
accomplished in such a way as to satisfy the
United States, in its sole discretion, that the
Divested Business can and will be used by
the Acquirer as part of a viable, ongoing
business, engaged in producing High-Purity
Nickel for sale worldwide, including the
United States. The divestiture shall be
accomplished so as to satisfy the United
States, in its sole discretion, that:
1. the Divested Business will remain viable
and the divestiture of the Divested business
will remedy the competitive harm alleged in
the Complaint; and
2. none of the terms of any agreement
between the Acquirer and defendants give
defendants the ability unreasonably to raise
the Acquirer’s costs, to lower the Acquirer’s
efficiency, or to otherwise interfere in the
ability of the Acquirer to compete effectively
in the production and sale of High-Purity
Nickel.
V. Appointment of Trustee to Effect
Divestiture
A. If defendants have not divested the
Divested Business as specified in Section
IV(A), defendants shall notify the United
States of that fact in writing. Upon
application of the United States, the Court
shall appoint a trustee selected by the United
States and approved by the Court (1) to divest
the Alternative Divested Business in a
manner consistent with this Final Judgment
to an Alternative Acquirer acceptable to the
United States in its sole discretion, (2) at the
option of the Alternative Acquirer, to
effectuate the Alternative Supply Agreement
between the defendants and the Alternative
Acquirer, and (3) except for those Existing
Third-Party Supply Agreements under which
Feedstocks are contractually obligated to be
processed at the Nikkelverk Refinery, to (a)
effectuate, at the option of the Alternative
Acquirer, the New Third-Party Supply
Agreement between the defendants and the
Alternative Acquirer, (b) oversee the
defendants’ best efforts to procure the
assignment of the Existing Third-Party
Supply Agreements, (c) order the divestiture
of Falconbridge International Limited, or (d)
some combination of these options, to ensure
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that the Alternative Acquirer obtains the
quantities and quality of Feedstock to be
supplied pursuant to the Existing Third-Party
Supply Agreements consistent with the
remaining term of each of the Existing ThirdParty Supply Agreements. In the event the
European Commission also requires the
divestiture of the same assets, the United
States shall consult in good faith with the
European Commission to ensure selection of
a trustee acceptable to both the United States
and the European Commission.
B. At the option of the Alternative
Acquirer, defendants shall enter into the
Alternative Supply Agreement with the
Alternative Acquirer to provide Feedstock of
the same or substantially the same quality
and volume provided by Falconbridge to be
used in operating the Nikkelverk Refinery. At
the option of the Alternative Acquirer, such
Alternative Supply Agreement may have a
term of up to ten (10) years. The terms and
conditions of the Alternative Supply
Agreement must be commercially reasonable
and designed to enable the Alternative
Acquirer to compete effectively in the sale of
High-Purity Nickel. The terms and conditions
of the Alternative Supply Agreement must be
approved by the United States in its sole
discretion. Inco shall give the United States
30 calendar days notice before exercising any
contract right to cancel or terminate the
Alternative Supply Agreement and before
implementing any material change to any
term related to the length of the Alternative
Supply Agreement, the volume and quality of
the Feedstock, or the price. In the
performance of the Alternative Supply
Agreement, defendants shall take no action
the effect of which is to interfere with or
impede the ability of the Alternative
Acquirer to compete effectively in the sale of
High-Purity Nickel.
C. Unless the United States otherwise
consents in writing, the divestiture pursuant
to Section V of this Final Judgment shall
include the entire Alternative Divested
Business, Alternative Supply Agreement, and
Third-Party Feedstock Option, and shall be
accomplished in such a way as to satisfy the
United States, in its sole discretion, that the
Alternative Divested Business can and will
be used by the Alternative Acquirer as part
of a viable, ongoing business, engaged in
producing High-Purity Nickel for sale
worldwide, including the United States. A
divestiture pursuant to Section V of this
Final Judgment, shall be accomplished so as
to satisfy the United States, in its sole
discretion, that:
1. The Alternative Acquirer has the intent
and capability (including the necessary
managerial, operational, technical and
financial capability) to compete effectively in
the production and sale of High-Purity
Nickel; and
2. That none of the terms of any agreement
between the Alternative Acquirer and
defendants give defendants the ability
unreasonably to raise the Alternative
Acquirer’s costs, to lower the Alternative
Acquirer’s efficiency, or otherwise to
interfere in the ability of the Alternative
Acquirer to compete effectively in the
production and sale of High-Purity Nickel;
and
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3. The Alternative Divested Business will
remain viable and the divestiture of the
Alternative Divested Business will remedy
the competitive harm alleged in the
Complaint.
D. Nothing in this Final Judgment shall be
construed to require the Alternative Acquirer
as a condition of any license granted by or
to defendants pursuant to Sections II (E)(2)–
(4) to extend to defendants the right to use
the Alternative Acquirer’s improvements to
processes used in the production of
Nikkelverk Refinery Products.
E. With respect to any divestiture to an
Alternative Acquirer under Section V of this
Final Judgment, defendants shall have the
same obligations to the Alternative Acquirer
with respect to the Alternative Divested
Business as they do to the Acquirer with
respect to the Divested Business as set forth
in Sections IV(B), (C), (D), (F), and (G) of the
Final Judgment.
F. After the appointment of a trustee
becomes effective, only the trustee shall have
the right to sell the Alternative Divested
Business. The trustee shall have the power
and authority to accomplish the divestiture
to an Alternative Acquirer acceptable to the
United States at such price and on such
terms as are then obtainable upon reasonable
effort by the trustee, subject to the provisions
of Sections V and VI of this Final Judgment,
and shall have such other powers as this
Court deems appropriate. Subject to Section
V(H) of this Final Judgment, the trustee may
hire at the cost and expense of defendants
any investment bankers, attorneys, or other
agents, who shall be solely accountable to the
trustee, reasonably necessary in the trustee’s
judgment to assist in the divestiture.
G. Defendants shall not object to a sale by
the trustee, or to the Alternative Supply
Agreement or the Third-Party Feedstock
Option ordered by the trustee, on any ground
other than the trustee’s malfeasance. Any
such objections by defendants must be
conveyed in writing to the United States and
the trustee within ten (10) calendar days after
the trustee has provided the notice required
under Section VI.
H. The trustee shall serve at the cost and
expense of defendants, on such terms and
conditions as plaintiff approves, and shall
account for all monies derived from the sale
of the Alternative Divested Business and all
costs and expenses so incurred. After
approval by the Court of the trustee’s
accounting, including fees for its services and
those of any professionals and agents
retained by the trustee, all remaining money
shall be paid to defendants and the trust shall
then be terminated. The compensation of the
trustee and any professionals and agents
retained by the trustee shall be reasonable in
light of the value of the Alternative Divested
Business and based on a fee arrangement
providing the trustee with an incentive based
on the price and terms of the divestiture and
the speed with which it is accomplished, but
timeliness is paramount.
I. Defendants shall use their best efforts to
assist the trustee in accomplishing the
required divestiture. The trustee and any
consultants, accountants, attorneys, and
other persons retained by the trustee shall
have full and complete access to the
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personnel, books, records, and facilities of
the business to be divested, and defendants
shall develop financial and other information
relevant to such business as the trustee may
reasonably request, subject to customary
confidentiality protection for trade secret or
other confidential research, development, or
commercial information. Defendants shall
take no action to interfere with or to impede
the trustee’s accomplishment of the
divestiture.
J. After its appointment, the trustee shall
file monthly reports with the United States
and the Court setting forth the trustee’s
efforts to accomplish the divestiture ordered
under this Final Judgment. To the extent
such reports contain information that the
trustee deems confidential, such reports shall
not be filed in the public docket of the Court.
Such reports shall include the name, address,
and telephone number of each person who,
during the preceding month, made an offer
to acquire, expressed an interest in acquiring,
entered into negotiations to acquire, or was
contacted or made an inquiry about
acquiring, any interest in the Alternative
Divested Business and shall describe in
detail each contact with any such person.
The trustee shall maintain full records of all
efforts made to divest the Alternative
Divested Business.
K. If the trustee has not accomplished such
divestiture within six months after its
appointment, the trustee shall promptly file
with the Court a report setting forth (1) The
trustee’s efforts to accomplish the required
divestiture; (2) the reasons, in the trustee’s
judgment, why the required divestiture has
not been accomplished; and (3) the trustee’s
recommendations. To the extent such reports
contain information that the trustee deems
confidential, such reports shall not be filed
in the public docket of the Court. The trustee
shall at the same time furnish such report to
the plaintiff who shall have the right to make
additional recommendations consistent with
the purpose of the trust. The Court thereafter
shall enter such orders as it shaIl deem
appropriate to carry out the purpose of the
Final Judgment, which may, if necessary,
include extending the trust and the term of
the trustee’s appointment by a period
requested by the United States.
VI. Notice of Proposed Divestiture
A. Within two (2) business days following
execution of a definitive divestiture
agreement, the trustee shall notify the United
States and the defendants of any proposed
divestiture required by Section V of this
Final Judgment. The notice shall set forth the
details of the proposed divestiture and list
the name, address, and telephone number of
each person not previously identified who
offered or expressed an interest in or desire
to acquire any ownership interest in the
Alternative Divested Business, together with
full details of the same.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of
receipt by the United States of such notice,
the United States may request from
defendants, the proposed Alternative
Acquirer, any other third party, or the trustee
if applicable, additional information
concerning the proposed divestiture, the
proposed Alternative Acquirer, and any other
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potential Alternative Acquirer. Defendants
and the trustee shall furnish any additional
information requested within fifteen (15)
calendar days of the receipt of the request,
unless the parties shall otherwise agree.
C. Within (a) thirty (30) calendar days after
receipt of the notice or (b) twenty (20)
calendar days after the United States has
been provided the additional information
requested from defendants, the proposed
Alternative Acquirer, any third party, or the
trustee, whichever is later, the United States
shall provide written notice to defendants
and the trustee, if there is one, stating
whether or not it objects to the proposed
divestiture. If the United States provides
written. notice that it does not object, the
divestiture may be consummated, subject
only to defendants’ limited right to object to
the sale under Section V(G) of this Final
Judgment. Absent written notice that the
United States does not object to the proposed
Alternative Acquirer or upon objection by the
United States, a divestiture proposed under
Section V shall not be consummated. Upon
objection by defendants under Section V(G),
a divestiture proposed under Section V shall
not be consummated unless approved by the
Court.
VII. Financing
To the extent that defendants are issued
Acquirer Shares pursuant to the Agreement
to Acquire the Divested Business Through
Purchase of FNA Group Shares dated June 6,
2006 between Falconbridge and LionOre, or
otherwise, in exchange for financing part of
the Acquirer’s acquisition of the Divested
Business, defendants:
1. Shall, within 150 days after the earlier
of (a) the Acquisition of Falconbridge, or (b)
the issuance of the Acquirer Shares, divest in
a manner consistent with this Final Judgment
all of the Acquirer Shares;
2. Shall divest the Acquirer Shares by open
market sale, public offering, private sale,
repurchase by LionOre, or a combination
thereof. The divestiture of the Acquirer
Shares shall not be made: (i) To any person
other than LionOre who provides High-Purity
Nickel unless the United States shall
otherwise agree in writing; or (ii) in a manner
that, in the sole judgment of the United
States, could significantly impair LionOre as
an effective competitor in the production and
sale of High-Purity Nickel;
3. Shall not be issued more than the
Acquirer Shares;
4. Shall not exercise any rights relating to
the Acquirer Shares, including but not
limited to (i) exercising or permitting the
exercise of any voting rights, (ii) electing,
nominating, appointing, or otherwise
designating or participating as officer or
directors; (iii) participating. as a member of
the Board of Directors or otherwise, in any
meeting of the Board of Directors, (iv)
participating in any committees or other
governing body of LionOre; (v) exercising any
veto rights with respect to the business of
LionOre, including veto power over changes
in control of LionOre, over significant asset
purchases or sales, over change in majority
of board membership, or over changes in
majority ownership of LionOre; (vi) obtaining
any financial or business information with
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respect to LionOre that is not otherwise
publicly available. In no event shall
defendant influence or attempt to influence
the decision-making, management, or
policies of LionOre; and
5. Shall not acquire, directly or indirectly,
any shares of, or other ownership interest in,
LionOre, within two years of divesting the
Acquirer Shares.
VIII. Hold Separate
Until the divestiture required by this Final
Judgment has been accomplished, defendants
shall take all steps necessary to comply with
the Hold Separate Stipulation and Order
entered by this Court. Defendants shall take
no action that would jeopardize the
divestiture ordered by this Court.
IX. Affidavits
A. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the
filing of the Complaint in this matter, and
every thirty (30) calendar days thereafter
until the divestiture has been completed
under Section IV or Section V, defendants
shall deliver to the United States an affidavit
as to the fact and manner of its compliance
with Section IV or Section V of this Final
Judgment. Every twelve (12) months
following completion of the divestiture
required by Section IV or Section V,
defendants shall deliver to the United States
an affidavit that describes in reasonable
detail all actions defendants have taken and
all steps defendants have implemented on an
ongoing basis to comply with Section IV(E)
or Section V(B) of this Final Judgment,
including compliance with the Supply
Agreement. Defendants shall, in addition,
deliver to the United States an affidavit
describing any changes to the Supply
Agreement outlined in defendants’ earlier
affidavits filed pursuant to this section
within fifteen (15) calendar days after the
change is implemented.
B. Defendants shall keep all records of all
efforts made to preserve the Divested
Business and to divest the Divested Business
until one year after such divestiture has been
completed.
C. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the
filing of the Complaint in this matter, and
every thirty (30) calendar days thereafter
until the divestiture of the Acquirer Shares
has been completed under Section VII of the
Final Judgment, defendants shall deliver to
the United States an affidavit that describes
in reasonable detail all actions defendants
have taken and all steps defendants have
implemented on an ongoing basis to comply
with Section VII of this Final Judgment.
X. Compliance Inspection
A. For purposes of determining or securing
compliance with this Final Judgment, or of
determining whether the Final Judgment
should be modified or vacated, and subject
to any legally recognized privilege, from time
to time duly authorized representatives of the
United States Department of Justice,
including consultants and other persons
retained by the United States, shall, upon
written request of a duly authorized
representative of the Assistant Attorney
General in charge of the Antitrust Division,
and on reasonable notice to defendants, be
permitted:
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1. Access during defendants’ office hours
to inspect and copy, or at plaintiffs option,
to require defendants to provide copies of, all
books, ledgers, accounts, records and
documents in the possession, custody, or
control of defendants, relating to any matters
contained in this Final Judgment; and
2. To interview, either informally or on the
record, defendants’ officers, employees, or
agents, who may have their individual
counsel present, regarding such matters. The
interviews shall be subject to the reasonable
convenience of the interviewee and without
restraint or interference by defendants.
B. Upon the written request of a duly
authorized representative of the Assistant
Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust
Division, defendants shall submit written
reports, under oath if requested, relating to
any of the matters contained in this Final
Judgment as may be requested.
C. No information or documents obtained
by the means provided in this section shall
be divulged by the United States to any
person other than an authorized
representative of the executive branch of the
United States, except in the course of legal
proceedings to which the United States is a
party (including grand jury proceedings), or
for the purpose of securing compliance with
this Final Judgment, or as otherwise required
by law.
D. If at the time information or documents
are furnished by defendants to the United
States, defendants represent and identify in
writing the material in any such information
or documents to which a claim of protection
may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(7) of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and
defendants mark each pertinent page of such
material, ‘‘Subject to claim of protection
under Rule 26(c)(7) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure,’’ then the United States shall
give defendants ten (10) calendar days notice
prior to divulging such material in any legal
proceeding (other than a grand jury
proceeding).
XI. No Reacquisition
Defendants may not reacquire any part of
the Divested Business during the term of this
Final Judgment.
XII. Retention of Jurisdiction
This Court retains jurisdiction to enable
any party to this Final Judgment to apply to
this Court at any time for further orders and
directions as may be necessary or appropriate
to carry out or construe this Final Judgment,
to modify any of its provisions, to enforce
compliance, and to punish violations of its
provisions.
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XIII. Expiration of Final Judgment
Unless this Court grants an extension, this
Final Judgment shall expire ten years from
the date of its entry.
XIV. Public Interest Determination
Entry of this Final Judgment is in the
public interest. The parties have complied
with the requirements of the Antitrust
Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16,
including making copies available to the
public of this Final Judgment, the
Competitive Impact Statement, and any
comments thereon and the United States’
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responses to comments. Based upon the
record before the Court, which includes the
Competitive Impact Statement and any
comments and response to comments filed
with the Court, entry of this Final Judgment
is in the public interest.
Date: llllllllllllllllll
Court approval subject to procedures of the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15
U.S.C. 16.
lllllllllllllllllllll
United States District Judge
Competitive Impact Statement
Plaintiff United States of America (‘‘United
States’’), pursuant to Section 2(b) of the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act
(‘‘APPA’’ or ‘‘Tunney Act’’), 15 U.S.C. 16(b)–
(h), files this Competitive Impact Statement
relating to the proposed Final Judgment
submitted for entry in this civil antitrust
proceeding.
Nature and Purpose of the Proceeding
The United States filed a civil antitrust
Complaint on June 23, 2006, seeking to
enjoin the proposed acquisition by defendant
Inco Limited (‘‘Inco’’) of defendant
Falconbridge Limited (’’Falconbridge’’). The
Complaint alleges that the likely effect of this
acquisition would be to lessen competition
substantially in the development, production
and sale of high-purity nickel (’’High-Purity
Nickel’’), i.e., a purer form of nickel used for
certain alloys such as those used in safetycritical parts for jet engines, in violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act. This loss of
competition would likely result in higher
prices, lower quality, less innovation, and
less favorable delivery terms to customers in
the High-Purity Nickel market.
At the same time the Complaint was filed,
the United States filed a Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order and a proposed Final
Judgment. These are designed to eliminate
the anticompetitive effects of the acquisition
while permitting Inco to complete its
acquisition of Falconbridge. Under the
proposed Final Judgment, which is explained
more fully below, Inco is required to divest
assets that include Falconbridge’s Nikkelverk
refinery in Kristiansand, Norway
(’’Nikkelverk Refinery’’), and Falconbridge’s
nickel marketing businesses. The proposed
Final Judgment requires that the divestiture
of these assets be made to LionOre Mining
International Ltd. (‘‘LionOre’’), a company
headquartered in London, United Kingdom.
LionOre is not currently involved in the
refining of nickel, but owns nickel mining
and processing resources in Africa and
Australia, and has had plans to enter the
business of refining nickel and thus become
a fully-integrated nickel producer. Its
acquisition of the Nikkelverk refinery and the
other assets included in the proposed
divestiture will accelerate LionOre’s
becoming a fully integrated nickel producer,
and make it a viable and active competitor
in the High-Purity Nickel market.
The proposed Final Judgment requires that
the divestiture to LionOre take place
concurrently with the acquisition of
Falconbridge by Inco. Under the terms of the
Hold Separate Stipulation and Order,
Falconbridge must maintain and preserve,
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until the acquisition is consummated, the
Nikkelverk Refinery and other divestiture
assets (hereafter ‘‘Divested Business’’) as an
ongoing, economically viable competitive
business. The Hold Separate Stipulation and
Order further requires that, upon Inco’s
acquisition of the first share of Falconbridge
common stock, the defendants will ensure
that the Divested Business operates as an
independent, economically viable ongoing
competitive business, held separate and apart
from Inco, and that it will remain
independent and uninfluenced by Inco.
The proposed Final Judgment also
provides that, if for any reason the divestiture
to LionOre does not occur as required by the
proposed Final Judgment, a trustee will be
appointed to divest the assets to an
Alternative Acquirer, which is defined as a
company that is in the metals mining or
processing business and is able to supply, on
a long-term basis, sufficient Feedstock to
assure the United States, in its sole
discretion, that the Nikkelverk Refinery will
remain an economically viable competitive
business.
The United States and defendants have
stipulated that the proposed Final Judgment
may be entered after compliance with the
APPA. Entry of the proposed Final Judgment
would terminate this action, except that the
Court would retain jurisdiction to construe,
modify, or enforce the provisions of the
proposed Final Judgment and to punish
violations thereof.
II. Description of the Events Giving Rise to
the Alleged Violation
A. The Defendants and the Proposed
Transaction
Inco, a Canadian corporation, has its
corporate headquarters and principal place of
business in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. As one
of the largest mining companies in the world,
Inco is primarily engaged in mining,
processing, and refining nickel, and also
produces other elements, such as cobalt and
platinum group metals (‘‘PGMs’’), as byproducts of its nickel production. In 2005,
Inco reported total sales of approximately
$4.7 billion. The company’s main nickel
mining, processing, and refining operations
are located in Canada, although it also owns
mines and processing facilities in many other
parts of the world. Inco’s High-Purity Nickel
refining operations are located in Ontario,
Canada, and Wales, United Kingdom. Inco
operates in the United States through its
wholly-owned subsidiary International
Nickel, Inc., located at Saddlebrook, New
Jersey, which markets and sells in the United
States nickel and other products
manufactured by Inco. Inco’s High-Purity
Nickel is shipped to customers all over the
world, including the United States.
Falconbridge, a Canadian corporation, also
has its corporate headquarters and principal
place of business in Toronto, Ontario,
Canada. Like Inco, Falconbridge is one of the
world’s largest mining companies and
engages in all phases of the production of
nickel and other refined elements. The main
products that Falconbridge produces are
nickel and copper, but the company also
produces cobalt, PGMs, and other elemental
metals as by-products of both its nickel and
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copper refining operations. In 2005,
Falconbridge reported total sales of
approximately $7.7 billion. Falconbridge’s
primary nickel mining and processing
facilities are located in Ontario, Canada,
although it also has such facilities
worldwide. Falconbridge’s only High-Purity
Nickel refining operation is the Nikkelverk
Refinery located in Kristiansand, Norway.
The company operates in the United States
through its wholly-owned subsidiary,
Falconbridge U.S., Inc., located at Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, which markets and sells in the
United States nickel and other products
manufactured by Falconbridge. The HighPurity Nickel produced by the Nikkelverk
Refinery is shipped to customers all over the
world, including the United States.
Inco and Falconbridge entered into an
agreement dated October 10, 2005, in which
Inco stated that it intended to offer to
purchase all of the common shares of
Falconbridge that it did not already own.
Also pursuant to that agreement,
Falconbridge’s Board of Directors stated that
it had determined that it is in the best
interests of Falconbridge to support the offer,
recommend acceptance of Inco’s offer to
holders of the common shares of
Falconbridge, and use its reasonable best
efforts to permit Inco’s offer to be successful,
on the terms and conditions contained in the
agreement. On October 24, 2005, Inco made
a formal offer to purchase all of the
outstanding common shares of Falconbridge
in a transaction valued at over $15 billion.
Inco’s offer originally was open for
acceptance until December 23,2005, but this
date has been extended several times, most
recently to June 30, 2006. The acquisition,
among other things, would combine the
operations of the two leading providers of
High-Purity Nickel worldwide. The United
States alleges in its Complaint that this
proposed transaction, as initially agreed to by
the defendants, would lessen competition
substantially in the market for High-Purity
Nickel in violation of section 7 of the Clayton
Act.
B. The Competitive Effects of the Transaction
on the High-Purity Nickel Market
Nickel is a metallic element that is
particularly resistant to high temperatures,
high stresses, and corrosion. Nickel is often
combined with other materials to form alloys
with particular performance characteristics.
These performance characteristics depend on
the amount of nickel and other elements
contained in the particular alloy. As a general
proposition, as the amount of nickel in the
alloy increases, the more resistant the alloy
is to heat and stress. One sub-set of nickelbased alloys is called super alloys, which
generally contain between 50 and 70 percent
nickel, as well as specific amounts of other
elements, including iron, cobalt, and
chromium, that combine to give the alloy
very specific performance characteristics.
Super alloys are used primarily in chemical
processing plants, medical applications,
industrial power generation, and various
aerospace applications. Many products made
from super alloys, such as the rotating parts
of jet engines, are considered safety-critical
parts. For these parts, it is vital that, in
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addition to containing the proper amount of
nickel, the super alloy be as free as possible
from certain trace elements that could
compromise the performance of the product
and result in serious problems, including
engine failure. The nickel that meets these
demanding requirements is High-Purity
Nickel. High-Purity Nickel is refined nickel
of sufficient purity and chemical
composition that it can be utilized for safetycritical applications. Only a small portion of
the refined nickel produced in the world
meets the specifications for High-Purity
Nickel.
High-Purity Nickel constitutes an essential
ingredient in the production of super alloys
used for safety-critical applications. The
Complaint alleges that a small but significant
post-acquisition increase in the price of HighPurity Nickel would not cause purchasers of
super alloys used for safety-critical
applications to substitute non-High-Purity
Nickel or elements other than nickel so as to
make such a price increase unprofitable.
The Complaint also alleges that the
relevant geographic market is the world,
because all of the High-Purity Nickel sold in
the world is mined, processed, and refined
outside of the United States, and both Inco
and Falconbridge sell High-Purity Nickel
throughout the world. Both companies
import High-Purity Nickel into the United
States and sell that nickel to customers
located throughout the United States.
The market for High-Purity Nickel is
already highly concentrated. Inco and
Falconbridge are by far the two largest
producers of High-Purity Nickel sold in the
United States and throughout the world. Inco
and Falconbridge each account for at least 40
percent of the worldwide sales of High-Purity
Nickel. Combined, Inco and Falconbridge
would account for over 80 percent of
worldwide High-Purity Nickel sales.
Only three other companies have
demonstrated any ability to produce HighPurity Nickel. While one other finn
consistently produces High-Purity Nickel, its
available capacity is substantially less than
that of either Inco or Falconbridge, and it
cannot economically increase its capacity.
Two other companies have produced small
amounts of High-Purity Nickel, but are not
substantial competitors in the High-Purity
Nickel market. While both have substantial
capacity to make non-High-Purity Nickel,
their current ability to make High-Purity
Nickel, and to make it on a consistent basis,
is very limited. The other current producers
of High-Purity Nickel do not have the ability,
individually or collectively, to constrain
effectively a unilateral exercise of market
power in High-Purity nickel by a combined
Inco and Falconbridge.
As alleged in the Complaint, High-Purity
Nickel customers generally view Inco’s and
Falconbridge’s High-Purity Nickel as their
only available options and do not view the
products of other producers as viable
alternatives due to concerns relating to the
other producers’ quality, capacity, and
reliability. The vigorous and aggressive
competition between Inco and Falconbridge
in the production and sale of High-Purity
Nickel has benefitted these customers, as
Inco and Falconbridge have competed
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41245
directly in terms of price, quality, innovation
and delivery terms. The acquisition as
originally proposed would eliminate all
competition between Inco and Falconbridge,
reduce the number of significant worldwide
suppliers of High-Purity Nickel from three to
two, and substantially increase the likelihood
that Inco would unilaterally raise the price of
High-Purity Nickel to a significant number of
customers.
The Complaint also alleges that the merged
firm would have the ability to increase prices
to certain customers of High-Purity Nickel
that must purchase High-Purity Nickel
because they use it in super alloys used for
safety-critical. applications, even though
other customers purchase High-Purity Nickel
for different uses and can often substitute
non-High-Purity Nickel. The combined Inco
and Falconbridge would be able to determine
their High-Purity Nickel customers’ end-uses
and identify which customers are purchasing
High-Purity Nickel specifically for super
alloys used for safety-critical applications.
They could, therefore, charge customers that
are purchasing High-Purity Nickel for super
alloys used for safety-critical applications a
higher price than customers that are
purchasing High-Purity Nickel for other uses.
Successful entry or expansion by another
firm into the development, manufacture, and
sale of High-Purity Nickel would be difficult,
time-consuming, and costly. As alleged in the
Complaint, companies not currently
producing nickel of any kind would require
roughly three to five years and the
expenditure of at least $100 million to build
a refinery to produce finished nickel product,
and it would require even greater
expenditures to enter the High-Purity Nickel
market. A new entrant in the High-Purity
Nickel market must invest in additional
equipment and processes to extract sufficient
undesirable trace elements to produce the
High-Purity Nickel required by makers of
super alloys used for safety-critical
applications. Further, if not vertically
integrated, the new entrant also must secure
nickel feed sources of sufficient quality
needed to make High-Purity Nickel. The
United States investigated whether nickel
producers not currently capable of producing
High-Purity Nickel could easily enter the
High-Purity Nickel market. The investigation
concluded, however, that such producers
would require an incremental investment of
millions of dollars over several years to
modify facilities and processes to become
capable of producing High-Purity Nickel. A
small but significant price increase in HighPurity Nickel would not be sufficient to
induce these companies to invest the
substantial time and money necessary to
enter the High-Purity Nickel market. A new
entrant in the High-Purity Nickel market also
must be able to produce High-Purity Nickel
in sufficient quantities, and with sufficiently
consistent purity levels that customers could
depend on it reliably to provide the HighPurity Nickel. Therefore, entry or expansion
by any other firm into the High-Purity Nickel
market will not be timely, likely, or sufficient
to defeat an anticompetitive price increase
that would result from Inco’s acquisition of
Falconbridge as originally proposed.
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III. Explanation of the Proposed Final
Judgment
The divestiture required by the proposed
Final Judgment will eliminate the
anticompetitive effects of the acquisition in
the market for High-Purity Nickel by
establishing a new, independent, and
economically viable competitor, which will
include essentially all of the current nickel
refining and marketing business of
Falconbridge. This divestiture is designed to
remedy the anticompetitive effects of the
proposed transaction while preserving
beneficial efficiencies that the parties
anticipate achieving through the combination
of the other businesses of Inco and
Falconbridge. As discussed below, the
proposed Final Judgment provides that
LionOre shall be the Acquirer of the Divested
Business. It also provides that the divestiture
to LionOre must be accomplished in such a
way as to demonstrate to the sole satisfaction
of the United States that the Divested
Business will remain viable and will remedy
the competitive harm alleged in the
Complaint. The divestiture must also be
accomplished in a manner that satisfies the
United States, in its sole discretion, that none
of the terms of any agreement between
LionOre and the defendants gives the
defendants the ability unreasonably to raise
LionOre’s costs, lower LionOre’s efficiency,
or otherwise interfere in the ability of
LionOre to compete effectively in the
production and sale of High-Purity Nickel.
The proposed Final Judgment also provides
for continued, contractually guaranteed
suitable refinery feeds (‘‘Feedstock’’) to
Nikkelverk through the establishment and
continuation of a Feedstock supply
agreement between LionOre and the
defendants, to supplement LionOre’s own
feedstock supplies.
A. Identification of LionOre as the Purchaser
of the Divested Business
A number of considerations led the United
States to specifically approve and designate
LionOre as the entity to whom the Divested
Business should be sold. In the course of its
investigation, the United States determined
that competition in the High-Purity Nickel
market would be most effectively preserved
if the divestiture of the Nikkelverk assets
were made to a purchaser that possessed its
own nickel feedstock sources, thus helping to
ensure that Nikkelverk would have a secure
and long-term source of supply. LionOre
satisfies that criterion. The defendants
identified LionOre as a potential purchaser of
the Divested Business that satisfies this
criterion, and the United States undertook an
evaluation of LionOre and determined that
its ownership of Nikkelverk would preserve
vigorous competition in the High-Purity
Nickel market. Additionally, the defendants
and LionOre had agreed on the terms of the
divestiture, and entered into a number of
subordinate agreements that will help ensure
that LionOre will be able to operate
Nikkelverk successfully.
Given the parties’ agreement with LionOre
and the United States’ determination that the
divestiture to LionOre would resolve the
competitive concerns, the United States
drafted the proposed Final Judgment to order
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the sale. Under such circumstances, the
United States’ competitive concerns are often
resolved by a ‘‘fix-it-first’’ remedy.1 A fix-itfirst remedy is a structural remedy that the
parties implement and the United States
accepts before a merger is consummated. In
such a case, there is no need for the United
States to file a Complaint to preserve
competition. In this case, however, two
aspects of the remedy led the United States
to seek entry of a Final Judgment to ensure
Court oversight of the defendants’ fulfillment
of their commitments. (Antitrust Division
Policy Guide to Merger Remedies, Section
IV.A; p. 28.) First, preservation of
competition required not only that the
Nikkelverk assets be divested, but that the
defendants continue to supply feedstock to
Nikkelverk for a number of years. (This part
of the remedy is described in more detail in
Section III.C. below.) Second, in order to
expedite its purchase, LionOre will be
issuing stock to Falconbridge, subject to the
requirement that defendants sell within 150
days any shares of LionOre that it receives as
partial payment for the sale of the Divested
Business. To ensure compliance with these
ongoing commitments, the United States
determined that a traditional ‘‘fix-it-first’’
remedy would not be appropriate, and that
it would be necessary to seek entry of the
proposed Final Judgment.
Because this is not a traditional fix-it-first
remedy, the United States also determined
that the proposed Final Judgment should
anticipate the possibility, however remote,
that for some reason the sale to LionOre does
not take place. Section V of the proposed
Final Judgment therefore requires that, if the
divestiture to LionOre does not occur in the
manner called for in Section IV, a trustee will
be appointed to sell the assets to an
Alternative Acquirer. For the most part, the
assets to be divested, and the Defendants’
obligations regarding the divestiture, are the
same whether the sale is made to LionOre
under Section IV or an Alternative Acquirer
under Section V. However, since, unlike
LionOre, an Alternative Acquirer has not
already entered into agreements with the
defendants, the proposed Final Judgment
gives the Alternative Acquirer the option to
enter into such agreements, including the
ability to choose among several options, as
discussed below, regarding the manner in
which third-party feedstocks will be secured.
B. Assets
The Divested Business as defined in the
proposed Final Judgment means
Falconbridge Nikkelverk A/S (the Nikkelverk
Refinery in Norway), Falconbridge’s three
current-nickel marketing arms (Falconbridge,
U.S., Inc.; Falconbridge Europe S.A.; and
Falconbridge (Japan) Limited), Falconbridge
International Limited (‘‘FIL’’), the
Falconbridge subsidiary responsible for the
current acquisition of feedstock from third
parties, and related assets. The proposed
fix-it-first remedy has several benefits,
including quick and certain divestiture, removing
the need for litigation, allowing the Antitrust
Division to use its resources more efficiently, and
saving society from incurring real costs. (Antitrust
Division Policy Guide to Merger Remedies, Section
IV.A, p. 27)
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Final Judgment includes a complete
descriptive list of related divestiture assets
designed to enable the Divested Business to
compete vigorously.2 In summary, the list of
divested assets includes all tangible assets
used in the development, production,
servicing, and sale of the products currently
made at the Nikkelverk Refinery
(‘‘Nikkelverk Refinery Products’’); and all
intangible assets that have been used
exclusively or primarily in the development,
production, servicing, and sale of products,
including but not limited to all intellectual
property, and trade names (including the
product or trade name ‘‘SuperElectro’’). With
respect to any other intangible assets that are
used by the Divested Business and also have
been used by Falconbridge’s other businesses
(i.e., the non-Divested Business), LionOre
may obtain a non-exclusive, non-transferable,
fully paid-up license for such intangible
assets (including the use of the name
‘‘Falconbridge’’). In addition, the proposed
Final Judgment requires Inco to provide
information to LionOre about current
employees to enable LionOre to make offers
of employment. The defendants will not
interfere with any negotiations by LionOre to
employ any of Falconbridge’s employees
whose responsibilities include the research,
development, production, operation, or sale
of the products of the Divested Business, or
procurement of Feedstock from third parties.
As noted above, the defendants bear these
obligations whether the sale is made to
LionOre under Section IV, or to an
Alternative Acquirer under Section V.
The United States is satisfied that LionOre
possesses the incentive and capability to use
the Divested Business to compete
successfully in the High-Purity Nickel
market. The proposed Final Judgment
provides that the United States must also be
satisfied that the manner in which the
divestiture to LionOre is accomplished, and
any agreements between the defendants and
LionOre, do not interfere with the ability of
LionOre to compete successfully in that
market.
C. Feedstock Supply
As part of the divestiture. the proposed
Final Judgment also addresses the potential
need for LionOre to have reliable and
sufficient Feedstock supply for the Divested
Business. This is accomplished in three
ways. First, Inco has entered into a supply
agreement (‘‘Supply Agreement’’) with
LionOre by which Inco commits to supply
Feedstock, produced by Inco, to be used in
operating the Nikkelverk Refinery. Second,
Inco has agreed to divest to LionOre the
Falconbridge group that is responsible, in
part, for procuring feedstock for Nikkelverk
from third parties along with existing thirdparty supply agreements. Third, as a miner
and processor of nickel, including feedstock
currently refined at Nikkelverk, LionOre has
2 The assets to be divested to an Alternative
Acquirer, defined as the Alternative Divested
Business, are the same as those to be divested to
LionOre, except that FIL is not included. The
proposed Final Judgment gives the Alternative
Acquirer the option of acquiring FlL, but does not
require the acquisition; LionOre has already chosen
to acquire FIL.
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current and long-term access to feedstock of
its own.
Under the Supply Agreement provision, it
is the option of LionOre to procure from Inco
the same or substantially the same quality
and volume of Feedstock provided by
Falconbridge to the Nikkelverk Refinery.
Currently, Falconbridge provides about 70%
of the Feedstock for the Nikkelverk Refinery
from its own operations. At the option of
LionOre, such Supply Agreement may have
a term of up to ten years. The terms and
conditions of the Supply Agreement must be
commercially reasonable and designed to
enable LionOre to compete effectively in the
sale of High-Purity Nickel, and must be
approved by the United States in its sole
discretion. The proposed Final Judgment also
provides that Inco give the United States
thirty days notice before implementing any
material change to the Supply Agreement
related to the length of the Supply
Agreement, to the volume and quality of the
Feedstock, or price, and further provides that
Inco in the performance of the Supply
Agreement will take no action to interfere
with LionOre’s ability to compete.
Although the Antitrust Division generally
disfavors long-term supply agreements, the
Division has agreed to a long-term supply
agreement here for three reasons. First, longterm supply agreements are common in this
industry and may be necessary to ensure
LionOre’s ability to compete effectively.
Second, the agreement is structured in a way
that minimizes the potential risks normally
associated with supply agreements. Third,
the use of a supply agreement preserves
substantial efficiencies the parties anticipate
from the Inco/Falconbridge acquisition.
Providing LionOre the option of obtaining
nickel feedstock from Inco through the
Supply Agreement may be critical to its
ability to compete effectively. Supply
agreements of up to fifteen or twenty years
are not uncommon in this industry because
refineries are configured to process feedstock
from specific sources, and a long-term
relationship encourages and ensures longterm profitability as capital expenditures are
made to the refinery to suit the feedstock. In
this instance, moreover, a long-term supply
agreement provides LionOre time to develop
and adapt the Nikkelverk Refinery to new
feedstock sources. LionOre will have
incentives to make this transition, but the
ten-year Supply Agreement ensures that
sufficient time is available for LionOre to
compete effectively while developing its own
sources and establishing relationships with
new third-party sources of feedstock. It is
contemplated that LionOre will over time
supply increasing portions of the Nikkelverk
feedstock from its own mines and processing
facilities, and will eventually be able to
operate Nikkelverk without the need for any
Inco feedstock. Until that occurs, however, it
is important to ensure that Nikkelverk will
have the same quality and quantity of
feedstock that it currently obtains from
Falconbridge.
The Supply Agreement between Inco and
LionOre ensures that Inco will not be able to
disadvantage the Nikkelverk Refinery
through Feedstock pricing or quality, or by
supply disruptions, and should not facilitate
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19:44 Jul 19, 2006
Jkt 208001
anticompetitive collusion between Inco and
the Nikkelverk refinery. Moreover, key
provisions of the agreement are expected to
check the ability of Inco to abuse the supply
relationship with LionOre. The price LionOre
will pay Inco for Feedstock has been set
through negotiations between Inco and
LionOre, and any price changes will be
linked directly to changes in the price for
finished nickel as published independently
by the London Metal Exchange. This wi1l
further ensure that Inco, as required under
the proposed Final Judgment, can take no
pricing action under the Supply Agreement
to interfere with or impede the ability of
LionOre to compete effectively in the sale of
High-Purity Nickel. Regarding the quality of
Feedstock or other performance under the
Supply Agreement, contract specifications
for Feedstock are well-defined and
chemically measurable, and inferior quality
or performance will be easily detected and
remedied.
The fact that High-Purity Nickel is a
relatively small part of total Nikkelverk
Refinery sales would make it difficult for
Inco to harm competition in the High-Purity
Nickel market by disrupting supply to
Nikkelverk. If Inco cut a portion of feedstock
supply, the Nikkelverk Refinery easily could
maintain its output of High-Purity Nickel
using its feedstock used for other nickel.
Nor will the Supply Agreement facilitate
anticompetitive collusion between Inco and
LionOre. There appear to be no structural
reasons to anticipate that, in an industry
where feedstock is generally destined for
many end-uses of nickel, Inco could use the
supply contract to coordinate with LionOre
to unlawfully restrain trade in the HighPurity Nickel market. Although Inco will
supply up to 70% of the Nikkelverk
Refinery’s feedstock, it will have incomplete
information about the Nikkelverk Refinery’s
other sources of feedstock, and no
information about its total production,
product mix, and prices.3
The other sources of suitable feedstock for
the new firm will be LionOre itself and third
parties. Currently, third parties, including a
company partly owned by LionOre, provide
about 30% of the Nikkelverk Refinery’s
Feedstock pursuant to long term contracts
with Falconbridge. Under the proposed Final
Judgment, LionOre will acquire Falconbridge
International Limited (‘‘FIL’’). FIL is a
Barbados corporation and is the subsidiary of
Falconbridge responsible, in part, for the
current acquisition of Feedstock from third
parties. By acquiring FIL, LionOre will also
be acquiring the Third-Party Supply
Agreements that have been made with FIL,
which currently represent thirty percent of
Nikkelverk’ s total feedstock supply.
The Supply Agreement with Inco, the
acquisition of FIL and its existing third-party
feedstock, and LionOre’s own substantial
feedstock resources will ensure that LionOre
has sufficient Feedstock at commercial terms
to operate the Divested Business as a viable,
ongoing business that can stand in the
3 It is also important to note that in this industry
supply agreements are common and appear to work
well. Indeed, Nikkelverk currently relies on such
contracts for much of the feedstock that it uses.
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41247
position of today’s Falconbridge, and thereby
compete effectively in the High-Purity Nickel
market.
An Alternative Acquirer who purchases
the Alternative Divested Business from the
trustee will also have the option of entering
into a Supply Agreement of up to ten years.
The Alternative Acquirer will be a company
that is in the metals mining or processing
business and able to supply on a long-term
basis, sufficient Feedstock to assure the
United States, in its sole discretion, that the
Nikkelverk Refinery will be a viable
competitive business. An Alternative
Acquirer will also have the option to obtain
the right to third-party feedstock comparable
to that provided by Falconbridge’s interest in
existing third-party supply agreements,
although it would not be required to do so
by acquiring FIL as part of the divested
assets. It may instead choose to provide for
third-party feedstock supply through the
defendants’ assigning existing third-party
agreements to the Alternative Acquirer, or by
the defendants entering into new agreements
with the Alternative Acquirer to procure
third-party feedstock.
Securing access to feedstock in the manner
provided by the proposed Final Judgment is
more advantageous than the divestiture of
one or more mines that are currently used to
supply Nikkelverk. The combination of the
Inco and Falconbridge mines in Ontario is
the source of a substantial portion of the
efficiencies that the parties anticipate they
will realize via the proposed acquisition.
Therefore, it is appropriate to craft a remedy
that preserves competition without
unnecessarily disrupting potential
efficiencies.
D. Timing of the Divestiture
In antitrust cases involving mergers in
which the United States seeks a divestiture
remedy, it requires completion of the
divestiture within the shortest time period
reasonable under the circumstances. In this
case, because Inco and Falconbridge have
significant sales and operations in Europe as
well as the United States, the European
Commission must also review Inco’s
proposed acquisition of Falconbridge. The
proposed Final Judgment requires that, if
Inco assumes control of Falconbridge, it must
concurrently divest the Divested Business to
LionOre as required by the proposed Final
Judgment. During the period before Inco
consummates the transaction with
Falconbridge, a Hold Separate Stipulation
and Order will preserve the assets to be
divested, and require that Inco and
Falconbridge continue to operate them as an
independent competitor in the High-Purity
Nickel market. During this time, Inco and
Falconbridge are required to take the
necessary steps to ensure that the assets
remain an economically viable and ongoing
business concern that is not influenced by
the consummation of the acquisition, and
otherwise maintain all competition during
the pendency of the ordered divestiture.
The United States and the defendants fully
expect that the divestiture to LionOre will
take place. In the event that it does not,
however, the proposed Final Judgment
provides that a trustee will be appointed to
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sell the Alternative Divested Business. If the
trustee has not effected a divestiture within
six months of the trustee’s appointment, the
trustee shall file a report with the Court, and
the Court shall thereafter enter whatever
orders may be necessary to carry out the
purposes of the proposed Final Judgment.
E. Financing
The Division has never favored seller
financing of divestitures, because such
arrangements create an avenue for the seller
to influence the business decisions of the
company to whom the assets have been sold.
In some cases, it may also signal that the
proposed purchaser has insufficient
resources to be a viable competition.
In this case, although LionOre will finance
the majority of its acquisition of the divested
business on its own, the purchase agreement
between Falconbridge and LionOre
contemplates a partial payment to
Falconbridge in the form of LionOre stock.
The proposed Final Judgment provides,
however, that any issuance of LionOre stock
to Falconbridge must be strictly limited to no
more than 19.99% or 49,118,057 shares,
defendants are not permitted to exercise any
voting or control rights associated with those
shares, and, perhaps most importantly,
defendants must divest themselves
completely of those shares within 150 days
of the divestiture of Nikkelverk to LionOre.
Under these circumstances, the Division
determined that there was no possibility that
the dangers associated with seller financing
could materialize, and that the short-term
issuance of these shares to Falconbridge
created no risk to competition. In addition,
the Division determined that the short-term
issuance of LionOre stock was necessitated
by the proposed speed of the divestiture, to
take place immediately upon the success of
Inco’s tender offer. The Division determined
that with a longer divestiture period, LionOre
was fully able to finance the transaction
without resorting to the issuance of stock to
Falconbridge.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES_1
V. Remedies Available to Potential Private
Litigants
Section 4 of the Clayton Act (15 U.S.C. 15)
provides that any person who has been
injured as a result of conduct prohibited by
the antitrust laws may bring suit in federal
court to recover three times the damages the
person has suffered, as well as costs and
reasonable attorneys’ fees. Entry of the
proposed Final Judgment will neither impair
nor assist the bringing of any private antitrust
damage action. Under the provisions of
Section 5(a) of the Clayton Act (15 U.S.C.
16(a)), the proposed Final Judgment has no
prima facie effect in any subsequent private
lawsuit that may be brought against the
defendants.
VI. Procedures Available for Modification of
the Proposed Final Judgment
The United States and defendants have
stipulated that the proposed Final Judgment
may be entered by the Court after compliance
with the provisions of the APPA, provided
that the United States has not withdrawn its
consent. The APPA conditions entry upon
the Court’s determination that the proposed
Final Judgment is in the public interest.
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The APPA provides a period of at least
sixty days preceding the effective date of the
proposed Final Judgment within which any
person may submit to the United States
written comments regarding the proposed
Final Judgment. Any person who wishes to
comment should do so within sixty days of
the date of publication of this Competitive
Impact Statement in the Federal Register. All
comments received during this period will be
considered by the Department of Justice,
which remains free to withdraw its consent
to the proposed Final Judgment at any time
prior to the Court’s entry of judgment. The
comments and the response of the United
States will be filed with the Court and
published in the Federal Register.
Written comments should be submitted to:
Maribeth Petrizzi, Chief, Litigation II Section,
1401 H St., NW., Suite 3000, Antitrust
Division, United States Department of
Justice, Washington, DC 20530.
The proposed Final Judgment provides that
the Court retains jurisdiction over this action,
and the parties may apply to the Court for
any order necessary or appropriate for the
modification, interpretation, or enforcement
of the proposed Final Judgment.
VII. Alternatives to the Proposed Final
Judgment
The United States considered, as an
alternative to the proposed Final Judgment,
a full trial on the merits against defendants.
The United States could have continued the
litigation and sought preliminary and
permanent injunctions against Inco’s
acquisition of Falconbridge. The United
States is satisfied, however, that the
divestiture of assets described in the
proposed Final Judgment will preserve
competition for the provision of High-Purity
Nickel as it existed prior to the proposed
acquisition, and that such a remedy would
achieve all or substantially all the relief the
government would have obtained through
litigation, but avoids the time and expense of
a trial.
VIII. Standard of Review Under the APPA
for the Proposed Final Judgment
The APPA requires that proposed consent
judgments in antitrust cases brought by the
United States be subject to a sixty-day
comment period, after which the Court shall
determine whether entry of the proposed
Final Judgment ‘‘is in the public interest.’’ 15
U.S.C. 16(e)(1). In making that determination,
the Court shall consider:
(A) The competitive impact of such
judgment, including termination of alleged
violations, provisions for enforcement and
modification, duration or relief sought,
anticipated effects of alternative remedies
actually considered, whether its terms are
ambiguous, and any other competitive
considerations bearing upon the adequacy of
such judgment that the court deems
necessary to a determination of whether the
consent judgment is in the public interest;
and
(B) The impact of entry of such judgment
upon competition in the relevant market or
markets, upon the public generally and
individuals alleging specific injury from the
violations set forth in the complaint
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
including consideration of the public benefit,
if any, to be derived from a determination of
the issues at trial. 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1)(A) & (B).
As the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit has held, the
APPA permits a court to consider, among
other things, the relationship between the
remedy secured and the specific allegations
set forth in the government’s complaint,
whether the decree is sufficiently clear,
whether enforcement mechanisms are
sufficient, and whether the decree may
positively harm third parties. See United
States v. Microsoft Corp., 56 F.3d 1448,
1458–62 (D.C. Cir. 1995).
‘‘Nothing in this section shall be construed
to require the court to conduct an evidentiary
hearing or to require the court to permit
anyone to intervene.’’ 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(2).
Thus, in conducting this inquiry, ‘‘[t]he court
is nowhere compelled to go to trial or to
engage in extended proceedings which might
have the effect of vitiating the benefits of
prompt and less costly settlement through
the consent decree process.’’ 119 Cong. Rec.
24,598 (1973) (statement of Senator
Tunney).4 Rather:
[a]bsent a showing of corrupt failure of the
government to discharge its duty, the Court,
in making its public interest finding, should
* * * carefully consider the explanations of
the government in the competitive impact
statement and its responses to comments in
order to determine whether those
explanations are reasonable under the
circumstances.
United States v. Mid-Am. Dairymen, Inc.,
1977–1 Trade Cas. (CCH) ¶ 61,508, at 71,980
(W.D. Mo. 1977).
Accordingly, with respect to the adequacy
of the relief secured by the decree, a court
may not ‘‘engage in an unrestricted
evaluation of what relief would best serve the
public.’’ United States v. BNS, Inc., 858 F.2d
456, 462 (9th Cir. 1988) (citing United States
v. Bechtel Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th Cir.
1981)); see also Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1460–
62. Courts have held that:
[t]he balancing of competing social and
political interests affected by a proposed
antitrust consent decree must be left, in the
first instance, to the discretion of the
Attorney General. The court’s role in
protecting the public interest is one of
insuring that the government has not
breached its duty to the public in consenting
to the decree. The court is required to
determine not whether a particular decree is
the one that will best serve society, but
4 See United States v. Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp.
713, 716 (D. Mass. 1975) (recognizing it was not the
court’s duty to settle; rather, the court must only
answer ‘‘whether the settlement achieved [was]
within the reaches of the public interest’’). A
‘‘public interest’’ determination can be made
properly on the basis of the Competitive Impact
Statement and Response to Comments filed by the
Department of Justice pursuant to the APPA.
Although the APPA authorizes the use of additional
procedures, 15 U.S.C. 16(f), those procedures are
discretionary. A court need not invoke any of them
unless it believes that the comments have raised
significant issues and that further proceedings
would aid the court in resolving those issues. See
H.R. Rep. No. 93–1463, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. 8–9
(1974), reprinted in 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6535, 6538.
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whether the settlement is ‘‘within the reaches
of the public interest.’’ More elaborate
requirements might undermine the
effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by
consent decree.
Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis added)
(citations omitted).5
The proposed Final Judgment, therefore,
should not be reviewed under a standard of
whether it is certain to eliminate every
anticompetitive effect of a particular practice
or whether it mandates certainty of free
competition in the future. Court approval of
a final judgment requires a standard more
flexible and less strict than the standard
required for a finding of liability. ‘‘[A]
proposed decree must be approved even if it
falls short of the remedy the court would
impose on its own, as long as it falls within
the range of acceptability or is ‘within the
reaches of public interest.’’’ United States v.
AT&T, 552 F. Supp. 131, 151 (D.D.C. 1982)
(citations omitted) (quoting Gillette, 406 F.
Supp. at 716), aff’d sub nom. Maryland v.
United States, 460 U.S. 1001 (1983); see also
United States v. Alcan Aluminum Ltd., 605
F. Supp. 619, 622 (W.D. Ky. 1985) (approving
the consent decree even though the court
would have imposed a greater remedy).
Moreover, the Court’s role under the APPA
is limited to reviewing the remedy in
relationship to the violations that the United
States has alleged in its Complaint, and does
not authorize the Court to ‘‘construct [its]
own hypothetical case and then evaluate the
decree against that case.’’ Microsoft, 56 F.3d
at 1459. Because the ‘‘court’s authority to
review the decree depends entirely on the
government’s exercising its prosecutorial
discretion by bringing a case in the first
place,’’ it follows that ‘‘the court is only
authorized to review the decree itself,’’ and
not to ‘‘effectively redraft the complaint’’ to
inquire into other matters that the United
States did not pursue. Id. at 1459–60.
IX. Determinative Documents
There are no determinative materials or
documents within the meaning of the APPA
that were considered by the United States in
formulating the proposed Final Judgment.
Dated: June 23, 2006.
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Respectfully submitted,
Karen Phillips-Savoy,
Dando Cellini,
Jillian Charles,
James Foster,
Christine Hill,
Tara Shinnick,
Robert Wilder,
5 Cf. BNS, 858 F.2d at 463 (holding that the
court’s ‘‘ultimate authority under the [APPA] is
limited to approving or disapproving the consent
decree’’); Gillette, 406 F. Supp. at 716 (noting that,
in this way, the court is constrained to ‘‘look at the
overall picture not hypercritically, nor with a
microscope, but with an artist’s reducing glass’’).
See generally Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 (discussing
whether ‘‘the remedies [obtained in the decree are]
so inconsonant with the allegations charged as to
fall outside of the ‘‘reaches of the public interest’’).
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20:14 Jul 19, 2006
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U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, Litigation II Section, Washington,
DC 20530.
[FR Doc. 06–6361 Filed 7–19–06; 8:45 am]
41249
Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202–
307–0468).
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations, Antitrust Division.
BILLING CODE 4410–11–M
In the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
United States of America, Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, 325 7th Street,
NW.; Suite 300, Washington, DC 20530,
Plaintiff, v. The McClatchy Company, 2100 Q
Street, Sacramento, CA 95816, and KnightRidder, Incorporated, 50 West San Fernando
Street, San Jose, CA 95113, Defendants
Case Number 1:06CV01175, Judge: Richard
W. Roberts, Deck Type: Antitrust, Date
Stamp: 06/27/2006.
Antitrust Division
United States v. The McClatchy
Company and Knight-Ridder
Incorporated; Proposed Final
Judgment and Competitive Impact
Statement
Notice is hereby given pursuant to the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act,
15 U.S.C. 16(b) through (h), that a
proposed Final Judgment, Stipulation
and Competitive Impact Statement have
been filed with the United States
District Court for the District of
Columbia in United States of America v.
The Clatchy Company and KnightRidder, Incorporated, Case No.
1:06CV01175. On June 27, 2006, the
United States filed a Complaint alleging
that the proposed merger of The
McClatchy Company and KnightRidder, Incorporated would violate
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
18. The proposed Final Judgment, filed
the same time as the Complaint,
requires defendant The McClatchy
Company to divest the Pioneer Press, a
daily newspaper distributed in the
Minneapolis/St. Paul metropolitan area,
along with certain tangible and
intangible assets. Copies of the
Complaint, proposed Final Judgment
and Competitive Impact Statement are
available for inspection at the
Department of Justice in Washington,
DC in Room 215, 325 Seventh Street,
NW., and at the Office of the Clerk of
the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia, Washington, DC.
Public comment is invited within 60
days of the date of this notice. Such
comments, and responses thereto, will
be published in the Federal Register
and filed with the Court. Comments
should be directed to John R. Read,
Chief, Litigation III Section, Antitrust
Division, United States Department of
Jusstice, 325 7th Street, NW., Suite 300,
PO 00000
Frm 00053
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Complaint
The United States of America, acting under
the direction of the Attorney General of the
United States, brings this civil antitrust
action to prevent the proposed merger of The
McClatchy Company and Knight-Ridder,
Incorporated. These two newspaper
publishing companies are each other’s
primary competitor in the sale of local daily
newspapers to readers in the Minneapolis/St.
Paul metropolitan area in the state of
Minnesota, and in the sale of advertising in
such newspapers. The merger would
substantially lessen competition and tend to
create a monopoly in the publishing and
distribution of newspapers in violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
I. Jurisdiction and Venue
1. This action is filed by the United States
pursuant to Section 15 of the Clayton Act, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to obtain equitable
relief to prevent a violation of Section 7 of
the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 18.
2. Both defendants sell newspapers and
sell advertising in such newspapers, a
commercial activity that substantially affects
and is in the flow of interstate commerce.
The Court has jurisdiction over the subject
matter of this action and jurisdiction over the
parties pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 22, 25, and 26,
and 28 U.S.C. 1331 and 1337.
3. Both defendants conduct business in the
District of Columbia and have consented to
the plaintiff’s assertion that venue in this
District is proper under 15 U.S.C. 22 and 28
U.S.C. 1391(c).
II. Defendants and the Proposed Merger
4. Defendant The McClatchy Company
(‘‘McClatchy’’) is a Delaware corporation
with its headquarters in Sacramento,
California. McClatchy publishes twelve (12)
daily newspapers throughout the United
States. In the Minneapolis/St. Paul
metropolitan area, McClatchy owns and
operates the Star Tribune.
5. Defendant Knight-Ridder, Incorporated
(‘‘Knight-Ridder’’) is a Florida corporation
With its headquarters in San Jose, California.
Knight-Ridder publishes thirty-two (32) daily
newspapers throughout the United States. In
the Minneapolis/St. Paul metropolitan area,
Knight-Ridder owns and operates the St. Paul
Pioneer Press.
6. On March 12, 2006, McClatchy and
Knight-Ridder entered into an ‘‘Agreement
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 139 (Thursday, July 20, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41237-41249]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-6361]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States v. Inco Limited and Falconbridge Limited--Proposed
Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement
Notice is hereby given pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(b) through (h), that a Complaint, proposed
Final Judgment, Hold Separate Stipulation and Order, and Competitive
Impact Statement have been filed with the United States District Court
for the District of Columbia in United States v. Inco Limited and
Falconbridge Limited, Civil Action No. 1:06CV01151. On June 23, 2006,
the United States filed a Complaint which sought to enjoin Inco Limited
(``Inco'') from acquiring Falconbridge Limited (``Falconbridge''). The
Complaint alleged that Inco's acquisition of Falconbridge would
substantially lessen competition in the development, manufacture, and
sale of High-Purity Nickel in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 18, throughout the United States. The
proposed Final Judgment, filed June 26, 2006, requires defendants to
divest Falconbridge's Nikkelverk Refinery located in Kristiansand,
Norway, and certain marketing offices and related assets, to preserve
competition in the sale of High-Purity Nickel. A Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order, entered by the Court on June 28, 2006, requires
defendants to maintain, prior to divestiture, the competitive
independence and economic viability of the assets subject to
divestiture under the proposed Final Judgment. A Competitive Impact
Statement filed by the United States describes the Complaint, proposed
Final Judgment, Hold Separate Stipulation and Order, and the remedies
available to private litigants who may have been injured by the alleged
violations.
Copies of the Complaint, proposed Final Judgment, Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order, and Competitive Impact Statement are available
for inspection at the United States Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, 325 Seventh Street, NW., Room 215, Washington, DC 20530,
(telephone: 202-514-2481), and at the Clerk's Office of the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia, Washington, DC.
Copies of these materials may be obtained upon request and payment of a
copying fee.
Public comment is invited within the statutory 60-day comment
period. Such comments and responses thereto will be published in the
Federal Register and filed with the Court. Comments should be directed
to Maribeth Petrizzi, Chief, Litigation II Section, Antitrust Division,
U.S. Department of Justice, 1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington,
DC 20530, (telephone: 202-307-0924).
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations.
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America Department of Justice, Antitrust Division,
1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC 20530, Plaintiff v. INCO
Limited, 145 King Street West, Suite 1500, Toronto, ON, Canada M5H 4B7,
and Falconbridge Limited, 207 Queens Quay West Suite 800 Toronto, ON,
Canada M5J lA7, Defendants.
Case Number: 1:06CV01151, Judge: Rosemary M. Collyer, Deck Type:
Antitrust, Date Stamp: 06/23/2006.
Complaint
Plaintiff United States of America (``United States''), acting
under the direction of the Attorney General of the United States,
brings this civil antitrust action to obtain equitable relief against
defendants, Inco Limited (``Inco'') and Falconbridge Limited
(``Falconbridge''). Plaintiff complains and alleges as follows:
I. Introduction
1. The United States brings this action for injunctive relief
under Section 15 of the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to
prevent and restrain Inco and Falconbridge from violating Section 7
of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18. The United States seeks to prevent
the proposed acquisition of Falconbridge by Inco because that
acquisition would substantially lessen competition in the
development, manufacture, and sale of refined nickel of sufficient
purity and chemical composition that it can be utilized in super
alloys used for safety-critical applications (hereinafter ``High-
Purity Nickel''). The use of High-Purity Nickel is particularly
important in making such
[[Page 41238]]
products as the rotating parts of jet engines, which are often
called ``safety-critial parts.''
2. Inco and Falconbridge are two of the world's leading
producers of refined nickel, a metallic element that is valued for
its resistance to corrosion, stress, and high temperatures. Inco and
Falconbridge are also by far the world's two largest producers of
High-Purity Nickel.
3. High-Purity Nickel is primarily distinguished from other
refined nickel because it contains lower amounts of certain
impurities commonly referred to as trace elements. In safety-
critical parts, for example, the presence of trace elements can make
the parts less resistant to the extreme stresses and temperatures
under which they operate and may eventually lead to engine failure.
4. Inco's proposed acquisition of Falconbridge would reduce the
number of significant worldwide High-Purity Nickel suppliers from
three to two and create a company with over 80 percent of the
world's sales of High-Purity Nickel.
5. Unless the proposed acquisition is enjoined, competition in
High-Purity Nickel that has benefitted customers will be
substantially reduced. The proposed acquisition would likely result
in higher prices, lower quality, less innovation, and less favorable
delivery terms in the High-Purity Nickel market.
II. The Defendants
6. Defendant Inco is a Canadian corporation with its principal
place of business in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Inco's High-Purity
Nickel sales in the United States are made through its wholly-owned
subsidiary, International Nickel, Inc. (``INI''). INI is a Delaware
corporation with its principal place of business in Saddlebrook, New
Jersey.
7. Inco is one of the largest mining companies in the world.
Inco mines, processes, and refines various minerals, including
nickel. Inco also produces cobalt and platinum group metals
(``PGMs'') as by-products of its nickel production. In 2005, Inco
reported total sales of approximately $4.7 billion.
8. Inco's main nickel mining, processing, and refining
operations are located in Canada, although it owns mines and
processing facilities worldwide. Inco's High-Purity Nickel refining
operations are located in Ontario, Canada, and Wales, United
Kingdom. Inco's High-Purity Nickel is shipped to customers
worldwide, including the United States.
9. Defendant Falconbridge is a Canadian corporation with its
principal place of business in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Falconbridge's High-Purity Nickel sales in the United States are
made through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Falconbridge U.S., Inc.
(``FUS''). FUS is a Pennsylvania corporation with its principal
place of business in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
10. Like Inco, Falconbridge is one of the world's largest mining
companies. Falconbridge mines, processes, and refines various
minerals, including nickel and copper. Falconbridge also produces
cobalt and PGMs as by-products of both its nickel and copper
production. In 2005, Falconbridge reported total sales of
approximately $7.7 billion.
11. Falconbridge's primary nickel mining and processing
facilities are located in Ontario, Canada, although it also has such
facilities worldwide. Falconbridge's only High-Purity Nickel
refining operation is located in Kristiansand, Norway.
Falconbridge's High-Purity Nickel is shipped to customers worldwide,
including the United States.
III. Jurisdiction and Venue
12. Plaintiff United States brings this action against
defendants Inco and Falconbridge under Section 15 of the Clayton
Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to prevent and restrain the violation
by defendants of Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
13. Defendants produce and sell High-Purity Nickel in the flow
of interstate commerce. Their activities in developing, producing,
and selling High-Purity Nickel substantially affect interstate
commerce. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this
action pursuant to Section 12 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 22; and
28 U.S.C. 1331, 1337(a), and 1345.
14. Venue is proper in this District pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
1391(d). Inco and Falconbridge have consented to venue and personal
jurisdiction in this judicial district.
IV. The Proposed Transaction
15. Pursuant to a Support Agreement dated October 10, 2005, Inco
stated that it intended to offer to purchase all of the common
shares of Falconbridge not currently owned by it. Also pursuant to
that Support Agreement, Falconbridge's Board of Directors stated
that it had determined that it is in the best interests of
Falconbridge to support the offer, recommend acceptance of Inco's
offer to holders of the common shares of Falconbridge, and use its
reasonable best efforts to permit Inco's offer to be successful, on
the terms and conditions contained in the Support Agreement.
16. On October 24, 2005, Inco made a forinal offer to purchase
all of the outstanding common shares of Falconbridge, a transaction
now valued at over $15 billion dollars. Inco's offer to purchase,
originally open for acceptance until December 23, 2005, has been
extended until June 30, 2006.
V. Reduced Competition in the High-Purity Nickel Market
A. The Relevant Product Market
17. Nickel is a metallic element that is particularly resistant
to high temperatures, high stresses, and corrosion. Nickel is often
combined with other materials to form alloys with particular
performance characteristics. These performance characteristics
depend on the amount of nickel and other elements contained in the
particular alloy.
18. As a general proposition, as the amount of nickel in the
alloy increases, the more resistant the alloy is to heat and stress.
The most common alloy using nickel is stainless steel, which
contains, on average, approximately 10 percent nickel and is used in
applications demanding the least amount of the resistence to heat
and stress that nickel provides.
19. At the other end of the spectrum are so-called super alloys.
Super alloys generally contain between 50 and 70 percent nickel, as
well as specific amounts of other elements, including iron, cobalt,
and chromium, that combine to give the alloy specific performance
characteristics. Super alloys are primarily used in chemical
processing plants, medical applications, industrial power
generation, and various aerospace applications.
20. Certain products made from super alloys, such as the
rotating parts of jet engines, are considered safety-critical parts.
For these parts, it is vital that, in addition to containing the
proper amount of nickel, the super alloy be as free as possible from
certain trace elements that could compromise the performance of the
product and result in serious problems, like engine failure. For
example, designers of jet engines severely restrict the maximum
amounts of trace elements that can be contained in superalloys used
to produce moving parts for jet engines.
21. The nickel that meets demanding safety-critical requirements
is High-Purity Nickel. High-Purity Nickel is refined nickel of
sufficient purity and chemical composition that it can be utilized
in super alloys used for safety-critical applications. Only a small
portion of the refined nickel produced in the world has sufficient
metal content and purity to qualify as High-Purity Nickel.
22. Super alloy makers must use High-Purity Nickel to meet the
specifications for safety-critical parts. Super alloy makers do not
have the in-house capability to remove sufficient quantities of
undesirable trace elements from non-High-Purity Nickel to permit
them to produce alloys that meet the specifications for safety-
critical parts.
23. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the
price of High-Purity Nickel would not cause the purchasers of
safety-critical parts to substitute non-High-Purity Nickel or
elements other than nickel so as to make such a price increase
unprofitable.
24. Accordingly, the development, manufacture, and sale of High-
Purity Nickel is a line of commerce and a relevant product market
for purposes of analyzing this acquisition under Section 7 of the
Clayton Act.
B. The Relevant Geographic Market
25. All of the High-Purity Nickel sold in the world is mined,
processed, and refined outside of the United States. Both Inco and
Falconbridge sell High-Purity Nickel throughout the world. Both
companies import High-Purity Nickel into the United States and sell
that nickel to customers located throughout the United States.
26. Accordingly, the world is the relevant geographic market
within the meaning of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
C. Concentration
27. The market for High-Purity Nickel is highly concentrated.
Inco and Falconbridge are by far the two largest producers of High-
Purity Nickel sold worldwide and in the United States.
28. Aside from Inco and Falconbridge, only three companies have
demonstrated any
[[Page 41239]]
ability to produce High-Purity Nickel. One of these companies
consistently produces High-Purity Nickel, but its available capacity
is substantially less than that of either Inco or Falconbridge and
it cannot economically increase its capacity. The other two
companies are not substantial competitors in the High-Purity Nickel
market. While both have substantial capacity to make non-High-Purity
Nickel and both have produced small amounts of High-Purity Nickel,
their ability to make High-Purity Nickel, and to make it on a
consistent basis, is very limited.
29. Inco accounts for at least 40 percent of the worldwide sales
of High-Purity Nickel. Similarly, Falconbridge accounts for at least
40 percent of the worldwide sales of High-Purity Nickel.
30. The market for High-Purity Nickel would become substantially
more concentrated if Inco acquires Falconbridge. Combined, Inco and
Falconbridge would account for over 80 percent of worldwide High-
Purity Nickel sales. Using a measure of market concentration called
the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (``HHI'') (defined and explained in
Appendix A), the proposed transaction will increase the HHI in the
market for High-Purity Nickel by approximately 3,200 points to a
post-acquisition level of approximately 6,800, well in excess of
levels that raise significant antitrust concerns.
D. Anticompetitive Effects
1. The Proposed Transaction Will Harm Competition in the Market for
High-Purity Nickel.
31. High-Purity Nickel customers generally view Inco's and
Falconbridge's High-Purity Nickel as their only available options
and do not view the products of other producers as viable
alternatives for High-Purity Nickel due to concerns relating to the
other producers' quality, capacity, and reliability.
32. The vigorous and aggressive competition between Inco and
Falconbridge in the production and sale of High-Purity Nickel has
benefitted customers. Inco and Falconbridge have competed directly
in terms of price, quality, innovation, and delivery terms.
33. The proposed acquisition will eliminate the competition
between Inco and Falconbridge, reduce the number of significant
suppliers of High-Purity Nickel from three to two, and substantially
increase the likelihood that Inco will unilaterally increase the
price of High-Purity Nickel to a significant number of customers.
34. Inco and Falconbridge have the ability to increase prices to
certain customers of High-Purity Nickel. Some customers must
purchase High-Purity Nickel because they use it in super alloys used
for safety-critical applications. These customers do not have the
ability to substitute any other product for High-Purity Nickel. Inco
and Falconbridge are able to determine their High-Purity Nickel
customers' end-uses and identify which customers are purchasing
High-Purity Nickel specifically for super alloys used for safety-
critical applications.
35. Inco and Falconbridge can, therefore, charge customers that
are purchasing High-Purity Nickel for super alloys used for safety-
critical applications a higher price than customers that are
purchasing High-Purity Nickel for other uses. Without the
competitive constraint of head-to-head competition between Inco and
Falconbridge, Inco post-merger will have a greater ability to
exercise market-power by raising prices to companies that purchase
High-Purity Nickel for super alloys used for safety-critical
applications.
36. The other High-Purity Nickel producers do not have the
incentive or the ability, individually or collectively, to
effectively constrain a unilateral exercise of market power by Inco
after the acquisition.
37. The transaction will therefore substantially lessen
competition in the market for High-Purity Nickel, which is likely to
lead to higher prices, lower quality, less innovation, and less
favorable delivery terms for the ultimate consumers of such
products, in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
2. Entry Is Not Likely To Deter the Exercise of Market Power
38. Successful entry or expansion into the development,
manufacture, and sale of High-Purity Nickel is difficult, time-
consuming, and costly. Companies not currently producing nickel of
any kind would require roughly three to five years and the
expenditure of at least $100 million to build a refinery to produce
a finished nickel product. In addition to building the refinery, the
new entrant, if not vertically integrated, would also have to secure
nickel feedstock to refine.
39. The cost of entering the High-Purity Nickel market is even
greater than the cost of entering the refined nickel market
generally. A new entrant into the High-Purity Nickel market would
have to invest in additional equipment and processes to enable it to
extract sufficient undesirable trace elements to produce the nickel
required by makers of super alloys used for safety-critical
applications. Further, if not vertically integrated, a new entrant
would have to secure nickel feedstock of sufficient quality to be
able to refine High-Purity Nickel.
40. Even companies that currently produce non-High-Purity Nickel
would require an investment of millions of dollars and several years
to modify their facilities and processes to be capable of producing
High-Purity Nickel. These companies would not invest the substantial
time and money necessary to modify their facilities and processes to
produce High-Purity Nickel in response to a small but significant
increase in the price of High-Purity Nickel.
41. Moreover, it is not sufficient simply to be able to produce
High-Purity Nickel. A new entrant in the High-Purity Nickel market
would have to be able to produce High-Purity Nickel in sufficient
quantities with sufficiently consistent purity levels that customers
could depend on it to provide the amounts of High-Purity Nickel
needed at the appropriate time. Achieving such capability could
require a substantial investment in time and money by a company
seeking to enter the High-Purity Nickel market.
42. Therefore, entry or expansion by any other firm into the
High-Purity Nickel market would not be timely, likely, or sufficient
to defeat an anticompetitive price increase in the event that Inco
acquires Falconbridge.
VI. The Proposed Acquisition Violates Section 7 of the Clayton Act
43. The proposed acquisition of Falconbridge by Inco would
substantially lessen competition and tend to create a monopoly in
interstate trade and commerce in violation of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
44. Unless restrained, the transaction will have the following
anticompetitive effects, among others:
a. Actual and potential competition in the world market,
including the United States, between Inco and Falconbridge in the
development, manufacture, and sale of High-Purity Nickel will be
eliminated;
b. Competition generally in the development, manufacture, and
sale of High-Purity Nickel will be substantially lessened; and
c. Prices for High-Purity Nickel will likely increase, the
quality of High-Purity Nickel will likely decline, innovation
relating to High-Purity Nickel will likely decline, and the delivery
terms currently offered in the High-Purity Nickel market will likely
become less favorable to the customer.
VII. Request for Relief
45. Plaintiff requests that:
a. Inco's proposed acquisition of Falconbridge be adjudged and
decreed to be unlawful and in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 18;
b. Defendants and all persons acting on their behalf be
permanently enjoined and restrained from consummating the proposed
acquisition or from entering into or carrying out any contract,
agreement, plan, or understanding, the effect of which would be to
combine Inco with the operations of Falconbridge;
c. Plaintiff be awarded its costs for this action; and
d. Plaintiff receive such other and further relief as the Court
deems just and proper.
Dated: June 23, 2006.
Respectfully submitted.
For Plaintiff United States of America:
Thomas O. Barnett,
Assistant Attorney General, D.C. Bar #426840.
David L. Meyer,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General, for Civil Enforcement, D.C. Bar
#414420.
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations and Civil Enforcement.
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section, D.C. Bar #435204.
Karen Y. Phillips-Savoy,
Dando B. Cellini,
Jillian E. Charles (D.C. Bar 459052),
James K. Foster, Jr.,
Christine A. Hill (D.C. Bar 461048/inactive),
Tara M. Shinnick,
Robert W. Wilder,
Attorneys, U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division,
Litigation II Section, 1401 H Street. NW., Suite 3000, Washington,
DC 20530, Tel: (202) 307-0924.
[[Page 41240]]
Appendix A--Herfindahl-Hirschman Index Calculations
``HHI'' means the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, a commonly
accepted measure of market concentration. It is calculated by
squaring the market share of each firm competing in the market and
then summing the resulting numbers. For example, for a market
consisting of four firms with shares of thirty, thirty, twenty, and
twenty percent, the HHI is 2600 (302 + 302 +
202 + 202 = 2600). The HHI takes into a ccount
the relative size and distribution of the firms in a market and
approaches zero when a market consists of a large number of firms of
relatively equal size. The HHI increases both as the number of firms
in the market decreases and as the disparity in size between those
firms increases.
Markets in which the HHI is between 1000 and 1800 points are
considered to be moderately concentrated and those in which the HHI
is in excess of 1800 points are considered to be highly
concentrated. Transactions that increase the HHI by more than 100
points in highly concentrated markets presumptively raise antitrust
concerns under the Horizontal Merger Guidelines issued by the U.S.
Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission. See
Horizontal Merger Guidelines Sec. 1.51.
Final Judgment
Whereas, plaintiff, United States of America, filed its
Complaint on June 23, 2006, and plaintiff and defendants, Inco
Limited and Falconbridge Limited, by their respective attorneys,
have consented to the entry of this Final Judgment without trial or
adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and without this Final
Judgment constituting any evidence against or admission by any party
regarding any issue of fact or law;
And Whereas, defendants agree to be bound by the provisions of
this Final Judgment pending its approval by the Court;
And Whereas, the essence of this Final Judgment is the prompt
and certain divestiture of certain rights or assets by the
defendants to assure that competition is not substantially lessened;
And Whereas, plaintiff requires defendants to make certain
divestitures and enter into the Supply Agreement and provide any
Alternative Acquirer the Third-Party Feedstock Option for the
purpose of remedying the loss of competition alleged in the
Complaint;
And Whereas, defendants have represented to the United States
that the divestitures, the Supply Agreement, and the Third-Party
Feedstock Option required below can and will be made and that
defendants will later raise no claim of hardship or difficulty as
grounds for asking the Court to modify any of the divestiture
provisions contained below;
Now Therefore, before any testimony is taken, without trial or
adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
parties, it is Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed:
I. Jurisdiction
This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of and each
of the parties to this action. The Complaint states a claim upon
which relief may be granted against defendants under Section 7 of
the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 18.
II. Definitions
As used in this Final Judgment:
A. ``Acquirer'' means LionOre, the entity to whom defendants
shall divest the Divested Business.
B. ``Acquirer Shares'' means the issuance to Falconbridge of no
more than 19.99 percent or 49,118,057 of the outstanding common
shares of the Acquirer at the completion of the purchase and sale of
the Divested Business to the Acquirer.
C. ``Acquisition of Falconbridge'' means: (a) the condition that
Inco has taken up and paid for such number of Falconbridge common
shares, validly deposited and not withdrawn at the expiry time of
Inco's Offer to Purchase all of the Outstanding Shares of
Falconbridge, dated October 24,2005, as amended, that, together with
any Falconbridge common shares directly or indirectly owned by Inco,
constitutes at least 50.01% of the Falconbridge common shares on a
fully-diluted basis at the expiry time or (b) Inco's acquisition of
control of Falconbridge by any other means.
D. ``Alternative Acquirer'' means an Acquirer other than LionOre
that is in the metals mining or processing business and is able to
supply, on a long-term basis, sufficient Feedstock to assure the
United States, in its sole discretion, that the Nikkelverk Refinery
will remain an economically viable competitive business.
E. ``Alternative Divested Business'' means Falconbridge
Nikkelverk AlS, Falconbridge, U.S., Inc. (``FUS''), Falconbridge
Europe S.A. (``FESA''), and Falconbridge (Japan) Limited (``FJKK''),
including:
1. All tangible assets used in the development, production,
servicing, and sale of the Nikkelverk Refinery Products, including
but not limited to the Nikkelverk Refinery; all real property; any
facilities used for research, development, and engineering support,
and any real property associated with those facilities;
manufacturing and sales assets, including capital equipment,
vehicles, supplies, personal property, inventory, office furniture,
fixed assets and fixtures, materials, on- or off-site warehouses or
storage facilities, and other tangible property or improvements; all
licenses, permits and authorizations issued by any governmental
organization; all contracts, agreements, leases, commitments, and
understandings; all customer contracts, lists, accounts, and credit
records; and other records relating to the Alternative Divested
Business;
2. All intangible assets that have been used exclusively or
primarily in the development, production, servicing, and sale of the
Nikkelverk Refinery Products, including but not limited to all
patents, licenses and sublicenses, intellectual property,
trademarks, trade names, service marks, service names (including the
product or trade name ``SuperElectro'' or any variation thereof),
technical information, computer software and related documentation,
know-how, trade secrets, drawings, blueprints, designs, design
protocols, specifications for materials, specifications for parts
and devices, safety procedures for the handling of materials and
substances, quality assurance and control procedures, design tools
and simulation capability, and all manuals and technical information
provided to the employees, customers, suppliers, agents or licensees
of the Alternative Divested Business, provided that with respect to
any such intangible assets relating to metal separation or
purification processes, at the option of the Alternative Acquirer
defendants may retain a non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully paid-
up license(s) to or copy of such intangible assets;
3. A non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully paid-up license(s)
for the use of the name ``Falconbridge,'' the duration and terms of
which shall be negotiated by the defendants and the Alternative
Acquirer and limited to the field of use of the Nikkelverk Refinery
Products, provided that any such license(s) may be transferable to
any future purchaser of the Nikkelverk Refinery;
4. A non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully paid-up license(s)
for use of any intangible asset that has been used by both the
Alternative Divested Business and any of Falconbridge's non-divested
businesses, provided that such license(s) may be transferable to any
future purchaser of Nikkelverk Refinery; and
5. All research data concerning historic and current research
and development efforts conducted at or for the Alternative Divested
Business, including designs of experiments, and the results of
unsuccessful designs and experiments.
The term ``Alternative Divested Business'' shall not include
tangible or intangible assets exclusively used in, or personnel
exclusively responsible for, the production or sale of products
other than the Nikkelverk Refinery Products.
F. ``Alternative Supply Agreement'' means an agreement between
Inco and the Alternative Acquirer on the terms described in Section
V(B) by which Inco commits to supply to the Alternative Acquirer,
other than through a New Third-Party Supply Agreement, Feedstock to
be used in operating the Nikkelverk Refinery.
G. ``Divested Business'' means Falconbridge Nikkelverk A/S,
Falconbridge, U.S., Inc. (``FUS''), Falconbridge Europe S.A.
(``FESA''), Falconbridge (Japan) Limited (``FJKK''), and
Falconbridge International Limited (``FIL''), including:
1. All tangible assets used in the development, production,
servicing, and sale of the Nikkelverk Refinery Products, including
but not limited to the Nikkelverk Refinery; all real property; any
facilities used for research development, and engineering support,
and any real property associated with those facilities;
manufacturing and sales assets, including capital equipment,
vehicles, supplies, personal property, inventory, office furniture,
fixed assets and fixtures, materials, on- or off-site warehouses or
storage facilities, and other tangible property or improvements; all
licenses, permits and authorizations issued by any governmental
organization; all contracts, agreements, leases, commitments, and
understandings; all customers contracts, lists, accounts, and credit
records; and other records relating to the Divested Business;
[[Page 41241]]
2. All intangible assets that have been used exclusively or
primarily in the development, production, servicing, and sale of the
Nikkelverk Refinery Products, including but not limited to all
patents, licenses and sublicenses, intellectual property,
trademarks, trade names, service marks, service names (including the
product or trade name ``SuperElectro'' or any variation thereof),
technical information, computer software and related documentation,
know-how, trade secrets, drawings, blueprints, designs, design
protocols, specifications for materials, specifications for parts
and devices, safety procedures for the handling of materials and
substances, quality assurance and control procedures, design tools
and simulation capability, and all manuals and technical information
provided to the employees, customers, suppliers, agents or licensees
of the Divested Business, provided that with respect to any such
intangible assets relating to metal separation or purification
processes, at the option of the Acquirer defendants may retain a
non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully paid-up license(s) to or copy
of such intangible assets;
3. A non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully paid-up license(s)
for the use of the name ``Falconbridge,'' the duration and terms of
which shall be negotiated by the defendants and the Acquirer and
limited to the field of use of the Nikkelverk Refinery Products,
provided that any such license(s) may be transferable to any future
purchaser of the Nikkelverk Refinery;
4. A non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully paid-up license(s)
for use of any intangible asset that has been used by both the
Divested Business and any of Falconbridge's non-divested businesses,
provided that such license(s) may be transferable to any future
purchaser of Nikkelverk Refinery; and
5. All research data concerning historic and current research
and development efforts conducted at or for the Divested Business,
including designs of experiments, and the results of unsuccessful
designs and experiments.
The term ``Divested Business'' shall not include tangible or
intangible assets exclusively used in, or personnel exclusively
responsible for, the production or sale of products other than the
Nikkelverk Refinery Products.
H. ``Existing Third-Party Supply Agreements'' means existing
agreements between Falconbridge and third parties for the supply of
Feedstock for the Nikkelverk Refinery that is produced by persons
other than the defendants.
I. ``Falconbridge'' means defendant Falconbridge Limited, a
Canadian corporation with its headquarters in Toronto, Canada, its
successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups,
affiliates, partnerships, and joint ventures, and their directors,
officers, managers, agents, and employees.
J. ``Falconbridge International Limited'' means a corporation
organized under the laws of Barbados and a subsidiary of
Falconbridge responsible, in part, for the acquisition of Feedstock
from third parties.
K. ``Feedstock'' means nickel-in-matte and other products and
intermediate compounds constituting refinery feed sources suitable
for refining at Nikkelverk Refinery.
L. ``Foreign Competition Clearance'' means an action or inaction
by the European Commission that results in the termination of any
relevant waiting period, or grant of approval, clearance or consent,
that is applicable to the acquisition of Falconbridge by Inco.
M. ``High-Purity Nickel'' means refined nickel of sufficient
purity and chemical composition that it can be utilized in super
alloys used for safety-critical applications.
N. ``Inco'' means defendant Inco Limited, a Canadian corporation
with its headquarters in Toronto, Canada, its successors and
assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, affiliates,
partnerships, and joint ventures, and their directors, officers,
managers, agents, and employees.
O. ``LionOre'' means LionOre Mining International Limited, a
Canadian corporation with its headquarters in London, England, its
successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups,
affiliates, partnerships, and joint ventures, and their directors,
officers, managers, agents, and employees.
P. ``New Third-Party Supply Agreement'' means one or more
agreements between the defendants and the Alternative Acquirer on
the terms described in Section V for the supply to the Nikkelverk
Refinery of Feedstock that is produced by persons other than the
defendants.
Q. ``Nikkelverk Refinery'' means the nickel, copper, cobalt, and
precious metals refinery owned by Falconbridge's subsidiary
Falconbridge Nikkelverk A/S and located In Kristiansand, Norway.
R. ``Nikkelverk Refinery Products'' means the finished nickel,
copper, cobalt, precious metals, and other products produced at the
Nikkelverk Refinery.
S. ``Supply Agreement'' means an agreement between Inco and the
Acquirer on the terms described in Section IV by which Inco commits
to supply to the Acquirer, other than through a New Third-Party
Supply Agreement, Feedstock to be used in operating the Nikkelverk
Refinery.
T. ``Third-Party Feedstock Option'' means one or more of the
options available to the Alternative Acquirer in Section V(A)(3) to
obtain the quantities and quality of Feedstock supplied pursuant to
the Existing Third-Party Supply Agreements.
III. Applicability
A. This Final Judgment applies to Inco and Falconbridge, as
defined above, and all other persons in active concert or
participation with any of them who receive actual notice of this
Final Judgment by personal service or otherwise.
B. Defendants shall require, as a condition of the sale or other
disposition of all or substantially all of their assets or of lesser
business units that include the Divested Business, that the
purchaser agrees to be bound by the provisions of this Final
Judgment.
IV. Divestiture
A. In the event that Inco acquires any shares pursuant to Inco
Limited Offer to Purchase All of the Outstanding Shares of
Falconbridge Limited dated October 24, 2005, as amended, defendants
are ordered and directed concurrently with Inco's Acquisition of
Falconbridge, (1) to divest the Divested Business to the Acquirer in
a manner consistent with this Final Judgment, and (2) to enter into
the Supply Agreement with the Acquirer. Defendants shall, as soon as
possible, but within one business day after the Acquisition of
Falconbridge, notify the United States of (1) the effective date of
the Acquisition of Falconbridge and (2) the effective date that the
Divested Business was divested to the Acquirer.
B. Defendants shall provide the United States and the Acquirer
information relating to the personnel employed by the Divested
Business or involved exclusively or primarily in research,
development, production, operation, and sale of the Nikkelverk
Refinery Products or procurement of Feedstock from third parties for
the Divested Business, to enable the Acquirer to make offers of
employment. Defendants will not interfere with any negotiations by
the Acquirer to employ any of the defendants' employees whose
responsibilities exclusively or primarily involve the research,
development, production, operation, or sale of the products of the
Divested Business or procurement of Feedstock from third parties for
the Divested Business.
C. Defendants shall permit the Acquirer to have reasonable
access to personnel and to make inspections of the physical
facilities of the Divested Business; access to any and all
environmental, zoning, and other permit documents and information;
access to any and all financial, operational, or other documents and
information customarily provided as part of a due diligence process;
and any documents and information the Acquirer shall consider
relevant to any issues relating to the Supply Agreement.
D. Defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer that each asset that
was operational as of the date of filing of the Complaint in this
matter will be operational on the date of divestiture.
E. Defendants shall enter into the Supply Agreement with the
Acquirer to provide Feedstock of the same or substantially the same
quality and volume provided by Falconbridge to be used in operating
the Nikkelverk Refinery. At the option of the Acquirer, such Supply
Agreement may have a term of up to ten (10) years. The terms and
conditions of the Supply Agreement must be commercially reasonable
and designed to enable the Acquirer to compete effectively in the
sale of High-Purity Nickel. The terms and conditions of the Supply
Agreement must be approved by the United States in its sole
discretion. Inco shall give the United States 30 calendar days
notice before exercising any contract right to cancel or terminate
the Supply Agreement and before implementing any material change to
any term related to the length of the Supply Agreement, the volume
and quality of the Feedstock, or the price. In the performance of
the Supply Agreement, defendants shall take no action the effect of
which is to interfere with or impede the ability of the Acquirer to
compete effectively in the sale of High-Purity Nickel.
F. Defendants shall not take any action that will impede in any
way the permitting,
[[Page 41242]]
operation. or divestiture of the Divested Business.
G. Defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer that there are no
material defects in the . environmental, zoning, or other permits
pertaining to the operation of the Divested Business, and that
following the sale of the Divested Business, defendants will not
undertake, directly or indirectly, any challenges to the
environmental, zoning, or other permits relating to the operation of
the Divested Business.
H. Nothing in this Final Judgment shall be construed to require
the Acquirer as a condition of any license granted by or to
defendants pursuant to Sections II (G)(2)-(4) to extend to
defendants the right to use the Acquirer's improvements to processes
used in the production of Nikkelverk Refinery Products.
I. Unless the United States otherwise consents in writing, the
divestiture pursuant to Section IV of this Final Judgment shall
include the entire Divested Business and the Supply Agreement, and
shall be accomplished in such a way as to satisfy the United States,
in its sole discretion, that the Divested Business can and will be
used by the Acquirer as part of a viable, ongoing business, engaged
in producing High-Purity Nickel for sale worldwide, including the
United States. The divestiture shall be accomplished so as to
satisfy the United States, in its sole discretion, that:
1. the Divested Business will remain viable and the divestiture
of the Divested business will remedy the competitive harm alleged in
the Complaint; and
2. none of the terms of any agreement between the Acquirer and
defendants give defendants the ability unreasonably to raise the
Acquirer's costs, to lower the Acquirer's efficiency, or to
otherwise interfere in the ability of the Acquirer to compete
effectively in the production and sale of High-Purity Nickel.
V. Appointment of Trustee to Effect Divestiture
A. If defendants have not divested the Divested Business as
specified in Section IV(A), defendants shall notify the United
States of that fact in writing. Upon application of the United
States, the Court shall appoint a trustee selected by the United
States and approved by the Court (1) to divest the Alternative
Divested Business in a manner consistent with this Final Judgment to
an Alternative Acquirer acceptable to the United States in its sole
discretion, (2) at the option of the Alternative Acquirer, to
effectuate the Alternative Supply Agreement between the defendants
and the Alternative Acquirer, and (3) except for those Existing
Third-Party Supply Agreements under which Feedstocks are
contractually obligated to be processed at the Nikkelverk Refinery,
to (a) effectuate, at the option of the Alternative Acquirer, the
New Third-Party Supply Agreement between the defendants and the
Alternative Acquirer, (b) oversee the defendants' best efforts to
procure the assignment of the Existing Third-Party Supply
Agreements, (c) order the divestiture of Falconbridge International
Limited, or (d) some combination of these options, to ensure that
the Alternative Acquirer obtains the quantities and quality of
Feedstock to be supplied pursuant to the Existing Third-Party Supply
Agreements consistent with the remaining term of each of the
Existing Third-Party Supply Agreements. In the event the European
Commission also requires the divestiture of the same assets, the
United States shall consult in good faith with the European
Commission to ensure selection of a trustee acceptable to both the
United States and the European Commission.
B. At the option of the Alternative Acquirer, defendants shall
enter into the Alternative Supply Agreement with the Alternative
Acquirer to provide Feedstock of the same or substantially the same
quality and volume provided by Falconbridge to be used in operating
the Nikkelverk Refinery. At the option of the Alternative Acquirer,
such Alternative Supply Agreement may have a term of up to ten (10)
years. The terms and conditions of the Alternative Supply Agreement
must be commercially reasonable and designed to enable the
Alternative Acquirer to compete effectively in the sale of High-
Purity Nickel. The terms and conditions of the Alternative Supply
Agreement must be approved by the United States in its sole
discretion. Inco shall give the United States 30 calendar days
notice before exercising any contract right to cancel or terminate
the Alternative Supply Agreement and before implementing any
material change to any term related to the length of the Alternative
Supply Agreement, the volume and quality of the Feedstock, or the
price. In the performance of the Alternative Supply Agreement,
defendants shall take no action the effect of which is to interfere
with or impede the ability of the Alternative Acquirer to compete
effectively in the sale of High-Purity Nickel.
C. Unless the United States otherwise consents in writing, the
divestiture pursuant to Section V of this Final Judgment shall
include the entire Alternative Divested Business, Alternative Supply
Agreement, and Third-Party Feedstock Option, and shall be
accomplished in such a way as to satisfy the United States, in its
sole discretion, that the Alternative Divested Business can and will
be used by the Alternative Acquirer as part of a viable, ongoing
business, engaged in producing High-Purity Nickel for sale
worldwide, including the United States. A divestiture pursuant to
Section V of this Final Judgment, shall be accomplished so as to
satisfy the United States, in its sole discretion, that:
1. The Alternative Acquirer has the intent and capability
(including the necessary managerial, operational, technical and
financial capability) to compete effectively in the production and
sale of High-Purity Nickel; and
2. That none of the terms of any agreement between the
Alternative Acquirer and defendants give defendants the ability
unreasonably to raise the Alternative Acquirer's costs, to lower the
Alternative Acquirer's efficiency, or otherwise to interfere in the
ability of the Alternative Acquirer to compete effectively in the
production and sale of High-Purity Nickel; and
3. The Alternative Divested Business will remain viable and the
divestiture of the Alternative Divested Business will remedy the
competitive harm alleged in the Complaint.
D. Nothing in this Final Judgment shall be construed to require
the Alternative Acquirer as a condition of any license granted by or
to defendants pursuant to Sections II (E)(2)-(4) to extend to
defendants the right to use the Alternative Acquirer's improvements
to processes used in the production of Nikkelverk Refinery Products.
E. With respect to any divestiture to an Alternative Acquirer
under Section V of this Final Judgment, defendants shall have the
same obligations to the Alternative Acquirer with respect to the
Alternative Divested Business as they do to the Acquirer with
respect to the Divested Business as set forth in Sections IV(B),
(C), (D), (F), and (G) of the Final Judgment.
F. After the appointment of a trustee becomes effective, only
the trustee shall have the right to sell the Alternative Divested
Business. The trustee shall have the power and authority to
accomplish the divestiture to an Alternative Acquirer acceptable to
the United States at such price and on such terms as are then
obtainable upon reasonable effort by the trustee, subject to the
provisions of Sections V and VI of this Final Judgment, and shall
have such other powers as this Court deems appropriate. Subject to
Section V(H) of this Final Judgment, the trustee may hire at the
cost and expense of defendants any investment bankers, attorneys, or
other agents, who shall be solely accountable to the trustee,
reasonably necessary in the trustee's judgment to assist in the
divestiture.
G. Defendants shall not object to a sale by the trustee, or to
the Alternative Supply Agreement or the Third-Party Feedstock Option
ordered by the trustee, on any ground other than the trustee's
malfeasance. Any such objections by defendants must be conveyed in
writing to the United States and the trustee within ten (10)
calendar days after the trustee has provided the notice required
under Section VI.
H. The trustee shall serve at the cost and expense of
defendants, on such terms and conditions as plaintiff approves, and
shall account for all monies derived from the sale of the
Alternative Divested Business and all costs and expenses so
incurred. After approval by the Court of the trustee's accounting,
including fees for its services and those of any professionals and
agents retained by the trustee, all remaining money shall be paid to
defendants and the trust shall then be terminated. The compensation
of the trustee and any professionals and agents retained by the
trustee shall be reasonable in light of the value of the Alternative
Divested Business and based on a fee arrangement providing the
trustee with an incentive based on the price and terms of the
divestiture and the speed with which it is accomplished, but
timeliness is paramount.
I. Defendants shall use their best efforts to assist the trustee
in accomplishing the required divestiture. The trustee and any
consultants, accountants, attorneys, and other persons retained by
the trustee shall have full and complete access to the
[[Page 41243]]
personnel, books, records, and facilities of the business to be
divested, and defendants shall develop financial and other
information relevant to such business as the trustee may reasonably
request, subject to customary confidentiality protection for trade
secret or other confidential research, development, or commercial
information. Defendants shall take no action to interfere with or to
impede the trustee's accomplishment of the divestiture.
J. After its appointment, the trustee shall file monthly reports
with the United States and the Court setting forth the trustee's
efforts to accomplish the divestiture ordered under this Final
Judgment. To the extent such reports contain information that the
trustee deems confidential, such reports shall not be filed in the
public docket of the Court. Such reports shall include the name,
address, and telephone number of each person who, during the
preceding month, made an offer to acquire, expressed an interest in
acquiring, entered into negotiations to acquire, or was contacted or
made an inquiry about acquiring, any interest in the Alternative
Divested Business and shall describe in detail each contact with any
such person. The trustee shall maintain full records of all efforts
made to divest the Alternative Divested Business.
K. If the trustee has not accomplished such divestiture within
six months after its appointment, the trustee shall promptly file
with the Court a report setting forth (1) The trustee's efforts to
accomplish the required divestiture; (2) the reasons, in the
trustee's judgment, why the required divestiture has not been
accomplished; and (3) the trustee's recommendations. To the extent
such reports contain information that the trustee deems
confidential, such reports shall not be filed in the public docket
of the Court. The trustee shall at the same time furnish such report
to the plaintiff who shall have the right to make additional
recommendations consistent with the purpose of the trust. The Court
thereafter shall enter such orders as it shaIl deem appropriate to
carry out the purpose of the Final Judgment, which may, if
necessary, include extending the trust and the term of the trustee's
appointment by a period requested by the United States.
VI. Notice of Proposed Divestiture
A. Within two (2) business days following execution of a
definitive divestiture agreement, the trustee shall notify the
United States and the defendants of any proposed divestiture
required by Section V of this Final Judgment. The notice shall set
forth the details of the proposed divestiture and list the name,
address, and telephone number of each person not previously
identified who offered or expressed an interest in or desire to
acquire any ownership interest in the Alternative Divested Business,
together with full details of the same.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of receipt by the United
States of such notice, the United States may request from
defendants, the proposed Alternative Acquirer, any other third
party, or the trustee if applicable, additional information
concerning the proposed divestiture, the proposed Alternative
Acquirer, and any other potential Alternative Acquirer. Defendants
and the trustee shall furnish any additional information requested
within fifteen (15) calendar days of the receipt of the request,
unless the parties shall otherwise agree.
C. Within (a) thirty (30) calendar days after receipt of the
notice or (b) twenty (20) calendar days after the United States has
been provided the additional information requested from defendants,
the proposed Alternative Acquirer, any third party, or the trustee,
whichever is later, the United States shall provide written notice
to defendants and the trustee, if there is one, stating whether or
not it objects to the proposed divestiture. If the United States
provides written. notice that it does not object, the divestiture
may be consummated, subject only to defendants' limited right to
object to the sale under Section V(G) of this Final Judgment. Absent
written notice that the United States does not object to the
proposed Alternative Acquirer or upon objection by the United
States, a divestiture proposed under Section V shall not be
consummated. Upon objection by defendants under Section V(G), a
divestiture proposed under Section V shall not be consummated unless
approved by the Court.
VII. Financing
To the extent that defendants are issued Acquirer Shares
pursuant to the Agreement to Acquire the Divested Business Through
Purchase of FNA Group Shares dated June 6, 2006 between Falconbridge
and LionOre, or otherwise, in exchange for financing part of the
Acquirer's acquisition of the Divested Business, defendants:
1. Shall, within 150 days after the earlier of (a) the
Acquisition of Falconbridge, or (b) the issuance of the Acquirer
Shares, divest in a manner consistent with this Final Judgment all
of the Acquirer Shares;
2. Shall divest the Acquirer Shares by open market sale, public
offering, private sale, repurchase by LionOre, or a combination
thereof. The divestiture of the Acquirer Shares shall not be made:
(i) To any person other than LionOre who provides High-Purity Nickel
unless the United States shall otherwise agree in writing; or (ii)
in a manner that, in the sole judgment of the United States, could
significantly impair LionOre as an effective competitor in the
production and sale of High-Purity Nickel;
3. Shall not be issued more than the Acquirer Shares;
4. Shall not exercise any rights relating to the Acquirer
Shares, including but not limited to (i) exercising or permitting
the exercise of any voting rights, (ii) electing, nominating,
appointing, or otherwise designating or participating as officer or
directors; (iii) participating. as a member of the Board of
Directors or otherwise, in any meeting of the Board of Directors,
(iv) participating in any committees or other governing body of
LionOre; (v) exercising any veto rights with respect to the business
of LionOre, including veto power over changes in control of LionOre,
over significant asset purchases or sales, over change in majority
of board membership, or over changes in majority ownership of
LionOre; (vi) obtaining any financial or business information with
respect to LionOre that is not otherwise publicly available. In no
event shall defendant influence or attempt to influence the
decision-making, management, or policies of LionOre; and
5. Shall not acquire, directly or indirectly, any shares of, or
other ownership interest in, LionOre, within two years of divesting
the Acquirer Shares.
VIII. Hold Separate
Until the divestiture required by this Final Judgment has been
accomplished, defendants shall take all steps necessary to comply
with the Hold Separate Stipulation and Order entered by this Court.
Defendants shall take no action that would jeopardize the
divestiture ordered by this Court.
IX. Affidavits
A. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the
Complaint in this matter, and every thirty (30) calendar days
thereafter until the divestiture has been completed under Section IV
or Section V, defendants shall deliver to the United States an
affidavit as to the fact and manner of its compliance with Section
IV or Section V of this Final Judgment. Every twelve (12) months
following completion of the divestiture required by Section IV or
Section V, defendants shall deliver to the United States an
affidavit that describes in reasonable detail all actions defendants
have taken and all steps defendants have implemented on an ongoing
basis to comply with Section IV(E) or Section V(B) of this Final
Judgment, including compliance with the Supply Agreement. Defendants
shall, in addition, deliver to the United States an affidavit
describing any changes to the Supply Agreement outlined in
defendants' earlier affidavits filed pursuant to this section within
fifteen (15) calendar days after the change is implemented.
B. Defendants shall keep all records of all efforts made to
preserve the Divested Business and to divest the Divested Business
until one year after such divestiture has been completed.
C. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the
Complaint in this matter, and every thirty (30) calendar days
thereafter until the divestiture of the Acquirer Shares has been
completed under Section VII of the Final Judgment, defendants shall
deliver to the United States an affidavit that describes in
reasonable detail all actions defendants have taken and all steps
defendants have implemented on an ongoing basis to comply with
Section VII of this Final Judgment.
X. Compliance Inspection
A. For purposes of determining or securing compliance with this
Final Judgment, or of determining whether the Final Judgment should
be modified or vacated, and subject to any legally recognized
privilege, from time to time duly authorized representatives of the
United States Department of Justice, including consultants and other
persons retained by the United States, shall, upon written request
of a duly authorized representative of the Assistant Attorney
General in charge of the Antitrust Division, and on reasonable
notice to defendants, be permitted:
[[Page 41244]]
1. Access during defendants' office hours to inspect and copy,
or at plaintiffs option, to require defendants to provide copies of,
all books, ledgers, accounts, records and documents in the
possession, custody, or control of defendants, relating to any
matters contained in this Final Judgment; and
2. To interview, either informally or on the record, defendants'
officers, employees, or agents, who may have their individual
counsel present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be
subject to the reasonable convenience of the interviewee and without
restraint or interference by defendants.
B. Upon the written request of a duly authorized representative
of the Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust
Division, defendants shall submit written reports, under oath if
requested, relating to any of the matters contained in this Final
Judgment as may be requested.
C. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in
this section shall be divulged by the United States to any person
other than an authorized representative of the executive branch of
the United States, except in the course of legal proceedings to
which the United States is a party (including grand jury
proceedings), or for the purpose of securing compliance with this
Final Judgment, or as otherwise required by law.
D. If at the time information or documents are furnished by
defendants to the United States, defendants represent and identify
in writing the material in any such information or documents to
which a claim of protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(7) of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and defendants mark each
pertinent page of such material, ``Subject to claim of protection
under Rule 26(c)(7) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then
the United States shall give defendants ten (10) calendar days
notice prior to divulging such material in any legal proceeding
(other than a grand jury proceeding).
XI. No Reacquisition
Defendants may not reacquire any part of the Divested Business
during the term of this Final Judgment.
XII. Retention of Jurisdiction
This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this
Final Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders
and directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or
construe this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to
enforce compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.
XIII. Expiration of Final Judgment
Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall
expire ten years from the date of its entry.
XIV. Public Interest Determination
Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The
parties have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust
Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16, including making copies
available to the public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive
Impact Statement, and any comments thereon and the United States'
responses to comments. Based upon the record before the Court, which
includes the Competitive Impact Statement and any comments and
response to comments filed with the Court, entry of this Final
Judgment is in the public interest.
Date:------------------------------------------------------------------
Court approval subject to procedures of the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
United States District Judge
Competitive Impact Statement
Plaintiff United States of America (``United States''), pursuant
to Section 2(b) of the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act
(``APPA'' or ``Tunney Act''), 15 U.S.C. 16(b)-(h), files this
Competitive Impact Statement relating to the proposed Final Judgment
submitted for entry in this civil antitrust proceeding.
Nature and Purpose of the Proceeding
The United States filed a civil antitrust Complaint on June 23,
2006, seeking to enjoin the proposed acquisition by defendant Inco
Limited (``Inco'') of defendant Falconbridge Limited
(''Falconbridge''). The Complaint alleges that the likely effect of
this acquisition would be to lessen competition substantially in the
development, production and sale of high-purity nickel (''High-
Purity Nickel''), i.e., a purer form of nickel used for certain
alloys such as those used in safety-critical parts for jet engines,
in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act. This loss of
competition would likely result in higher prices, lower quality,
less innovation, and less favorable delivery terms to customers in
the High-Purity Nickel market.
At the same time the Complaint was filed, the United States
filed a Hold Separate Stipulation and Order and a proposed Final
Judgment. These are designed to eliminate the anticompetitive
effects of the acquisition while permitting Inco to complete its
acquisition of Falconbridge. Under the proposed Final Judgment,
which is explained more fully below, Inco is required to divest
assets that include Falconbridge's Nikkelverk refinery in
Kristiansand, Norway (''Nikkelverk Refinery''), and Falconbridge's
nickel marketing businesses. The proposed Final Judgment requires
that the divestiture of these assets be made to LionOre Mining
Internati