United States, 50084-50097 [06-7090]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 164 / Thursday, August 24, 2006 / Notices
Bureau of Indian Education, 1849 C
Street, NW., MS–3609 MIB,
Washington, DC 20240; Telephone (202)
208–6123; Fax (202) 208–3312.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lynann Barbero, Acting Supervisory
Education Specialist—Special
Education, Bureau of Indian Education,
Division of Compliance, Monitoring and
Accountability, P.O. Box 1088, Suite
332, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87103;
Telephone (505) 563–5270.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Advisory Board was established to
advise the Secretary of the Interior,
through the Assistant Secretary—Indian
Affairs, on the needs of Indian children
with disabilities, as mandated by the
Individuals with Disabilities Education
Improvement Act of 2004 (Pub. L. 108–
446).
The following items will be on the
agenda:
• State Performance Plan.
• Special Education Supervisor
Report.
• Part B State Administrative setaside budget.
• Updates on Priority Issues.
• Compliance and Monitoring.
• Procedural Safeguards.
• Institutionalized Handicapped
Program.
• Early Childhood Program.
• Coordinated Services Plan.
• Update on final IDEIA regulations.
The meetings are open to the public.
Dated: August 21, 2006.
Michael D. Olsen,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary—Indian
Affairs.
[FR Doc. E6–14055 Filed 8–23–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–6W–P
Lands and Minerals Center at 99 23rd
Avenue West, Dickinson, ND 58601,
beginning at 1 p.m. The public comment
period will begin at 8 a.m. on October
27, 2006.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The 15member Council advises the Secretary
of the Interior, through the Bureau of
Land Management, on a variety of
planning and management issues
associated with public land
management in North and South
Dakota. All meetings are open to the
public. The public may present written
comments to the Council. Each formal
Council meeting will also have time
allocated for hearing public comments.
Depending on the number of persons
wishing to comment and time available,
the time for individual oral comments
may be limited. Individuals who plan to
attend and need special assistance, such
as sign language interpretation, or other
reasonable accommodations, should
contact the BLM as provided below. The
Council will hear updates to Recreation
Resource Advisory Committee roles,
Sage Grouse Conservation, and
upcoming resource management
planning efforts.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marian Atkins, Field Manager, South
Dakota Field Office, 310 Roundup St.,
Belle Fourche, South Dakota,
605.892.7000, or Lonny Bagley, Field
Manager, North Dakota Field Office,
2933 3rd Ave. W. Dickinson, North
Dakota, 701.227.7700.
Dated: August 17, 2006.
Lonny R. Bagley,
Field Manager.
[FR Doc. E6–14027 Filed 8–23–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–$$–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Bureau of Land Management
Notice of Lodging of Consent Decree
Under the Comprehensive
Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act
[MT–039–1020–PK]
Notice of Public Meeting, Dakotas
Resource Advisory Council Meeting
AGENCY:
Bureau of Land Management,
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Interior.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
SUMMARY: In accordance with the
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act (FLPMA) and the Federal Advisory
Committee Act of 1972 (FACA), the U.S.
Department of the Interior, Bureau of
Land Management (BLM), Dakotas
Resource Advisory Council will meet as
indicated below.
DATES: A meeting will be held October
26 and 27, 2006, at the Bureau of Land
Management and U.S. Forest Service
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Notice is hereby given that on August
8, 2006, a proposed Consent Decree in
United States v. University of Miami,
Civil Action Number 06–22000–CIV–
JORDAN, was lodged with the United
States District Court for the Southern
District of Florida.
In this action the United States
sought, under Section 107 of the
Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. 9607, recovery of
response costs incurred by the Army
Corps of Engineers in response to
releases of hazardous substances at a
site located on land that was formerly
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the Richmond Naval Air Station, in
Perrine, Florida. Under the Consent
Decree, the Defendant will pay $393,473
for past response costs associated with
the site, and the United States gives a
covenant not to sue for past response
costs associated with the site.
The Department of Justice will
receive, for a period of thirty (30) days
from the date of this publication,
comments relating to the proposed
Consent Decree. Comments should be
addressed to the Assistant Attorney
General, Environment and Natural
Resources Division, P.O. Box 7611, U.S.
Department of Justice, Washington, DC
20044–7611, and should refer to United
States v. University of Miami, DOJ Ref.
#90–11–3–08486.
The Consent Decree may be examined
at the Office of the United States
Attorney for the Southern District of
Florida, 99 NE 4th Street, Miami,
Florida. During the public comment
period, the proposed Consent Decree
may be examined on the following
Department of Justice Web site: https://
www.usdoj.gov/enrd/
consentlDecrees.html. A copy of the
proposed Consent Decree may also be
obtained by mail from the Consent
Decree Library, P.O. Box 7611, U.S.
Department of Justice, Washington, DC
20044–7611, or by faxing or E-mailing a
request to Tonia Fleetwood,
tonia.fleetwood@usdoj.gov, Fax No.
(202) 514–0097, phone confirmation
number (202) 514–1547. In requesting a
copy from the Consent Decree Library,
please enclose a check in the amount of
$4.25 (25 cents per page reproduction
cost) payable to the U.S. Treasury, or, if
by E-mail or fax, forward a check in that
amount to the Consent Decree Library at
the stated address.
Henry Friedman,
Assistant Section Chief, Environmental
Enforcement Section, Environment and
Natural Resources Division.
[FR Doc. 06–7106 Filed 8–23–06; 8:45am]
BILLING CODE 4410–15–M
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States v. Mittal Steel Company
N.V. 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)–(h), that a Complaint,
proposed Final Judgment, Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order, and Competitive
Impact Statement were filed with the
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia in United States v.
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Mittal Steel Company N.V. Civil Action
No. 1:06CY01360. On August 1, 2006,
the United States filed a Complaint to
enjoin Mittal Steel Company N.Y.
(‘‘Mittal Steel’’) from acquiring Arcelor
S.A. (‘‘Arcelor’’). The Complaint alleges
that Mittal Steel’s acquisition of Arcelor
would substantially lessen competition
in the development, manufacture, and
sale of Tin Mill Products in violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. 18, throughout the
United States east of the Rocky
Mountains (the ‘‘Eastern United
States’’). The proposed Final Judgment,
filed August 1, 2006, requires
defendant, Mittal Steel, to divest one of
their three North American tin mills it
will own after the acquisition to
preserve competition in the sale of Tin
Mill Products. A Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order, entered by the
Court on August 2, 2006, requires
defendant to maintain, prior to
divestiture, the competitive
independence and economic viability
ofthe 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 U.S. Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, 325 Seventh
Street, NW., Room 215, Washington,
D.C. 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 set
by the U.S. Department of Justice
regulations.
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
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Street, N.W., Suite 3000, Washington,
D.C. 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, U.S.
Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, 1401 H Street, NW., Suite
3000, Washington, DC 20530. Plaintiff,
v. Mittal Steel Company N.V., Hofplein
20, 15th Floor, Rotterdam, The
Netherlands, 3032. Defendant.
Case No.
JUDGE:
DECK TYPE: Antitrust
DATE STAMP:
Complaint
The United States of America, acting
under the direction of the Attorney
General of the United States, brings this
civil antitrust action to obtain equitable
and other relief against the defendant,
Mittal Steel Company N.V. (‘‘Mittal
Steel’’), to prevent its proposed
acquisition of Arcelor S.A. (‘‘Arcelor’’),
and alleges as follows:
I. Nature of the Action
1. Mittal Steel formally launched a
tender offer for Arcelor on May 19,
2006, and on June 25, 2006 the Arcelor
board recommended Mittal’s offer to
Arcelor’s shareholders. The acceptance
period for Mittal’s tender offer cJosed on
July 13,2006, and Mittal Steel can take
ownership of the shares beginning on
August 1, 2006.
2. Mittal Steel is an integrated
steelmaker that manufactures, among
other products, finely rolled tin or
chrome coated steel sheets known as
‘‘Tin Mill Products.’’ Tin Mill Products
are used in manufacturing steel cans for
packaging a wide range of food products
such as soup, fruits, and vegetables, and
non-food products such as paints,
aerosols, and shaving cream. Mittal
Steel is the second largest supplier of
Tin Mill Products to the portion of the
United States east of the Rocky
Mountains (the ‘‘Eastern United
States’’), accounting for about 31
percent of Tin Mill Products tonnage
sold in 2005.
3. Arcelor accounted for about two
percent of Tin Mill Products tonnage
sold in the Eastern United States in
2005. Arcelor acquired its subsidiary
Dofasco Inc. (‘‘Dofasco’’) in February
2006. In 2005 Dofasco accounted for an
additional four percent of the Tin Mill
Products tonnage sold in 2005 in the
Eastern United States.
4. Mittal Steel’s proposed acquisition
of Arcelor would eliminate Arcelor,
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including its subsidiary Dofasco, as an
independent competitor in the sale of
Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United
States, further consolidating an already
highly concentrated market. The largest
supplier of Tin Mill Products sold in the
Eastern United States, another
integrated steelmaker, accounted for
over 44 percent of the tons sold in 2005.
If this merger were not enjoined, the two
largest suppliers of Tin Mill Products
would account for over 81 percent of
2005 sales in the Eastern United States.
5. The acquisition would remove
current constraints on coordination and
increase the incentives of the two largest
firms to coordinate their behavior. The
acquisition would thus substantially
increase the likelihood of coordination
and would likely lead to higher prices,
lower quality, less innovation, and less
favorable delivery terms in the Tin Mill
Products market in the Eastern United
States.
6. Accordingly, the acquisition would
substantially lessen competition in Tin
Mill Products in the Eastern United
States, in violation of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act.
II. Jurisdiction and Venue
7. Plaintiff United States brings this
action against defendant Mittal Steel
under Section 15 of the Clayton Act, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to prevent and
restrain the violation by defendant of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
18.
8. Defendant manufactures and sells
Tin Mill Products in the flow of
interstate commerce. Defendant’s
activities in developing, manufacturing
and selling Tin Mill Products
substantially affect interstate commerce.
This Court has subject matter
jurisdiction over this action and the
defendant pursuant to Section 12 of the
Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 22, and 28 U.S.C.
1331, 1337(a), and 1345.
9. Venue is proper in this District
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1391(d).
Furthermore, defendant has consented
to venue and personal jurisdiction in
this judicial district.
III. Parties to the Proposed Transaction
10. Defendant Mittal Steel is a
Netherlands corporation with its
corporate headquarters and principal
place of business in Rotterdam, The
Netherlands, and operations in sixteen
countries on four continents. Mittal
Steel produces both flat and long steel
products for all of the major steel
consuming sectors, including
automotive, appliance, machinery, and
construction. Mittal Steel’s total
worldwide revenues exceeded $28
billion in 2005, and its total annual steel
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production exceeded 55 million tons.
Mittal Steel produces Tin Mill Products
in Sparrows Point, Maryland and
Weirton, West Virginia. In 2005, Mittal
Steel sold over 800,000 tons of Tin Mill
Products in the Eastern United States.
11. Arcelor is a Luxembourg
corporation with its corporate
headquarters and principal place of
business in the City of Luxembourg.
Arcelor, with operations primarily in
Europe and Brazil, produces flat and
long products for the automotive,
appliance, packaging, and general
industries. In 2005, Arcelor had
approximately $41.5 billion in total
worldwide revenues and steel
production of 46 million tons.
12. In February 2006 Arcelor acquired
Dofasco, a wholly-owned Canadian
subsidiary with its corporate
headquarters and principal place of
business in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Dofasco shipped 4.8 million tons of
steel and had $3.9 billion in revenues in
2005. Arcelor, which shipped Tin Mill
Products to the Eastern United States
primarily from its European facilities,
and Dofasco, which shipped Tin Mill
Products to the Eastern United States
from its Canadian facility, sold a
combined 170,615 tons of Tin Mill
Products in the Eastern United States in
2005.
IV. The Proposed Transaction
13. On January 27, 2006, Mittal Steel
announced its intention to launch a
hostile tender offer to acquire Arcelor
for approximately $23 billion in cash
and securities. Mittal Steel
simultaneously announced an
agreement to sell Dofasco for
approximately $5 billion to a German
steelmaker, ThyssenKrupp A.G.
(‘‘ThyssenKrupp’’), if Mittal Steel
acquired Arcelor. Arcelor initially
resisted the hostile takeover. One of the
steps Arcelor’s Board of Directors took
to resist the takeover was to transfer
legal title to the shares of Dofasco to an
independent Dutch foundation known
as a ‘‘stichting.’’
14. Mittal Steel subsequently
increased its tender offer to
approximately $33 billion in cash and
securities and formally launched its
tender offer on May 19, 2006. After
Mittal Steel agreed to improve the
financial, corporate govemance, and
other terms of its offer for Arcelor, the
Arcelor Board agreed on June 25, 2006
to recommend Mittal’s offer to Arcelor’s
shareholders. The acceptance period for
Mittal’s initial tender offer, during
which 92.6 percent of Arcelor’s shares
were tendered, closed on July 13, 2006.
Mittal Steel can take ownership of the
shares beginning on August 1, 2006.
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V. Trade and Commerce
A. Relevant Product Market
15. Tin Mill Products are finely rolled
steel sheets, usually coated with a thin
protective layer of tin or chrome. Tin
Mill Products are manufactured using a
sequence of processing steps in which
steel is rolled into successively thinner
sheets, then hardened, and finally
coated with either tin or chrome.
16. Tin Mill Products are comprised
of three types of steel: Black plate,
electrolytic tin plate (‘‘ETP’’), and tin
free steel (‘‘TFS’’). Black plate is a lightgauge cold-rolled bare steel sheet that
serves as the substrate for production of
both ETP and TFS and can be used bare
for some applications, such as pails or
larger containers. Black plate is coated
with tin to produce ETP and with
chrome to produce TFS. ETP and TFS
are both used for packaging, although
each provides different advantages and
disadvantages (including, inter alia,
organic coating acceptance, strength,
surface finish and formability) that are
considered by purchasers in making
their purchase decisions.
17. The majority of Tin Mill Products
shipments are used to produce sanitary
cans, often referred to as food cans.
Other uses include aerosol cans, general
line cans, pails, larger containers, metal
buildings, and oil and fuel filter sheets.
18. For most Tin Mill Products
purchasers, including downstream food
can customers, there are no close
substitutes for Tin Mill Products.
Packaging alternatives, such as plastic
containers, are generally not viewed by
can customers as replacements for
products normally packaged in cans
because of cost differences and the
performance advantages associated with
cans. Some of the advantages of steel
cans compared to alternative packaging
include their longer shelf life and
greater durability, familiarity, and
security. Alternative packaging
generally costs at least as much as a
steel can and sometimes costs as much
as eight times as much as a can, and
significant additional capital
investments are necessary to incorporate
alternative packaging materials into a
customer’s packaging process.
19. A small but significant increase in
the price of Tin Mill Products would not
cause can manufacturers or their
downstream customers to substitute
non-Tin Mill Products containers, or
otherwise to reduce their purchases of
Tin Mill Products, in sufficient
quantities so as to make such a price
increase unprofitable. The use of
alternative packaging containers is
driven primarily by capital equipment
investment considerations and by
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marketing factors such as consumer
convenience, rather than by small but
significant changes in the prices of Tin
Mill Products. For example, can
customers often use alternative
packaging in order to extend an existing
product line, such as using alternative
materials for portable microwavable
containers for soup, while continuing to
package the bulk of soup products in
steel cans.
20. Accordingly, the development,
manufacture, and sale of Tin Mill
Products is a line of commerce and a
relevant product market within the
meaning of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
B. Relevant Geographic Market
21. The Eastern United States is a
geographically distinct market for the
sale of Tin Mill Products. The only Tin
Mill Products manufacturer in the
United States west of the Rocky
Mountains (the ‘‘Western United
States’’) is located in California, and it
does not have substantial sales in the
Eastern United States due to its distance
from can manufacturers in that part of
the country, which tend to be located in
proximity to agricultural regions. That
California Tin Mill Products
manufacturer, half owned by one of the
two largest Tin Mill Products producers
in the Eastern United States, accounts
for over 84 percent of the Tin Mill
Products sold in the Western United
States but ships only small quantities to
the Eastern United States. Similarly, Tin
Mill Products producers in the Eastern
United States generally do not sell
significant quantities in the Western
United States because their treight costs
are higher than those of the single
manufacturer located in the Western
United States.
22. A small but significant increase in
the price of Tin Mill Products would not
cause Tin Mill Products customers in
the Eastern United States to substitute
purchases from outside of the Eastern
United States in sufficient quantities so
as to make such a price increase
unprofitable.
23. Accordingly, the Eastern United
States is a relevant geographic market
within the meaning of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act.
C. Anticompetitive Effects
24. Currently, Mittal Steel and its
primary competitor account for over 75
percent of Tin Mill Products sales in the
Eastern United States. Were Mittal Steel
to acquire ArceJor, the largest two firms
would account for over 81 percent of
such sales. In 2005, Mittal Steel,
Arcelor, Dofasco, and one other firm
sold more than 2.1 million tons of Tin
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Mill Products in the Eastern United
States.
25. The market for Tin Mill Products
in the Eastern United States would thus
become substantially more concentrated
if Mittal Steel were to acquire Arcelor
and its Dofasco subsidiary. 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
Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United
States by approximately 412 points to a
post-acquisition level of approximately
3,522, well in excess of levels that raise
significant antitrust concerns.
26. Purchasers of Tin Mill Products in
the Eastern United States have
benefitted from competition between
Mittal Steel and Arcelor through lower
prices, higher quality, more innovation,
and better delivery terms for Tin Mill
Products. Arcelor and its subsidiary
Dofasco are known for high quality and
innovation, which forces Mittal Steel
and other domestic producers to
compete on these aspects as well. By
acquiring Arcelor, Mittal Steel would
eliminate that competition.
27. Mittal Steel’s elimination of
Arcelor as an independent competitor in
the manufacture and sale of Tin Mill
Products within the Eastern United
States is likely to facilitate
anticompetitive coordination among the
two major Tin Mill Products
manufacturers by making such
coordination more profitable and harder
to defeat. If the two largest Tin Mill
Products firms in the Eastern United
States were to seek to raise prices or
reduce output today, purchasers of Tin
Mill Products could purchase Tin Mill
Products from Arcelor and its subsidiary
Dofasco. Arcelor has substantial excess
and divertible capacity in Europe, and
Arcelor’s Dofasco subsidiary has
significant divertible capacity in
Canada. Were Arcelor and Dofasco no
longer available as independent
suppliers, the remaining domestic and
foreign fringe producers would likely
not have sufficient capacity and/or
incentives to increase production
enough to defeat an anticompetitive
price increase or output reduction by
the two largest firms. In particular, the
only other incumbent producer located
in the Eastern United States does not
have the ability to manufacture coldrolled substrate, and its ability to obtain
the additional substrate needed to
increase its output is constrained.
D. Entry and Expansion
28. De novo entry into the
development, manufacture and sale of
Tin Mill Products is difficult, time-
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consuming, and costly, and such entry
would not be timely, likely, or sufficient
to defeat coordination by the two largest
Tin Mill Products firms in the Eastern
United States post-merger. To produce
Tin Mill Products, a firm needs a
reliable source of cold-rolled substrate
and a Tin Mill Products finishing
facility. A facility to finish cold-rolled
substrate into Tin Mill Products would
likely cost in the range of $60 to $100
million and take approximately two
years to design and build. In addition,
entry by a firm that lacks the ability to
manufacture cold-rolled substrate or to
increase its output of cold-rolled
substrate would be more risky as it may
not gain access to sufficient substrate to
compete effectively. The cost of entry is
largely ‘‘sunk,’’ i.e., it cannot be
recovered or converted to other uses,
raising the risk to entry, and there is a
very high risk that a new entrant may
not receive any profits from its entry.
29. Significant new foreign entry or
expansion of shipments to the Eastern
United States by existing foreign
producers is unlikely due to longer
delivery lead times occasioned by the
need for oceangoing transportation,
additional shipping costs, trade barriers,
the possibility of future import
restrictions, and the reluctance of
foreign Tin Mill Products manufacturers
to abandon existing markets elsewhere
in order to enter or expand in the
Eastern United States. Overseas
shipping increases the time between
order and delivery by up to four
months, which is unacceptable for most
customers in the Eastern United States
because their demand requirements
fluctuate with hard-to-predict fruit and
vegetable harvests. Capacity constraints
also limit certain foreign producers from
expanding their sales into the Eastern
United States.
30. Therefore, entry or expansion by
any other finn into the Eastern United
States Tin Mill Products market would
not be timely, likely, or sufficient to
deter post-acquisition coordination.
VI. Violation Alleged
31. The effect of the proposed
acquisition of Arcelor by Mittal Steel
would be to substantially lessen
competition in interstate trade and
commerce, in violation of Section 7 of
the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
32. Unless restrained, the transaction
will likely have the following effects,
among others:
a. Competition generally in the
development, manufacture and sale of
Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United
States would be substantially lessened;
b. Actual and potential competition
between Mittal Steel and Arcelor in the
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development, manufacture and sale of
Tin Mill Products will be eliminated;
and
c. The prices for Tin Mill Products
will likely increase, the quality of Tin
Mill Products will likely decline,
innovation relating to Tin Mill Products
will likely decline, and the delivery
terms currently offered in the Tin Mill
Products market will likely become less
favorable to customers.
VII. Requested Relief
33. Plaintiff requests that:
a. Mittal Steel’s proposed acquisition
of Arcelor be adjudged and decreed to
be unlawful and in violation of Section
7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18;
b. Defendant and all persons acting on
its 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
Mittal Steel with the operations of
Arcelor;
c. Plaintiff be awarded its costs for
this action; and
d. Plaintiff receive such other and
further relief as the case requires and
the Court deems just and proper.
Dated: August 1, 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, D.C. Bar
#414420.
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations.
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section, D.C. Bar #435204.
Robert W. Wilder,
Acting Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section.
Kerrie J. Freeborn,
John F. Greaney,
Stephen A. Harris,
Lowell Stern (D.C. Bar #440487), Attorneys,
U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, Litigation II Section, 1401 H Street,
N.W., Suite 3000, Washington, D.C. 20530,
(202) 307–0924.
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
BBI is 2600 (30 2 + 30 2 + 20 2 + 20 2 = 2600).
The HHI takes into account the relative size
and distribution of the firms in a market and
approaches zero when a market consists of a
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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.
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff; v.
Mittal Steel Company N.V., Defendant
Case No.
DECK TYPE: Antitrust
DATE STAMP:
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Final Judgment
Whereas, plaintiff, United States of
America, filed its Complaint on August
1, 2006 and plaintiff and defendant,
Mittal Steel Company N.V., 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, defendant agrees 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 defendant to assure that
competition is not substantially
lessened;
And Whereas, plaintiff requires
defendant to make certain divestitures
for the purpose of remedying the loss of
competition alleged in the Complaint;
And Whereas, defendant has
represented to the United States that the
divestitures required below can and will
be made and that defendant 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
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claim upon which relief may be granted
against defendant 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 the entity or
entities to whom defendant divests
either the Dofasco Business or the
Selected Business.
B. ‘‘Arcelor’’ means Arcelor, S.A., a
Luxembourg corporation with its
headquarters in Luxembourg City,
Luxembourg, its successors and assigns,
and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups,
affiliates, partnerships, joint ventures,
and their directors, officers, managers,
agents, and employees.
C. ‘‘Divested Business’’ means either
the Dofasco Business or the Sparrows
Point Business or the Weirton Business,
whichever is being offered for sale by
the defendant or by a trustee appointed
pursuant to Section V of this Final
Judgment.
D. ‘‘Dofasco Business’’ means all
assets, interests, and rights in Dofasco
Inc. (‘‘Dofasco’’), including any
additions, improvements, or expansions
made by Arcelor after Arcelor’s
acquisition of Dofasco on or about
February 20, 2006, and includes but is
not limited to:
1. All tangible assets that comprise
Dofasco, including research and
development activities, all
manufacturing equipment, tooling and
fixed assets, personal property,
inventory, office furniture, materials,
supplies, on- or off-site warehouses or
storage facilities and other tangible
property, and all assets used exclusively
in connection with the Dofasco
business; all licenses, permits and
authorizations issued by any
governmental organization relating to
Dofasco; all supply agreements relating
to Dofasco; all contracts, teaming
agreements, agreements, leases,
certifications, commitments, and
understandings; all customer contracts,
lists, accounts, and credit records
relating to Dofasco; and all other records
relating to Dofasco;
2. All intangible assets used in the
development, production, servicing, and
sale of products by Dofasco, including
but not limited to all patents, licenses
and sublicenses, intellectual property,
copyrights, trademarks, trade names,
service marks, service names, 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
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procedures, design tools and simulation
capability, and all manuals and
technical information provided to the
employees, customers, suppliers, agents
or licensees of Dofasco; all research data
concerning historic and current research
and development efforts relating to
products produced or sold by Dofasco,
including but not limited to designs of
experiments, and the results of
successful and unsuccessful designs and
experiments, provided, however, that
Dofasco does not include Dofasco’s
interest in Sorevco.
E. ‘‘DoSol Joint Venture’’ means
DoSol Galva Limited Partnership, the
hot dip galvanizing facility located in
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, that is a
joint venture between Dofasco and
Arcelor.
F. ‘‘Mittal Steel’’ means defendant
Mittal Steel Company, N.V., a
Netherlands public limited liability
company with its headquarters in
Rotterdam, The Netherlands, its
successors and assigns, and its
subsidiaries, divisions, groups,
affiliates, partnerships, joint ventures,
and their directors, officers, managers,
agents, and employees.
G. ‘‘QCM’’ means Quebec Cartier
Mining Company, a producer of iron ore
products, headquartered in Montreal,
Quebec, Canada.
H. ‘‘Selected Business’’ means
whichever of the Sparrows Point
Business or the Weirton Business is
selected by the United States in its sole
discretion to be offered for sale by the
defendant or by a trustee appointed
pursuant to Section V of this Final
Judgment.
I. ‘‘Sorevco’’ mean Sorevco and
Company, Limited, the hot dip
galvanizing operation located in
Montreal, Quebec, Canada, that is a joint
venture between Dofasco and Mittal.
J. ‘‘Sparrows Point Facility’’ means
the steel making, rolling, and coating
facility owned by Mittal Steel and
located in or near Sparrows Point,
Maryland.
K. ‘‘Sparrows Point Business’’ means
all assets, interests, and rights in the
Sparrows Point Facility, and includes
but is not limited to:
1. All tangible assets used in the
development, production, servicing, and
sale of all products produced at the
Sparrows Point Facility, including but
not limited to 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 all manufacturing
equipment, tooling and fixed assets,
capital equipment, vehicles, supplies,
personal property, inventory, office
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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 relating
to the Sparrows Point Business; supply
agreements; all contracts, teaming
agreements, agreements, leases,
certifications, commitments, and
understandings relating to the Sparrows
Point Business; all customer contracts,
lists, accounts, and credit records; and
all other records maintained by Mittal
Steel in connection with the operation
of the Sparrows Point Business;
provided, however, that with respect to
any assets covered by Section II(K)(1)
that relate primarily to Mittal’s nondivested businesses, but also relate in
part to the Sparrows Point Business, the
defendant shall have the option, subject
to the written approval of the United
States in its sole discretion, to substitute
equivalent assets or arrangements (a
substituted asset or arrangement will
not be deemed equivalent unless it
provides the Sparrows Point Business
the same benefits, or enables the
Sparrows Point Business to perform the
same function at the same or less cost);
and further provided, that the Sparrows
Point Business does not include Mittal
Steel’s contract to supply hot-rolled
steel to the The Ford Motor Company,
which contract is supplied in part by
the Sparrows Point Facility;
2. All intangible assets currently used
exclusively or primarily in the
development, production, servicing, and
sale of all products produced at the
Sparrows Point Facility, including but
not limited to all patents, licenses and
sublicenses, intellectual property,
copyrights, trademarks, trade names,
service marks, service names (except to
the extent such trademarks, trade
names, service marks, or service names
contain the trademark or name ‘‘Mittal
Steel’’ 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 Sparrows Point Business;
3. With respect to any other identified
intangible assets that are not subject to
Section II(K)(2) and that prior to the
filing of the Complaint were used both
in connection with the Sparrows Point
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Business and in connection with Mittal
Steel’s non-divested businesses, the
defendant shall provide to the Acquirer
a non-exclusive, non-transferable, fullypaid-up license(s) for such intangible
asset(s) to the extent and for the period
of time that defendant has rights to such
intangible assets, provided, however,
that any such license may be
transferable to any future purchaser of
the Sparrows Point Business; and
4. All research data concerning
historic and current research and
development efforts related to the
Sparrows Point Business, including but
not limited to designs of experiments,
and the results of successful and
unsuccessful designs and experiments.
To the extent that any such data also
relates to historic and current research
and development efforts related to
businesses other than the Sparrows
Point Business, providing a nonexclusive copy of such data shall fulfill
defendant’s obligations under this
provision.
L. ‘‘ThyssenKrupp’’ means
ThyssenKrupp AG, a German
corporation with its headquarters in
Dusseldorf, Germany, its successors and
assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions,
groups, affiliates, partnerships, joint
ventures, and their directors, officers,
managers, agents, and employees.
M. ‘‘Tin Mill Products’’ means
collectively black plate, i.e., light-gauge
cold-rolled bare steel sheet; electrolytic
tin plate, i.e., black-plate electrolytically
coated with tin; and tin free steel, i.e.,
black plate electrolytically coated with
chromium.
N. ‘‘Weirton Facility’’ means the steel
making, rolling, and coating facility
owned by Mittal Steel and located in or
near Weirton, West Virginia.
O. ‘‘Weirton Business’’ means all
assets, interests, and rights in Weirton
Facility, and includes but is not limited
to:
1. All tangible assets used in the
development, production, servicing, and
sale of all products produced at the
Weirton Facility, including but not
limited to 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 all manufacturing equipment,
tooling and fixed assets, capital
equipment, vehicles, supplies, personal
property, inventory, office furniture,
fixed assets and fixtures, materials, onor off-site warehouses or storage
facilities, and other tangible property or
improvements, including but not
limited to all of defendant’s rights and
interests in the Half Moon tin
warehouse and processing facility near
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50089
the Weirton Facility; all licenses,
permits and authorizations issued by
any governmental organization relating
to the Weirton Facility; supply
agreements; all contracts, teaming
agreements, agreements, leases,
certifications, commitments, and
understandings relating to the Weirton
Facility; all customer contracts, lists,
accounts, and credit records; and all
other records maintained by Mittal Steel
in connection with the operation of the
Weirton Business; provided, however,
that with respect to any assets covered
by Section II(O)(I) that relate primarily
to Mittal’s non-divested businesses, but
also relate in part to the Weirton
Business, the defendant shall have the
option, subject to the written approval
of the United States in its sole
discretion, to substitute equivalent
assets or arrangements (a substituted
asset or arrangement will not be deemed
equivalent unless it provides the
Weirton Business the same benefits, or
enables the Weirton Business to perform
the same function at the same or less
cost);
2. All intangible assets currently used
exclusively or primarily in the
development, production, servicing, and
sale of all products produced at the
Weirton Facility, including but not
limited to all patents, licenses and
sublicenses, intellectual property,
copyrights, trademarks, trade names,
service marks, service names (except to
the extent such trademarks, trade
names, service marks, or service names
contain the trademark or name ‘‘Mittal
Steel’’ 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 Weirton Business;
3. With respect to any other identified
intangible assets that are not subject to
Section II(O)(2) and that prior to the
filing of the Complaint were used both
in connection with the Weirton
Business and in connection with Mittal
Steel’s non-divested businesses, the
defendant shall provide to the Acquirer
a non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully
paid-up license(s) for such intangible
asset(s) to the extent and for the period
of the time that defendant has rights to
such intangible assets, provided,
however, that any such license may be
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transferable to any future purchaser of
the Weirton Business; and
4. All research data concerning
historic and current research and
development efforts related to the
Weirton Business, including but not
limited to designs of experiments, and
the results of successful and
unsuccessful designs and experiments.
To the extent that any such data also
relates to historic and current research
and development efforts related to
businesses other than the Weirton
Business, providing a non-exclusive
copy of such data shall fulfill
defendant’s obligations under this
provision.
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III. Applicability
A. This Final Judgment applies to
Mittal Steel, as defined above, and all
other persons in active concert or
participation with Mittal Steel who
receive actual notice of this Final
Judgment by personal service or
otherwise.
B. Defendant shall require, as a
condition of the sale or other
disposition of all or substantially all of
its assets or of lesser business units that
includes the Divested Business, that the
purchaser agrees to be bound by the
provisions of this Final Judgment.
IV. Divestiture
A. In the event defendant acquires
Arcelor, defendant is ordered and
directed to divest the Dofasco Business
to ThyssenKrupp within (1) 120
calendar days after the filing of the
Complaint in this matter or (2) five (5)
days after notice of the entry of this
Final Judgment by the Court, whichever
is later. The United States, in its sole
discretion, may agree to one or more
extensions of this time period, not to
exceed in total sixty (60) calendar days,
and shall notify the Court in each such
circumstance. At its option, defendant
may elect to sell Dofasco to an
alternative Acquirer acceptable to the
United States in the sole discretion of
the United States. Defendant agrees to
use its best efforts to divest the Dofasco
Business as expeditiously as possible.
B. In the event defendant acquires
Arcelor but is unable to accomplish the
divestiture of the Dofasco Business
within the time period specified in
Section IV(A), then at the option of the
United States, defendant shall divest
either the Sparrows Point Business or
the Weirton Business. The United States
shall provide defendant written notice
of its selection. Defendant is ordered
and directed, within ninety (90)
calendar days of the receipt of such
notice, to divest the Selected Business
in a manner consistent with this Final
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Judgment to an Acquirer acceptable to
the United States in its sole discretion.
The United States, in its sole discretion,
may agree to one or more extensions of
this time period, not to exceed in total
sixty (60) calendar days, and shall notify
the Court in each such circumstance.
Defendant agrees to use its best efforts
to divest the Selected Business as
expeditiously as possible. Once the
United States has provided defendant
with written notice of its selection
under Section IV(B), the defendant will
cease to have any obligation under
Section IV(A) to divest the Dofasco
Business.
C. In accomplishing the divestiture
ordered by the Final Judgment,
defendant promptly shall make known,
by usual and customary means, the
availability of the Divested Business.
Defendant shall inform any person
making inquiry regarding a possible
purchase of the Divested Business that
it will be divested pursuant to this Final
Judgment and provide that person with
a copy of this Final Judgment.
Defendant shall offer to furnish to all
prospective Acquirers, subject to
customary confidentiality assurances,
all information and documents relating
to the Divested Business that
customarily are provided in a due
diligence process except such
information or documents subject to the
attorney-client or work-product
privilege. Defendant shall make
available such information to the United
States at the same time that such
information is made available to any
other person.
D. Defendant shall provide the
Acquirer and the United States
information relating to personnel
involved in the research, development,
production, operation, and sale of the
products of the Divested Business to
enable the Acquirer to make offers of
employment. Defendant will not
interfere with any negotiations by the
Acquirer to employ any employee of the
Divested Business whose primary
responsibility is the production,
operation, development, or sale of the
products of the Divested Business.
E. Defendant shall permit prospective
Acquirers of the Divested Business 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; and access to any and
all financial, operational, and other
documents and information customarily
provided as part of a due diligence
process.
F. Defendant shall warrant to the
Acquirer of the Divested Business that
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each asset of the Divested Business is in
a condition and state of repair equal to
the condition and state of repair as of,
(1) in the case that the Selected Business
is divested, the date the defendant
publicly announced its intention to
acquire Arcelor, i.e., January 27, 2006,
or (2) in the case that the Dofasco
Business is divested, the date of the
filing of the Complaint in this matter.
G. Defendant shall not take any action
that will impede in any way the
permitting, operation, or divestiture of
the Divested Business.
H. The defendant will not undertake,
directly or indirectly, any challenges to
the environmental, zoning, or other
permits relating to the operation of the
Divested Business. If the Selected
Business is divested, the defendant shall
warrant to the Acquirer of the Selected
Business that there are no material
defects in the environmental, zoning, or
other permits pertaining to the
operation of the Selected Business as
operated by the defendant.
I. Nothing in this Final Judgment shall
be construed to require the Acquirer as
a condition of any license granted by
defendant pursuant to Sections II(K)(3)
or II(O)(3) to extend to defendant the
right to use the Acquirer’s
improvements to processes used in
connection with the Selected Business.
J. Unless the United States otherwise
consents in writing, the divestiture
pursuant to Section IV, or by trustee
appointed pursuant to Section V, of this
Final Judgment, shall include the entire
business and assets of the Divested
Business, 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 a viable, ongoing
business engaged in producing Tin Mill
Products. The divestiture, whether
pursuant to Section IV or Section V of
this Final Judgment,
1. Shall be made to an Acquirer that,
in the United States’s sole judgment, has
the intent and capability (including the
necessary managerial, operational,
technical and financial capability) to
compete effectively in the production
and sale of Tin Mill Products; and
2. Shall be accomplished so as to
satisfy the United States, in its sole
discretion, that none of the terms of any
agreement between an Acquirer and
defendant gives defendant the ability
unreasonably to raise the Acquirer’s
costs, to lower the Acquirer’s efficiency,
or otherwise interfere in the ability of
the Acquirer to compete effectively in
the production and sale of Tin Mill
Products.
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V. Appointment of Trustee To Effect
Divestiture
A. If the defendant has not divested
the Selected Business pursuant to
Section IV(B) of this Final Judgment
within the time period specified in that
Section, defendant 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 to effect the
divestiture of the Selected Business
pursuant to Section IV(B).
B. After the appointment of a trustee
becomes effective, only the trustee shall
have the right to sell the Selected
Business. The trustee shall have the
power and authority to accomplish the
divestiture to an 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 IV, V, and
VI of this Final Judgment, and shall
have such other powers as this Court
deems appropriate. Subject to Section
V(D) of this Final Judgment, the trustee
may hire at the cost and expense of
defendant 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.
C. Defendant shall not object to a sale
by the trustee on any ground other than
the trustee’s malfeasance. Any such
objection by defendant 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.
D. The trustee shall serve at the cost
and expense of defendant, on such
terms and conditions as plaintiff
approves, and shall account for all
monies derived from the sale of the
Selected Business 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 defendant 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
Selected 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.
E. Defendant shall use its best efforts
to assist the trustee in accomplishing
the required divestiture. The trustee and
any consultants, accountants, attorneys,
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and other persons retained by the
trustee shall have full and complete
access to the personnel, books, records,
and facilities of the Selected Business,
and defendant 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. Defendant shall take no
action to interfere with or to impede the
trustee’s accomplishment of the
divestiture.
F. 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 the Selected 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 Selected Business.
G. If the trustee has not accomplished
the divestiture of the Selected Business
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 report contains
information that the trustee deems
confidential, such report 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
shall 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, defendant or the
trustee, whichever is then responsible
for effecting the divestiture required
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herein, shall notify the United States of
any proposed divestiture required by
Section IV or V of this Final Judgment.
If the trustee is responsible, it shall
similarly notify defendant. 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 Selected Business.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of
receipt by the United States of such
notice, the United States may request
from defendant, the proposed Acquirer,
any other third party, or the trustee if
applicable additional information
concerning the proposed divestiture, the
proposed Acquirer, and any other
potential Acquirer. Defendant 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 defendant,
the proposed Acquirer, any third party,
or the trustee, whichever is later, the
United States shall provide written
notice to defendant 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 defendant’s limited right
to object to the sale under Section V(C)
of this Final Judgment. Absent written
notice that the United States does not
object to the proposed Acquirer or upon
objection by the United States, a
divestiture proposed under Section IV
or Section V shall not be consummated.
Upon objection by defendant under
Section V(C), a divestiture proposed
under Section V shall not be
consummated unless approved by the
Court.
VII. Financing
Defendant shall not finance all or any
part of any purchase made pursuant to
Section IV or V of this Final Judgment.
VIII. Hold Separate
Until the divestiture required by this
Final Judgment has been accomplished
defendant shall take all steps necessary
to comply with the Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order entered by this
Court. Defendant shall take no action
that would jeopardize the divestiture
order by this Court.
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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 V,
defendant shall deliver to the United
States an affidavit as to the fact and
manner of its compliance with Section
IV or V of this Final Judgement. Each
such affidavit shall include the name,
address, and telephone number of each
person who, during the preceding thirty
days, 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 Divested
Business, and shall describe in detail
each contact with any such person
during that period. Each such affidavit
shall also include a description of the
efforts defendant has taken to solicit
buyers for the Divested Business, and to
provide required information to any
prospective Acquirer, including the
limitations, if any, on such information.
Assuming the information set forth in
the affidavit is true and complete, any
objection by the United States to
information provided by defendant,
including limitations on the
information, shall be made within
fourteen (14) calendar days of receipt of
such affidavit.
B. Within twenty (20) calendar days
of the filing of the Complaint in this
matter, defendant shall deliver to the
United States an affidavit that describes
in reasonable detail all actions
defendant has taken and all steps
defendant has implemented on an
ongoing basis to comply with Section
VIII of this Final Judgment. Defendant
shall deliver to the United States an
affidavit describing any changes to the
efforts and actions outlined in
defendant’s earlier affidavits filed
pursuant to this section within fifteen
(15) calendar days after the change is
implemented.
C. Defendant shall keep all records of
all efforts made to preserve and divest
the Divested Business until one year
after a divestiture has been completed.
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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
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authorized representative of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of
the Antitrust Division, and on
reasonable notice to defendant, be
permitted:
1. Access during defendant’s office
hours to inspect and copy, or at
plaintiff’s option, to require defendant
to provide copies of, all books, ledgers,
accounts, records and documents in the
possession, custody, or control of
defendant, relating to any matters
contained in this Final Judgment; and
2. To interview, either informally or
on the record, defendant’s 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
defendant.
B. Upon the written request of a duly
authorized representative of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of
the Antitrust Division, defendant 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 defendant
to the United States, defendant
represents and identifies 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 defendant 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 defendant ten (10) calendar
days notice prior to divulging such
material in any legal proceeding (other
than a grand jury proceeding).
XI. No Reacquisition
Defendant may not reacquire any part
of any assets divested during the term
of this Final Judgment, provided,
however, that nothing in this decree
shall prevent defendant from (1)
reacquiring any of the assets of QCM,
subject to the written consent of the
United States in its sole discretion; or
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(2) increasing its interest in the DoSol
Joint Venture to 50 percent.
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: llllllllllllllllll
Court approval subject to procedures of the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15
U.S.C. 16.
lllllllllllllllllllll
United States District Judge
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v.
Mittal Steel Company N.V., Defendant
Case No.
JUDGE:
DECK TYPE: Antitrust
DATE STAMP:
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.
I. Nature and Purpose of the Proceeding
The United States filed a civil
antitrust Complaint on August 1, 2006,
seeking to obtain equitable and other
relief against defendant Mittal Steel
Company N.V. (‘‘Mittal Steel’’) to
prevent its proposed acquisition of
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Arcelor S.A. (‘‘Arcelor’’). Mittal Steel
and Arcelor, including its Canadian
subsidiary Dofasco Inc. (‘‘Dofasco’’ or
the ‘‘Dofasco Business’’), are two of only
a limited number of suppliers to the
portion of the United States east of the
Rocky Mountains (the ‘‘Eastern United
States’’) of finely rolled tin or chrome
coated steel sheets (‘‘Tin Mill
Products’’). Tin Mill Products are used
in manufacturing steel cans for
packaging a wide range of food
products, such as soup, fruits, and
vegetables, and non-food products, such
as paints, aerosols, and shaving cream.
The Complaint alleges that the likely
effect of this acquisition would be to
lessen competition substantially in the
development, manufacture and sale of
Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United
States, 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 Eastern United States Tin Mill
Products 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 remedy the anticompetitive
effects of the acquisition while
permitting Mittal Steel to complete its
acquisition of Arcelor. Under the
proposed Final Judgment, which is
explained more fully below, the
defendants are required to divest certain
assets including Arcelor’s Dofasco
subsidiary to ThyssenKrupp AG
(‘‘ThyssenKrupp’’), a German
corporation with its headquarters in
Dusseldorf, Germany, or, if defendant
chooses, to another acquirer of the
divested business (‘‘Acquirer’’)
acceptable to the United States in its
sole discretion. If the defendant is
unable to sell the Dofasco Business to
ThyssenKrupp or an alternative
acceptable buyer, then the defendant is
required to divest, at the United States’s
option, either Mittal Steel’s Sparrows
Point, Maryland, facility (‘‘Sparrows
Point Business’’) or Mittal Steel’s
Weirton, West Virginia, facility
(‘‘Weirton Business’’) to an Acquirer
acceptable to the United States in its
sole discretion (with the business so
selected referred to as the ‘‘Selected
Business’’). The divestiture of either the
Dofasco Business or the Selected
Business is designed to enable the
Acquirer to become a viable and active
competitor in the Eastern United States
Tin Mill Products market.
The United States and defendant have
stipulated that the proposed Final
Judgment may be entered after
compliance with the APPA. Entry of the
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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 Defendant and the Proposed
Transaction
Mittal Steel, a Netherlands
corporation, has its corporate
headquarters and principal place of
business in Rotterdam, The
Netherlands, and has operations in
sixteen countries, located on four
continents. As one of the largest steel
producers in the world, Mittal Steel is
primarily engaged in making a variety of
steel products for all the major steel
consuming sectors, including
automotive, appliance, machinery, and
construction. Among its many steel
product lines is Tin Mill Products. In
2005, Mittal Steel reported total
worldwide revenues that exceeded $28
billion and total annual steel production
that exceeded 55 million tons. Mittal
Steel maintains seventeen production
facilities within the United States, and
produces Tin Mill Products in Sparrows
Point and Weirton. Mittal Steel operates
in the United States through its whollyowned subsidiary Mittal Steel USA,
located in Chicago, Illinois, which
markets and sells in the United States
Tin Mill Products and other products
manufactured by Mittal Steel. Tin Mill
Products manufactured at Mittal Steel’s
U.S. tin mills are shipped primarily to
customers in the United States. In 2005,
Mittal Steel sold over 800,000 tons of
Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United
States.
Arcelor, a Luxembourg corporation,
has its corporate headquarters and
principal place of business in the City
of Luxembourg. Like Mittal Steel,
Arcelor is one of the world’s largest
steel producers and makes a variety of
steel products for the automotive,
appliance, packaging, and other
industries. In 2005, Arcelor reported
total worldwide revenues of
approximately $41.5 billion and steel
production of 46 million tons. In
February 2006, Arcelor acquired
Dofasco, a wholly-owned Canadian
subsidiary with its principal place of
business in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
In 2005, Dofasco shipped 4.8 million
tons and had $3.9 billion in revenues.
Among Arcelor’s many steel product
lines is Tin Mill Products, which it
makes at mills in Europe and Brazil and
at Dofasco’s Hamilton mill. In 2005,
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Arcelor, which shipped Tin Mill
Products to the Eastern United States
primarily from its European facilities,
and Dofasco, which shipped Tin Mill
Products to the Eastern United States
from its Canadian facility, sold a
combined 170,615 tons of Tin Mill
Products in the Eastern United States.
On January 27, 2006, Mittal Steel
announced its intention to launch a
hostile tender offer to acquire Arcelor
for approximately $23 billion in cash
and securities. Mittal Steel
simultaneously announced an
agreement to sell Dofasco for
approximately $5 billion to
ThyssenKrupp if Mittal Steel acquired
Arcelor. Arcelor initially resisted the
hostile takeover. One of the steps
Arcelor’s Board of Directors took to
resist the takeover was to transfer legal
title to the shares of Dofasco to an
independent Dutch foundation known
as a ‘‘stichting.’’
Mittal Steel subsequently increased
its tender offer to approximately $33
billion in cash and securities and
formally launched its tender offer on
May 19, 2006. After Mittal Steel agreed
to improve the financial, corporate
governance, and other terms of its offer
for Arcelor, the Arcelor Board agreed on
June 25, 2006 to recommend Mittal
Steel’s offer to Arcelor’s shareholders.
The acceptance period for Mittal’s
initial tender offer, during which 92.6
percent of Arcelor’s shares were
tendered, closed on July 13, 2006. Mittal
Steel can take ownership of the shares
beginning on August 1, 2006.
Mittal Steel’s acquisition of Arcelor
would, among other things, combine the
operations of two significant providers
of Tin Mill Products in the Eastern
United States. The United States alleges
in its Complaint that this proposed
transaction would lessen competition
substantially in the market for Tin Mill
Products in the Eastern United States, in
violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act.
B. The Competitive Effects of the
Transaction on the Tin Mill Products
Market
1. Relevant Product Market: The
Development, Manufacture and Sale of
Tin Mill Products
The Complaint alleges that the
development, manufacture and sale of
Tin Mill Products is a relevant product
market within the meaning of Section 7
of the Clayton Act. Tin Mill Products
are finely rolled steel sheets, usually
coated with a thin protective layer of tin
or chrome. Tin Mill Products are
manufactured using a sequence of
processing steps in which steel is rolled
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into successively thinner sheets, then
hardened, and finally coated with either
tin or chrome. Tin Mill products are
comprised of three types of steel: black
plate, electrolytic tin plate (‘‘ETP’’), and
tin free steel (‘‘TFS’’). Black plate is a
light-gauge cold-rolled bare steel sheet
that serves as the substrate for
production of both ETP and TFS and
can be used bare for some applications
such as pails or larger containers. Black
plate is coated with tin to produce ETP
and with chrome to produce TFS. ETP
and TFS are both used in packaging,
although each provides different
advantages and disadvantages
(including, inter alia, organic coating
acceptance, strength, surface finish, and
formability) that are considered by
purchasers in making their purchase
decisions. The majority of Tin Mill
Products are used to produce sanitary
cans, often referred to as food cans.
Other uses include aerosol cans, general
line cans, pails, larger containers, metal
buildings, and oil and fuel filter sheets.
For most Tin Mill Products
purchasers, including downstream food
can customers, there are no close
substitutes for Tin Mill Products.
Packaging alternatives, such as plastic
containers, are generally not viewed by
can customers as replacements for
products normally packaged in cans
because of cost differences and the
performance advantages associated with
cans. Some of the advantages of steel
cans compared to alternative packaging
include their longer shelf life and
greater durability, familiarity, and
security. Alternative packaging
generally costs at least as much as a
steel can and sometimes costs as much
as eight times as much as a can, and
significant additional capital
investments are necessary to incorporate
alternative packaging materials into a
customer’s packaging process.
The Complaint alleges that a small but
significant increase in the price of Tin
Mill Products would not cause can
manufacturers or their downstream
customers to substitute non-Tin Mill
Products containers or otherwise to
reduce their purchases of Tin Mill
Products in sufficient quantities so as to
make such a price increase unprofitable.
The use of alternative packaging
containers is driven primarily by capital
equipment investment considerations
and by marketing factors such as
consumer convenience, rather than by
small but significant changes in the
prices of Tin Mill Products. For
example, can customers often use
alternative packaging in order to extend
an existing product line, such as using
alternative materials to package soup in
portable microwavable containers,
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while continuing to package the bulk of
their soup products in steel cans.
Accordingly, the Complaint alleges that
the development, manufacture, and sale
of Tin Mill Products is a line of
commerce and a relevant product
market within the meaning of Section 7
of the Clayton Act.
2. Relevant Geographic Market: Eastern
United States
The Complaint also alleges that the
Eastern United States is a geographically
distinct market for the sale of Tin Mill
Products. The only Tin Mill Products
manufacturer in the United States west
of the Rocky Mountains (the ‘‘Western
United States’’) is located in California,
and it does not have substantial sales in
the Eastern United States due to its
distance from can manufacturers in that
part of the country, which tend to be
located in proximity to agricultural
regions. The California Tin Mill
Products manufacturer, which is half
owned by one of the two largest Tin
Mill Products producers in the Eastern
United States, accounts for more than 84
percent of the Tin Mill Products sold in
the Western United States but ships
only small quantities to the Eastern
United States. Similarly, Tin Mill
Products producers in the Eastern
United States generally do not sell
significant quantities in the Western
United States because their freight costs
are higher than those of the single
manufacturer located in the Western
United States.
Customers are reluctant to rely on
offshore suppliers of Tin Mill Products
for their general production
requirements. More than 89 percent of
Tin Mill Products sold in the Eastern
United States are manufactured by firms
located either in the Eastern United
States or eastern Canada. Among the
factors that tend to limit import
penetration are the longer lead times
required for offshore orders, higher
shipping costs, the inability of some
importers to provide the full range of
product specifications required by some
customers, anti-dumping duties
currently in force against several
Japanese producers, and voluntary selfrestraint by importers who are fearful of
prompting additional scrutiny of and
tariff protection against imports.
Thus, a small but significant increase
in the price of Tin Mill Products would
not cause Tin Mill Products customers
in the Eastern United States to
substitute purchases from outside of the
Eastern United States in sufficient
quantities so as to make such a price
increase unprofitable. Accordingly, the
Eastern United States is a relevant
geographic market in which to assess
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the competitive effects of Mittal Steel’s
proposed acquisition of Arcelor on sales
of Tin Mill Products.
3. Anticompetitive Effects of the
Acquisition
The complaint alleges that, in this
highly concentrated market for Tin Mill
Products, a combination of Mittal Steel
and Arcelor likely would: (i)
Substantially lessen competition
generally in the development,
manufacture and sale of Tin Mill
Products in the Eastern United States;
(ii) eliminate actual and potential
competition between Mittal Steel and
Arcelor in the development,
manufacture and sale of Tin Mill
Products; and (iii) increase the prices for
Tin Mill Products, lessen the quality of
Tin Mill Products, lessen the innovation
relating to Tin Mill Products, and
adversely affect the delivery terms
currently offered to the customers in the
Tin Mill Products market.
The market for Tin Mill products in
the Eastern United States is highly
concentrated and is dominated by two
firms, Mittal Steel, an integrated
steelmaker which accounted for 31
percent of the tons sold in 2005, and
another integrated steelmaker, which
accounted for more than 44 percent of
the tons sold in 2005. Luxembourgbased Arcelor is a significant
competitor, which accounted for about
two percent of tons sold in the Eastern
United States in 2005. Dofasco, which
Arcelor acquired in February 2006,
accounts for about four percent of the
tons sold in 2005 in the Eastern United
States. Were Mittal Steel to acquire
Arcelor, the largest two remaining firms
would account for more than 81 percent
of Tin Mill Products sales in the Eastern
United States. In 2005, Mittal Steel and
one other firm accounted for more than
2.1 million tons of such sales.
The acquisition of Arcelor by Mittal
would thus substantially increase the
concentration in the Eastern United
States Tin Mill Products market. 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
Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United
States by approximately 412 points to a
post-acquisition level of approximately
3,522, well in excess of levels that raise
significant antitrust concerns.
Mittal Steel’s elimination of Arcelor
as an independent competitor in the
manufacture and sale of Tin Mill
Products within the Eastern United
States is likely to facilitate
anticompetitive coordination among the
two major Tin Mill Products
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manufacturers by making such
coordination more profitable and harder
to defeat. If The two largest Tin Mill
Products firms in the Eastern United
States were to seek to raise prices or
reduce output today, purchasers of Tin
Mill Products could purchase Tin Mill
Products from Arcelor and its subsidiary
Dofasco. Arcelor has substantial excess
and divertible capacity in Europe, and
Arcelor’s Dofasco subsidiary has
significant divertible capacity in
Canada. Were Arcelor and Dofasco no
longer available as independent
suppliers, the remaining domestic and
foreign fringe producers would likely
not have sufficient capacity and/or
incentives to increase sales in the
Eastern United States enough to defeat
an anti competitive price increase or
output reduction by the two largest
firms. In particular, the only other
incumbent producer located in the
Eastern United States lacks the ability to
manufacture cold-rolled substrate, and
its ability to obtain the additional
substrate needed to increase its output
is uncertain.
De novo entry into the development,
manufacture and sale of Tin Mill
Products is difficult, time-consuming,
and costly, and such entry would not be
timely, likely, or sufficient to defeat
coordination by the two largest Tin Mill
Products firms in the Eastern United
States post-merger. To produce Tin Mill
Products, a firm needs a reliable source
of cold-rolled substrate and a Tin Mill
Products finishing facility. Entry by a
firm that lacks the ability to
manufacture cold-rolled substrate
would be extremely difficult. A facility
to finish cold-rolled substrate into Tin
Mill Products would likely cost in the
range of $60 to $100 million and take
approximately two years to design and
build. The cost of entry is largely
‘‘sunk,’’ i.e., it cannot be recovered or
converted to other uses, raising the risk
to entry, and there is a very high risk
that a new entrant may not receive any
profits from its entry.
Significant new foreign entry or
expansion of shipments to the Eastern
United States by existing foreign
producers is unlikely due to longer
delivery lead times occasioned by
oceangoing transportation, additional
shipping costs, trade barriers, the
possibility of future import restrictions,
and the reluctance of foreign Tin Mill
Products manufacturers to abandon
existing markets elsewhere in order to
enter the Eastern United States market.
Overseas shipping increases the time
between order and delivery by up to
four months, which is unacceptable for
many customers because their demand
requirements fluctuate with hard-to-
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predict fruit and vegetable harvests.
Capacity constraints also limit the
ability of certain foreign producers from
expanding their sales into the Eastern
United States. Therefore, entry or
expansion by any other firm into the
Eastern United States Tin Mill Products
market would not be timely, likely, or
sufficient to deter post-acquisition
coordination.
III. Explanation of the Proposed Final
Judgment
The proposed Final Judgment will
preserve competition in the market for
Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United
States by requiring the divestiture of one
of the three North American tin mills
that Mittal Steel will own following its
acquisition of Arcelor: (1) The Dofasco
mill, currently owned by Arcelor; (2)
Mittal’s Sparrows Point facility; or (3)
Mittal’s Weirton facility. The proposed
Final Judgment provides for the
divestiture of the entire steel mill and
not simply the finishing lines for Tin
Mill Products, and in the case of
Dofasco requires divesting the entirety
of Dofasco’s steel business. The
proposed Final Judgment sets forth a
procedure under which Mittal Steel is
first required to use its best efforts to
sell Dofasco to ThyssenKrupp or an
alternative purchaser approved by the
United States. If Mittal Steel is unable
to sell Dofasco because it proves
impossible to dissolve the stichting
created by Arcelor to hold legal title to
its Dofasco shares, then the Department
of Justice can select either the Sparrows
Point or Weirton facilities for
divestiture.
The required divestiture of Dofasco
will remedy the anticompetitive effects
of the acquisition alleged in the
Complaint, and in the event such a
divestiture is not possible, the alternate
divestiture of either Sparrows Point or
Weirton (as selected by the United
States) would likewise be sufficient to
remedy those effects. The divestiture of
the Dofasco Business or a Selected
Business would preserve an
independent competitor with sufficient
Tin Mill Products capacity to replace
Arcelor/Dofasco as an impediment to
profitable and successful coordination
post-merger. In either case, the
preserved competitor would have
modern and efficient facilities located
close enough to customers in the
Eastern United States to compete
effectively.
The proposed Final Judgment
provides that for any divestiture to be
approved, it must be demonstrated to
the satisfaction of the United States, in
its sole discretion, that the Divested
Business can and will be used by the
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Acquirer as a viable ongoing business
that will remedy the competitive harm
alleged in the Complaint. The
divestiture must be made to an Acquirer
that in the United States’s judgment has
the intent and capability (including the
necessary managerial, operational,
technical, and financial capability) to
compete effectively in the development,
production and sale of Tin Mill
Products; the divestiture also must be
accomplished in a manner that satisfies
the United States, in its sole discretion,
that none of the terms of any agreement
between an Acquirer and the defendant
gives the defendant the ability
unreasonably to raise the Acquirer’s
costs, reduce the Acquirer’s efficiency,
or otherwise interfere in the ability of
the Acquirer to compete effectively in
the development, production and sale of
Tin Mill Products. Mittal Steel must
take all reasonable steps necessary to
accomplish the divestiture quickly and
shall cooperate with prospective
purchasers.
The proposed Final Judgment requires
Mittal Steel, within one hundred and
twenty (120) days after the filing of the
Complaint, or five (5) days after notice
of the entry of the Final Judgment by the
Court, whichever is later, to divest the
Dofasco Business to ThyssenKrupp. The
United States, in its sole discretion, may
agree to one or more extensions of this
time period, not to exceed in total sixty
(60) calendar days, and shall notify the
Court in each such circumstance. At its
option, defendant may elect to sell the
Dofasco Business to an alternative
Acquirer acceptable to the United States
in the sole discretion of the United
States. Mittal Steel agrees to use its best
efforts to divest expeditiously the
Dofasco Business.1
In the event Mittal Steel is unable by
virtue of the stichting to accomplish the
divestiture of the Dofasco Business
within the period prescribed by the
proposed Final Judgment, then
defendant shall divest, at the option of
the United States, either the Sparrows
1 Under the terms of the Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order, Mittal Steel must maintain
and preserve the Dofasco Business, the Sparrows
Point Business, and the Weirton Business as
ongoing, economically viable competitive
businesses from the date of entry of the Hold
Separate Stipulation and Order until the divestiture
required by the proposed Final Judgment is
accomplished. In addition, the Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order requires that Mittal Steel
ensure that Dofasco operates as an independent,
economically viable, and ongoing competitive
business concern, held separate and apart from
Mittal Steel’s other operations, and that it will
remain independent and uninfluenced by Mittal
Steel while the divestiture of Dofasco is pending or
until the United States selects either the Sparrows
Point Business or the Weirton Business for
divestiture.
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Court’s determination that the proposed
Final Judgment is in the public interest.
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, U.S. Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, 1401 H St.,
NW., Suite 3000, 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.
IV. 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 defendant.
rmajette on PROD1PC67 with NOTICES1
Point Business or the Weirton Business.
In the event that defendant does not
accomplish the divestiture of the
Selected Business within 90 days or
within an extension to this time period,
not to exceed 60 calendar days, which
may be granted by the United States in
its sole discretion, the proposed Final
Judgment provides that the Court will
appoint a trustee selected by the United
States to effect the divestiture of the
Selected Business.
In the event that a trustee is to be
appointed, the proposed Final Judgment
provides that the United States shall
select a trustee to be approved by the
Court. If a trustee is appointed, the
proposed Final Judgment provides that
defendant will pay all costs and
expenses of the trustee. The trustee’s fee
arrangement will be structured so as to
provide an incentive for the trustee
based on the price and terms of the
divestiture and the speed with which
the divestiture is accomplished. After
his or her appointment becomes
effective, the trustee will file monthly
reports with the Court and the United
States setting forth his or her efforts to
accomplish the divestiture. At the end
of six months after appointment of the
trustee, if the divestiture has not been
accomplished, the trustee and the
United States will make
recommendations to the Court, which
shall enter such orders as appropriate,
in order to carry out the purpose of the
trust, including extending the trust or
the term of the trustee’s appointment.
The United States considered, as an
alternative to the proposed Final
Judgment, a full trial on the merits
against defendant. The United States
could have continued the litigation and
sought preliminary and permanent
injunctions against Mittal Steel’s
acquisition of Arcelor. The United
States is satisfied, however, that the
divestitures described in the proposed
Final Judgment will avoid the
transaction’s anticompetitive effects in
the provision of Tin Mill Products, and,
thus, would achieve all or substantially
all of the relief the government would
have obtained through litigation, but
without the time and expense of a trial.
V. Procedures Available for
Modification of the Proposed Final
Judgment
The United States and defendant 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
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15:15 Aug 23, 2006
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VI. Alternatives to the Proposed Final
Judgment
VII. 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 (60) 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:
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
(A) The competitive impact of such
judgment, including termination of
alleged violations, provisions for
enforcement and modification, duration
of 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
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) and (B).2 As the
United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit has held,
under the APPA a court considers,
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).
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
deterrnine not whether a particular decree is
the one that will best serve society, but
whether the settlement is ‘‘within the reaches
of the public interest.’’ More elaborate
2 In 2004, Congress amended the APPA to ensure
that courts take into account the above-quoted list
of relevant factors when making a public interest
determination. Compare 15 U.S.C. 16(e) (2004) with
15 U.S.C. 16(e)(l) (2006) (substituting ‘‘shall’’ for
‘‘may’’ in directing relevant factors for court to
consider and amending list of factors to focus on
competitive considerations and to address
potentially ambiguous judgment terms). On the
points discussed herein, the 2004 amendments did
not alter the substance of the Tunney Act, and the
pre-2004 precedents cited below remain applicable.
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requirements might undermine the
effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by
consent decree.
rmajette on PROD1PC67 with NOTICES1
Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis
added) (citations omitted) 3 In making
its public interest determination, a
district court must accord due respect to
the government’s prediction as to the
effect of proposed remedies, its
perception of the market structure, and
its views of the nature of the case.
United States v. Archer-DanielsMidland Co., 272 F. Supp. 2d 1, 6
(D.D.C. 2003).
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. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 552
F. Supp. 131, 151 (D.D.C. 1982)
(citations omitted) (quoting United
States v. Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp. 713,
716 (D. Mass. 1975)), 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.
In its 2004 amendments to the
Tunney Act, Congress made clear its
intent to preserve the practical benefits
of utilizing consent decrees in antitrust
enforcement, adding the unambiguous
instruction ‘‘[n]othing in this section
3 Cf BNS, 858 F.2d at 464 (holding that the court’s
‘‘ultimate authority under the [APPA] is limited to
approving or disapproving the consent decree’’);
United States v. Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp. 713, 716
(D. Mass. 1975) (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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15:15 Aug 23, 2006
Jkt 208001
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). This
language codified the intent of the
original 1974 statute, expressed by
Senator Tunney in the legislative
history: ‘‘[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). 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-America
Dairymen, Inc., 1977–1 Trade Cas.
(CCH) ¶ 61,508, at 71,980 (W.D. Mo.
1977).
VIII. 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: August 1, 2006.
Respectfully submitted,
Kerrie Freeborn,
John Greaney,
Stephen Harris,
Lowell Stern (DC Bar #440487), Attorneys,
U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, Litigation II Section, 1401 H Street,
NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC 20530,
(202) 307–0924.
[FR Doc. 06–7090 Filed 8–24–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–11–M
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
Peter A. Ahles, M.D.; Revocation of
Registration
On August 15, 2005, I, the Deputy
Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, issued an Order to
Show Cause and further ordered the
immediate suspension of DEA
Certificate of Registration, AA0092558,
issued to Peter A. Ahles, M.D.
(Respondent), of Anaheim, California.
The Show Cause Order proposed to
revoke Respondent’s registration as a
practitioner and to deny any pending
applications for renewal or modification
of the registration, on the ground that
Respondent’s continued registration
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
50097
would be inconsistent with the public
interest. See 21 U.S.C. 823(f) and
824(a)(4). The Show Cause Order also
immediately suspended Respondent’s
registration based on my preliminary
finding that his continued registration
‘‘would constitute an immediate danger
to the public health and safety because
of the substantial likelihood that [he
would] continue to acquire large
amounts of narcotic controlled
substances and * * * illegally
distribute these narcotic controlled
substances to potential abusers and
other unauthorized persons in exchange
for cash.’’ Show Cause Order at 3.
The Show Cause Order specifically
alleged that based on a review of
transaction reports filed by DEA
registrants, Respondent, during the
period March 2004 to March 2005, had
received ‘‘nearly 570,000 tablets of
Schedule III hydrocodone and codeine
tablets, most of which were packaged in
500 and 1000 count bottles.’’ Id. at 1–
2. The Show Cause Order alleged that
‘‘[t]hese are excessive amounts of
narcotics to be legitimately dispensed or
administered from a single practitioner’s
office in a one-year period.’’ Id. The
Show Cause Order further alleged that
in the thirteen month period ending in
April 2005, Respondent ‘‘had purchased
over one million dosage units of
Schedule II through V controlled
substances, [which were] predominately
narcotic tablets.’’ Id. at 2.
The Show Cause Order also alleged
that on three occasions during May
2005, a DEA Special Agent and a
cooperating source (CS) had visited
Respondent’s office and made
undercover buys of hydrocodone, a
Schedule III controlled substance. Id.
The Show Cause Order alleged that on
two occasions, the Special Agent
observed the CS pay Respondent $500
in cash and receive a plastic bag
containing approximately 500 tablets of
hydrocodone. Id. The Show Cause
Order alleged that on the other occasion,
the Special Agent observed the CS pay
Respondent $600 and receive a plastic
bag containing 500 tablets of Norco,
another hydrocodone product. Id. The
Show Cause Order further alleged that
Respondent made each of the
dispensings without asking the CS for
his medical complaint, taking a medical
history, or conducting a physical
examination. The Show Cause Order
thus alleged that the distributions were
made ‘‘without any legitimate medical
purpose and [were] not in the course of
legitimate medical practice’’ and
violated 21 U.S.C. 841(a)(1). Id.
Finally, the Show Cause Order alleged
that Respondent had, in submitting his
DEA renewal application, answered
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 164 (Thursday, August 24, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 50084-50097]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-7090]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States v. Mittal Steel Company N.V. 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)-(h), that a Complaint, proposed Final
Judgment, Hold Separate Stipulation and Order, and Competitive Impact
Statement were filed with the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia in United States v.
[[Page 50085]]
Mittal Steel Company N.V. Civil Action No. 1:06CY01360. On August 1,
2006, the United States filed a Complaint to enjoin Mittal Steel
Company N.Y. (``Mittal Steel'') from acquiring Arcelor S.A.
(``Arcelor''). The Complaint alleges that Mittal Steel's acquisition of
Arcelor would substantially lessen competition in the development,
manufacture, and sale of Tin Mill Products in violation of Section 7 of
the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 18, throughout the United States
east of the Rocky Mountains (the ``Eastern United States''). The
proposed Final Judgment, filed August 1, 2006, requires defendant,
Mittal Steel, to divest one of their three North American tin mills it
will own after the acquisition to preserve competition in the sale of
Tin Mill Products. A Hold Separate Stipulation and Order, entered by
the Court on August 2, 2006, requires defendant to maintain, prior to
divestiture, the competitive independence and economic viability ofthe
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 U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division,
325 Seventh Street, NW., Room 215, Washington, D.C. 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 set
by the U.S. Department of Justice regulations.
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, N.W., Suite 3000,
Washington, D.C. 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, U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, 1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC 20530.
Plaintiff, v. Mittal Steel Company N.V., Hofplein 20, 15th Floor,
Rotterdam, The Netherlands, 3032. Defendant.
Case No.
JUDGE:
DECK TYPE: Antitrust
DATE STAMP:
Complaint
The United States of America, acting under the direction of the
Attorney General of the United States, brings this civil antitrust
action to obtain equitable and other relief against the defendant,
Mittal Steel Company N.V. (``Mittal Steel''), to prevent its proposed
acquisition of Arcelor S.A. (``Arcelor''), and alleges as follows:
I. Nature of the Action
1. Mittal Steel formally launched a tender offer for Arcelor on May
19, 2006, and on June 25, 2006 the Arcelor board recommended Mittal's
offer to Arcelor's shareholders. The acceptance period for Mittal's
tender offer cJosed on July 13,2006, and Mittal Steel can take
ownership of the shares beginning on August 1, 2006.
2. Mittal Steel is an integrated steelmaker that manufactures,
among other products, finely rolled tin or chrome coated steel sheets
known as ``Tin Mill Products.'' Tin Mill Products are used in
manufacturing steel cans for packaging a wide range of food products
such as soup, fruits, and vegetables, and non-food products such as
paints, aerosols, and shaving cream. Mittal Steel is the second largest
supplier of Tin Mill Products to the portion of the United States east
of the Rocky Mountains (the ``Eastern United States''), accounting for
about 31 percent of Tin Mill Products tonnage sold in 2005.
3. Arcelor accounted for about two percent of Tin Mill Products
tonnage sold in the Eastern United States in 2005. Arcelor acquired its
subsidiary Dofasco Inc. (``Dofasco'') in February 2006. In 2005 Dofasco
accounted for an additional four percent of the Tin Mill Products
tonnage sold in 2005 in the Eastern United States.
4. Mittal Steel's proposed acquisition of Arcelor would eliminate
Arcelor, including its subsidiary Dofasco, as an independent competitor
in the sale of Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United States, further
consolidating an already highly concentrated market. The largest
supplier of Tin Mill Products sold in the Eastern United States,
another integrated steelmaker, accounted for over 44 percent of the
tons sold in 2005. If this merger were not enjoined, the two largest
suppliers of Tin Mill Products would account for over 81 percent of
2005 sales in the Eastern United States.
5. The acquisition would remove current constraints on coordination
and increase the incentives of the two largest firms to coordinate
their behavior. The acquisition would thus substantially increase the
likelihood of coordination and would likely lead to higher prices,
lower quality, less innovation, and less favorable delivery terms in
the Tin Mill Products market in the Eastern United States.
6. Accordingly, the acquisition would substantially lessen
competition in Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United States, in
violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
II. Jurisdiction and Venue
7. Plaintiff United States brings this action against defendant
Mittal Steel under Section 15 of the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C.
25, to prevent and restrain the violation by defendant of Section 7 of
the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
8. Defendant manufactures and sells Tin Mill Products in the flow
of interstate commerce. Defendant's activities in developing,
manufacturing and selling Tin Mill Products substantially affect
interstate commerce. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over
this action and the defendant pursuant to Section 12 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 22, and 28 U.S.C. 1331, 1337(a), and 1345.
9. Venue is proper in this District pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1391(d).
Furthermore, defendant has consented to venue and personal jurisdiction
in this judicial district.
III. Parties to the Proposed Transaction
10. Defendant Mittal Steel is a Netherlands corporation with its
corporate headquarters and principal place of business in Rotterdam,
The Netherlands, and operations in sixteen countries on four
continents. Mittal Steel produces both flat and long steel products for
all of the major steel consuming sectors, including automotive,
appliance, machinery, and construction. Mittal Steel's total worldwide
revenues exceeded $28 billion in 2005, and its total annual steel
[[Page 50086]]
production exceeded 55 million tons. Mittal Steel produces Tin Mill
Products in Sparrows Point, Maryland and Weirton, West Virginia. In
2005, Mittal Steel sold over 800,000 tons of Tin Mill Products in the
Eastern United States.
11. Arcelor is a Luxembourg corporation with its corporate
headquarters and principal place of business in the City of Luxembourg.
Arcelor, with operations primarily in Europe and Brazil, produces flat
and long products for the automotive, appliance, packaging, and general
industries. In 2005, Arcelor had approximately $41.5 billion in total
worldwide revenues and steel production of 46 million tons.
12. In February 2006 Arcelor acquired Dofasco, a wholly-owned
Canadian subsidiary with its corporate headquarters and principal place
of business in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Dofasco shipped 4.8 million
tons of steel and had $3.9 billion in revenues in 2005. Arcelor, which
shipped Tin Mill Products to the Eastern United States primarily from
its European facilities, and Dofasco, which shipped Tin Mill Products
to the Eastern United States from its Canadian facility, sold a
combined 170,615 tons of Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United States
in 2005.
IV. The Proposed Transaction
13. On January 27, 2006, Mittal Steel announced its intention to
launch a hostile tender offer to acquire Arcelor for approximately $23
billion in cash and securities. Mittal Steel simultaneously announced
an agreement to sell Dofasco for approximately $5 billion to a German
steelmaker, ThyssenKrupp A.G. (``ThyssenKrupp''), if Mittal Steel
acquired Arcelor. Arcelor initially resisted the hostile takeover. One
of the steps Arcelor's Board of Directors took to resist the takeover
was to transfer legal title to the shares of Dofasco to an independent
Dutch foundation known as a ``stichting.''
14. Mittal Steel subsequently increased its tender offer to
approximately $33 billion in cash and securities and formally launched
its tender offer on May 19, 2006. After Mittal Steel agreed to improve
the financial, corporate govemance, and other terms of its offer for
Arcelor, the Arcelor Board agreed on June 25, 2006 to recommend
Mittal's offer to Arcelor's shareholders. The acceptance period for
Mittal's initial tender offer, during which 92.6 percent of Arcelor's
shares were tendered, closed on July 13, 2006. Mittal Steel can take
ownership of the shares beginning on August 1, 2006.
V. Trade and Commerce
A. Relevant Product Market
15. Tin Mill Products are finely rolled steel sheets, usually
coated with a thin protective layer of tin or chrome. Tin Mill Products
are manufactured using a sequence of processing steps in which steel is
rolled into successively thinner sheets, then hardened, and finally
coated with either tin or chrome.
16. Tin Mill Products are comprised of three types of steel: Black
plate, electrolytic tin plate (``ETP''), and tin free steel (``TFS'').
Black plate is a light-gauge cold-rolled bare steel sheet that serves
as the substrate for production of both ETP and TFS and can be used
bare for some applications, such as pails or larger containers. Black
plate is coated with tin to produce ETP and with chrome to produce TFS.
ETP and TFS are both used for packaging, although each provides
different advantages and disadvantages (including, inter alia, organic
coating acceptance, strength, surface finish and formability) that are
considered by purchasers in making their purchase decisions.
17. The majority of Tin Mill Products shipments are used to produce
sanitary cans, often referred to as food cans. Other uses include
aerosol cans, general line cans, pails, larger containers, metal
buildings, and oil and fuel filter sheets.
18. For most Tin Mill Products purchasers, including downstream
food can customers, there are no close substitutes for Tin Mill
Products. Packaging alternatives, such as plastic containers, are
generally not viewed by can customers as replacements for products
normally packaged in cans because of cost differences and the
performance advantages associated with cans. Some of the advantages of
steel cans compared to alternative packaging include their longer shelf
life and greater durability, familiarity, and security. Alternative
packaging generally costs at least as much as a steel can and sometimes
costs as much as eight times as much as a can, and significant
additional capital investments are necessary to incorporate alternative
packaging materials into a customer's packaging process.
19. A small but significant increase in the price of Tin Mill
Products would not cause can manufacturers or their downstream
customers to substitute non-Tin Mill Products containers, or otherwise
to reduce their purchases of Tin Mill Products, in sufficient
quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable. The use of
alternative packaging containers is driven primarily by capital
equipment investment considerations and by marketing factors such as
consumer convenience, rather than by small but significant changes in
the prices of Tin Mill Products. For example, can customers often use
alternative packaging in order to extend an existing product line, such
as using alternative materials for portable microwavable containers for
soup, while continuing to package the bulk of soup products in steel
cans.
20. Accordingly, the development, manufacture, and sale of Tin Mill
Products is a line of commerce and a relevant product market within the
meaning of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
B. Relevant Geographic Market
21. The Eastern United States is a geographically distinct market
for the sale of Tin Mill Products. The only Tin Mill Products
manufacturer in the United States west of the Rocky Mountains (the
``Western United States'') is located in California, and it does not
have substantial sales in the Eastern United States due to its distance
from can manufacturers in that part of the country, which tend to be
located in proximity to agricultural regions. That California Tin Mill
Products manufacturer, half owned by one of the two largest Tin Mill
Products producers in the Eastern United States, accounts for over 84
percent of the Tin Mill Products sold in the Western United States but
ships only small quantities to the Eastern United States. Similarly,
Tin Mill Products producers in the Eastern United States generally do
not sell significant quantities in the Western United States because
their treight costs are higher than those of the single manufacturer
located in the Western United States.
22. A small but significant increase in the price of Tin Mill
Products would not cause Tin Mill Products customers in the Eastern
United States to substitute purchases from outside of the Eastern
United States in sufficient quantities so as to make such a price
increase unprofitable.
23. Accordingly, the Eastern United States is a relevant geographic
market within the meaning of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
C. Anticompetitive Effects
24. Currently, Mittal Steel and its primary competitor account for
over 75 percent of Tin Mill Products sales in the Eastern United
States. Were Mittal Steel to acquire ArceJor, the largest two firms
would account for over 81 percent of such sales. In 2005, Mittal Steel,
Arcelor, Dofasco, and one other firm sold more than 2.1 million tons of
Tin
[[Page 50087]]
Mill Products in the Eastern United States.
25. The market for Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United States
would thus become substantially more concentrated if Mittal Steel were
to acquire Arcelor and its Dofasco subsidiary. 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 Tin Mill Products in the Eastern
United States by approximately 412 points to a post-acquisition level
of approximately 3,522, well in excess of levels that raise significant
antitrust concerns.
26. Purchasers of Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United States
have benefitted from competition between Mittal Steel and Arcelor
through lower prices, higher quality, more innovation, and better
delivery terms for Tin Mill Products. Arcelor and its subsidiary
Dofasco are known for high quality and innovation, which forces Mittal
Steel and other domestic producers to compete on these aspects as well.
By acquiring Arcelor, Mittal Steel would eliminate that competition.
27. Mittal Steel's elimination of Arcelor as an independent
competitor in the manufacture and sale of Tin Mill Products within the
Eastern United States is likely to facilitate anticompetitive
coordination among the two major Tin Mill Products manufacturers by
making such coordination more profitable and harder to defeat. If the
two largest Tin Mill Products firms in the Eastern United States were
to seek to raise prices or reduce output today, purchasers of Tin Mill
Products could purchase Tin Mill Products from Arcelor and its
subsidiary Dofasco. Arcelor has substantial excess and divertible
capacity in Europe, and Arcelor's Dofasco subsidiary has significant
divertible capacity in Canada. Were Arcelor and Dofasco no longer
available as independent suppliers, the remaining domestic and foreign
fringe producers would likely not have sufficient capacity and/or
incentives to increase production enough to defeat an anticompetitive
price increase or output reduction by the two largest firms. In
particular, the only other incumbent producer located in the Eastern
United States does not have the ability to manufacture cold-rolled
substrate, and its ability to obtain the additional substrate needed to
increase its output is constrained.
D. Entry and Expansion
28. De novo entry into the development, manufacture and sale of Tin
Mill Products is difficult, time-consuming, and costly, and such entry
would not be timely, likely, or sufficient to defeat coordination by
the two largest Tin Mill Products firms in the Eastern United States
post-merger. To produce Tin Mill Products, a firm needs a reliable
source of cold-rolled substrate and a Tin Mill Products finishing
facility. A facility to finish cold-rolled substrate into Tin Mill
Products would likely cost in the range of $60 to $100 million and take
approximately two years to design and build. In addition, entry by a
firm that lacks the ability to manufacture cold-rolled substrate or to
increase its output of cold-rolled substrate would be more risky as it
may not gain access to sufficient substrate to compete effectively. The
cost of entry is largely ``sunk,'' i.e., it cannot be recovered or
converted to other uses, raising the risk to entry, and there is a very
high risk that a new entrant may not receive any profits from its
entry.
29. Significant new foreign entry or expansion of shipments to the
Eastern United States by existing foreign producers is unlikely due to
longer delivery lead times occasioned by the need for oceangoing
transportation, additional shipping costs, trade barriers, the
possibility of future import restrictions, and the reluctance of
foreign Tin Mill Products manufacturers to abandon existing markets
elsewhere in order to enter or expand in the Eastern United States.
Overseas shipping increases the time between order and delivery by up
to four months, which is unacceptable for most customers in the Eastern
United States because their demand requirements fluctuate with hard-to-
predict fruit and vegetable harvests. Capacity constraints also limit
certain foreign producers from expanding their sales into the Eastern
United States.
30. Therefore, entry or expansion by any other finn into the
Eastern United States Tin Mill Products market would not be timely,
likely, or sufficient to deter post-acquisition coordination.
VI. Violation Alleged
31. The effect of the proposed acquisition of Arcelor by Mittal
Steel would be to substantially lessen competition in interstate trade
and commerce, in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
18.
32. Unless restrained, the transaction will likely have the
following effects, among others:
a. Competition generally in the development, manufacture and sale
of Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United States would be
substantially lessened;
b. Actual and potential competition between Mittal Steel and
Arcelor in the development, manufacture and sale of Tin Mill Products
will be eliminated; and
c. The prices for Tin Mill Products will likely increase, the
quality of Tin Mill Products will likely decline, innovation relating
to Tin Mill Products will likely decline, and the delivery terms
currently offered in the Tin Mill Products market will likely become
less favorable to customers.
VII. Requested Relief
33. Plaintiff requests that:
a. Mittal Steel's proposed acquisition of Arcelor be adjudged and
decreed to be unlawful and in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 18;
b. Defendant and all persons acting on its 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 Mittal Steel
with the operations of Arcelor;
c. Plaintiff be awarded its costs for this action; and
d. Plaintiff receive such other and further relief as the case
requires and the Court deems just and proper.
Dated: August 1, 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, D.C. Bar #414420.
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations.
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section, D.C. Bar #435204.
Robert W. Wilder,
Acting Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section.
Kerrie J. Freeborn,
John F. Greaney,
Stephen A. Harris,
Lowell Stern (D.C. Bar #440487), Attorneys, U.S. Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, Litigation II Section, 1401 H Street,
N.W., Suite 3000, Washington, D.C. 20530, (202) 307-0924.
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 BBI is 2600 (30 \2\ + 30 \2\ + 20 \2\ + 20 \2\ =
2600). The HHI takes into account the relative size and distribution
of the firms in a market and approaches zero when a market consists
of a
[[Page 50088]]
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.
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff; v. Mittal Steel Company N.V.,
Defendant
Case No.
DECK TYPE: Antitrust
DATE STAMP:
Final Judgment
Whereas, plaintiff, United States of America, filed its Complaint
on August 1, 2006 and plaintiff and defendant, Mittal Steel Company
N.V., 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, defendant agrees 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 defendant to
assure that competition is not substantially lessened;
And Whereas, plaintiff requires defendant to make certain
divestitures for the purpose of remedying the loss of competition
alleged in the Complaint;
And Whereas, defendant has represented to the United States that
the divestitures required below can and will be made and that defendant
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 defendant 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 the entity or entities to whom defendant
divests either the Dofasco Business or the Selected Business.
B. ``Arcelor'' means Arcelor, S.A., a Luxembourg corporation with
its headquarters in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg, its successors and
assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, affiliates,
partnerships, joint ventures, and their directors, officers, managers,
agents, and employees.
C. ``Divested Business'' means either the Dofasco Business or the
Sparrows Point Business or the Weirton Business, whichever is being
offered for sale by the defendant or by a trustee appointed pursuant to
Section V of this Final Judgment.
D. ``Dofasco Business'' means all assets, interests, and rights in
Dofasco Inc. (``Dofasco''), including any additions, improvements, or
expansions made by Arcelor after Arcelor's acquisition of Dofasco on or
about February 20, 2006, and includes but is not limited to:
1. All tangible assets that comprise Dofasco, including research
and development activities, all manufacturing equipment, tooling and
fixed assets, personal property, inventory, office furniture,
materials, supplies, on- or off-site warehouses or storage facilities
and other tangible property, and all assets used exclusively in
connection with the Dofasco business; all licenses, permits and
authorizations issued by any governmental organization relating to
Dofasco; all supply agreements relating to Dofasco; all contracts,
teaming agreements, agreements, leases, certifications, commitments,
and understandings; all customer contracts, lists, accounts, and credit
records relating to Dofasco; and all other records relating to Dofasco;
2. All intangible assets used in the development, production,
servicing, and sale of products by Dofasco, including but not limited
to all patents, licenses and sublicenses, intellectual property,
copyrights, trademarks, trade names, service marks, service names,
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
Dofasco; all research data concerning historic and current research and
development efforts relating to products produced or sold by Dofasco,
including but not limited to designs of experiments, and the results of
successful and unsuccessful designs and experiments, provided, however,
that Dofasco does not include Dofasco's interest in Sorevco.
E. ``DoSol Joint Venture'' means DoSol Galva Limited Partnership,
the hot dip galvanizing facility located in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada,
that is a joint venture between Dofasco and Arcelor.
F. ``Mittal Steel'' means defendant Mittal Steel Company, N.V., a
Netherlands public limited liability company with its headquarters in
Rotterdam, The Netherlands, its successors and assigns, and its
subsidiaries, divisions, groups, affiliates, partnerships, joint
ventures, and their directors, officers, managers, agents, and
employees.
G. ``QCM'' means Quebec Cartier Mining Company, a producer of iron
ore products, headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
H. ``Selected Business'' means whichever of the Sparrows Point
Business or the Weirton Business is selected by the United States in
its sole discretion to be offered for sale by the defendant or by a
trustee appointed pursuant to Section V of this Final Judgment.
I. ``Sorevco'' mean Sorevco and Company, Limited, the hot dip
galvanizing operation located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, that is a
joint venture between Dofasco and Mittal.
J. ``Sparrows Point Facility'' means the steel making, rolling, and
coating facility owned by Mittal Steel and located in or near Sparrows
Point, Maryland.
K. ``Sparrows Point Business'' means all assets, interests, and
rights in the Sparrows Point Facility, and includes but is not limited
to:
1. All tangible assets used in the development, production,
servicing, and sale of all products produced at the Sparrows Point
Facility, including but not limited to 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 all manufacturing equipment, tooling and fixed
assets, capital equipment, vehicles, supplies, personal property,
inventory, office
[[Page 50089]]
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 relating to the Sparrows Point Business;
supply agreements; all contracts, teaming agreements, agreements,
leases, certifications, commitments, and understandings relating to the
Sparrows Point Business; all customer contracts, lists, accounts, and
credit records; and all other records maintained by Mittal Steel in
connection with the operation of the Sparrows Point Business; provided,
however, that with respect to any assets covered by Section II(K)(1)
that relate primarily to Mittal's non-divested businesses, but also
relate in part to the Sparrows Point Business, the defendant shall have
the option, subject to the written approval of the United States in its
sole discretion, to substitute equivalent assets or arrangements (a
substituted asset or arrangement will not be deemed equivalent unless
it provides the Sparrows Point Business the same benefits, or enables
the Sparrows Point Business to perform the same function at the same or
less cost); and further provided, that the Sparrows Point Business does
not include Mittal Steel's contract to supply hot-rolled steel to the
The Ford Motor Company, which contract is supplied in part by the
Sparrows Point Facility;
2. All intangible assets currently used exclusively or primarily in
the development, production, servicing, and sale of all products
produced at the Sparrows Point Facility, including but not limited to
all patents, licenses and sublicenses, intellectual property,
copyrights, trademarks, trade names, service marks, service names
(except to the extent such trademarks, trade names, service marks, or
service names contain the trademark or name ``Mittal Steel'' 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 Sparrows Point Business;
3. With respect to any other identified intangible assets that are
not subject to Section II(K)(2) and that prior to the filing of the
Complaint were used both in connection with the Sparrows Point Business
and in connection with Mittal Steel's non-divested businesses, the
defendant shall provide to the Acquirer a non-exclusive, non-
transferable, fully-paid-up license(s) for such intangible asset(s) to
the extent and for the period of time that defendant has rights to such
intangible assets, provided, however, that any such license may be
transferable to any future purchaser of the Sparrows Point Business;
and
4. All research data concerning historic and current research and
development efforts related to the Sparrows Point Business, including
but not limited to designs of experiments, and the results of
successful and unsuccessful designs and experiments. To the extent that
any such data also relates to historic and current research and
development efforts related to businesses other than the Sparrows Point
Business, providing a non-exclusive copy of such data shall fulfill
defendant's obligations under this provision.
L. ``ThyssenKrupp'' means ThyssenKrupp AG, a German corporation
with its headquarters in Dusseldorf, Germany, its successors and
assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, affiliates,
partnerships, joint ventures, and their directors, officers, managers,
agents, and employees.
M. ``Tin Mill Products'' means collectively black plate, i.e.,
light-gauge cold-rolled bare steel sheet; electrolytic tin plate, i.e.,
black-plate electrolytically coated with tin; and tin free steel, i.e.,
black plate electrolytically coated with chromium.
N. ``Weirton Facility'' means the steel making, rolling, and
coating facility owned by Mittal Steel and located in or near Weirton,
West Virginia.
O. ``Weirton Business'' means all assets, interests, and rights in
Weirton Facility, and includes but is not limited to:
1. All tangible assets used in the development, production,
servicing, and sale of all products produced at the Weirton Facility,
including but not limited to 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 all manufacturing equipment, tooling and fixed assets,
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, including but not limited to all of defendant's rights
and interests in the Half Moon tin warehouse and processing facility
near the Weirton Facility; all licenses, permits and authorizations
issued by any governmental organization relating to the Weirton
Facility; supply agreements; all contracts, teaming agreements,
agreements, leases, certifications, commitments, and understandings
relating to the Weirton Facility; all customer contracts, lists,
accounts, and credit records; and all other records maintained by
Mittal Steel in connection with the operation of the Weirton Business;
provided, however, that with respect to any assets covered by Section
II(O)(I) that relate primarily to Mittal's non-divested businesses, but
also relate in part to the Weirton Business, the defendant shall have
the option, subject to the written approval of the United States in its
sole discretion, to substitute equivalent assets or arrangements (a
substituted asset or arrangement will not be deemed equivalent unless
it provides the Weirton Business the same benefits, or enables the
Weirton Business to perform the same function at the same or less
cost);
2. All intangible assets currently used exclusively or primarily in
the development, production, servicing, and sale of all products
produced at the Weirton Facility, including but not limited to all
patents, licenses and sublicenses, intellectual property, copyrights,
trademarks, trade names, service marks, service names (except to the
extent such trademarks, trade names, service marks, or service names
contain the trademark or name ``Mittal Steel'' 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 Weirton Business;
3. With respect to any other identified intangible assets that are
not subject to Section II(O)(2) and that prior to the filing of the
Complaint were used both in connection with the Weirton Business and in
connection with Mittal Steel's non-divested businesses, the defendant
shall provide to the Acquirer a non-exclusive, non-transferable, fully
paid-up license(s) for such intangible asset(s) to the extent and for
the period of the time that defendant has rights to such intangible
assets, provided, however, that any such license may be
[[Page 50090]]
transferable to any future purchaser of the Weirton Business; and
4. All research data concerning historic and current research and
development efforts related to the Weirton Business, including but not
limited to designs of experiments, and the results of successful and
unsuccessful designs and experiments. To the extent that any such data
also relates to historic and current research and development efforts
related to businesses other than the Weirton Business, providing a non-
exclusive copy of such data shall fulfill defendant's obligations under
this provision.
III. Applicability
A. This Final Judgment applies to Mittal Steel, as defined above,
and all other persons in active concert or participation with Mittal
Steel who receive actual notice of this Final Judgment by personal
service or otherwise.
B. Defendant shall require, as a condition of the sale or other
disposition of all or substantially all of its assets or of lesser
business units that includes the Divested Business, that the purchaser
agrees to be bound by the provisions of this Final Judgment.
IV. Divestiture
A. In the event defendant acquires Arcelor, defendant is ordered
and directed to divest the Dofasco Business to ThyssenKrupp within (1)
120 calendar days after the filing of the Complaint in this matter or
(2) five (5) days after notice of the entry of this Final Judgment by
the Court, whichever is later. The United States, in its sole
discretion, may agree to one or more extensions of this time period,
not to exceed in total sixty (60) calendar days, and shall notify the
Court in each such circumstance. At its option, defendant may elect to
sell Dofasco to an alternative Acquirer acceptable to the United States
in the sole discretion of the United States. Defendant agrees to use
its best efforts to divest the Dofasco Business as expeditiously as
possible.
B. In the event defendant acquires Arcelor but is unable to
accomplish the divestiture of the Dofasco Business within the time
period specified in Section IV(A), then at the option of the United
States, defendant shall divest either the Sparrows Point Business or
the Weirton Business. The United States shall provide defendant written
notice of its selection. Defendant is ordered and directed, within
ninety (90) calendar days of the receipt of such notice, to divest the
Selected Business in a manner consistent with this Final Judgment to an
Acquirer acceptable to the United States in its sole discretion. The
United States, in its sole discretion, may agree to one or more
extensions of this time period, not to exceed in total sixty (60)
calendar days, and shall notify the Court in each such circumstance.
Defendant agrees to use its best efforts to divest the Selected
Business as expeditiously as possible. Once the United States has
provided defendant with written notice of its selection under Section
IV(B), the defendant will cease to have any obligation under Section
IV(A) to divest the Dofasco Business.
C. In accomplishing the divestiture ordered by the Final Judgment,
defendant promptly shall make known, by usual and customary means, the
availability of the Divested Business. Defendant shall inform any
person making inquiry regarding a possible purchase of the Divested
Business that it will be divested pursuant to this Final Judgment and
provide that person with a copy of this Final Judgment. Defendant shall
offer to furnish to all prospective Acquirers, subject to customary
confidentiality assurances, all information and documents relating to
the Divested Business that customarily are provided in a due diligence
process except such information or documents subject to the attorney-
client or work-product privilege. Defendant shall make available such
information to the United States at the same time that such information
is made available to any other person.
D. Defendant shall provide the Acquirer and the United States
information relating to personnel involved in the research,
development, production, operation, and sale of the products of the
Divested Business to enable the Acquirer to make offers of employment.
Defendant will not interfere with any negotiations by the Acquirer to
employ any employee of the Divested Business whose primary
responsibility is the production, operation, development, or sale of
the products of the Divested Business.
E. Defendant shall permit prospective Acquirers of the Divested
Business 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;
and access to any and all financial, operational, and other documents
and information customarily provided as part of a due diligence
process.
F. Defendant shall warrant to the Acquirer of the Divested Business
that each asset of the Divested Business is in a condition and state of
repair equal to the condition and state of repair as of, (1) in the
case that the Selected Business is divested, the date the defendant
publicly announced its intention to acquire Arcelor, i.e., January 27,
2006, or (2) in the case that the Dofasco Business is divested, the
date of the filing of the Complaint in this matter.
G. Defendant shall not take any action that will impede in any way
the permitting, operation, or divestiture of the Divested Business.
H. The defendant will not undertake, directly or indirectly, any
challenges to the environmental, zoning, or other permits relating to
the operation of the Divested Business. If the Selected Business is
divested, the defendant shall warrant to the Acquirer of the Selected
Business that there are no material defects in the environmental,
zoning, or other permits pertaining to the operation of the Selected
Business as operated by the defendant.
I. Nothing in this Final Judgment shall be construed to require the
Acquirer as a condition of any license granted by defendant pursuant to
Sections II(K)(3) or II(O)(3) to extend to defendant the right to use
the Acquirer's improvements to processes used in connection with the
Selected Business.
J. Unless the United States otherwise consents in writing, the
divestiture pursuant to Section IV, or by trustee appointed pursuant to
Section V, of this Final Judgment, shall include the entire business
and assets of the Divested Business, 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 a viable,
ongoing business engaged in producing Tin Mill Products. The
divestiture, whether pursuant to Section IV or Section V of this Final
Judgment,
1. Shall be made to an Acquirer that, in the United States's sole
judgment, has the intent and capability (including the necessary
managerial, operational, technical and financial capability) to compete
effectively in the production and sale of Tin Mill Products; and
2. Shall be accomplished so as to satisfy the United States, in its
sole discretion, that none of the terms of any agreement between an
Acquirer and defendant gives defendant the ability unreasonably to
raise the Acquirer's costs, to lower the Acquirer's efficiency, or
otherwise interfere in the ability of the Acquirer to compete
effectively in the production and sale of Tin Mill Products.
[[Page 50091]]
V. Appointment of Trustee To Effect Divestiture
A. If the defendant has not divested the Selected Business pursuant
to Section IV(B) of this Final Judgment within the time period
specified in that Section, defendant 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 to effect the divestiture of the Selected Business pursuant
to Section IV(B).
B. After the appointment of a trustee becomes effective, only the
trustee shall have the right to sell the Selected Business. The trustee
shall have the power and authority to accomplish the divestiture to an
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 IV, V, and VI of this Final
Judgment, and shall have such other powers as this Court deems
appropriate. Subject to Section V(D) of this Final Judgment, the
trustee may hire at the cost and expense of defendant 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.
C. Defendant shall not object to a sale by the trustee on any
ground other than the trustee's malfeasance. Any such objection by
defendant 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.
D. The trustee shall serve at the cost and expense of defendant, on
such terms and conditions as plaintiff approves, and shall account for
all monies derived from the sale of the Selected Business 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 defendant 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
Selected 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.
E. Defendant shall use its 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 personnel, books,
records, and facilities of the Selected Business, and defendant 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. Defendant shall take
no action to interfere with or to impede the trustee's accomplishment
of the divestiture.
F. 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 the Selected 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 Selected Business.
G. If the trustee has not accomplished the divestiture of the
Selected Business 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 report contains information that the trustee deems
confidential, such report 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 shall 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, defendant or the trustee, whichever is then
responsible for effecting the divestiture required herein, shall notify
the United States of any proposed divestiture required by Section IV or
V of this Final Judgment. If the trustee is responsible, it shall
similarly notify defendant. 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 Selected Business.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of receipt by the United
States of such notice, the United States may request from defendant,
the proposed Acquirer, any other third party, or the trustee if
applicable additional information concerning the proposed divestiture,
the proposed Acquirer, and any other potential Acquirer. Defendant 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 defendant, the
proposed Acquirer, any third party, or the trustee, whichever is later,
the United States shall provide written notice to defendant 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
defendant's limited right to object to the sale under Section V(C) of
this Final Judgment. Absent written notice that the United States does
not object to the proposed Acquirer or upon objection by the United
States, a divestiture proposed under Section IV or Section V shall not
be consummated. Upon objection by defendant under Section V(C), a
divestiture proposed under Section V shall not be consummated unless
approved by the Court.
VII. Financing
Defendant shall not finance all or any part of any purchase made
pursuant to Section IV or V of this Final Judgment.
VIII. Hold Separate
Until the divestiture required by this Final Judgment has been
accomplished defendant shall take all steps necessary to comply with
the Hold Separate Stipulation and Order entered by this Court.
Defendant shall take no action that would jeopardize the divestiture
order by this Court.
[[Page 50092]]
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 V, defendant
shall deliver to the United States an affidavit as to the fact and
manner of its compliance with Section IV or V of this Final Judgement.
Each such affidavit shall include the name, address, and telephone
number of each person who, during the preceding thirty days, 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 Divested Business, and shall describe in
detail each contact with any such person during that period. Each such
affidavit shall also include a description of the efforts defendant has
taken to solicit buyers for the Divested Business, and to provide
required information to any prospective Acquirer, including the
limitations, if any, on such information. Assuming the information set
forth in the affidavit is true and complete, any objection by the
United States to information provided by defendant, including
limitations on the information, shall be made within fourteen (14)
calendar days of receipt of such affidavit.
B. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the Complaint
in this matter, defendant shall deliver to the United States an
affidavit that describes in reasonable detail all actions defendant has
taken and all steps defendant has implemented on an ongoing basis to
comply with Section VIII of this Final Judgment. Defendant shall
deliver to the United States an affidavit describing any changes to the
efforts and actions outlined in defendant's earlier affidavits filed
pursuant to this section within fifteen (15) calendar days after the
change is implemented.
C. Defendant shall keep all records of all efforts made to preserve
and divest the Divested Business until one year after a divestiture has
been completed.
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 defendant, be
permitted:
1. Access during defendant's office hours to inspect and copy, or
at plaintiff's option, to require defendant to provide copies of, all
books, ledgers, accounts, records and documents in the possession,
custody, or control of defendant, relating to any matters contained in
this Final Judgment; and
2. To interview, either informally or on the record, defendant's
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 defendant.
B. Upon the written request of a duly authorized representative of
the Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division,
defendant 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
defendant to the United States, defendant represents and identifies 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 defendant 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 defendant ten (10) calendar days notice prior to divulging such
material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand jury proceeding).
XI. No Reacquisition
Defendant may not reacquire any part of any assets divested during
the term of this Final Judgment, provided, however, that nothing in
this decree shall prevent defendant from (1) reacquiring any of the
assets of QCM, subject to the written consent of the United States in
its sole discretion; or (2) increasing its interest in the DoSol Joint
Venture to 50 percent.
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
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v. Mittal Steel Company N.V.,
Defendant
Case No.
JUDGE:
DECK TYPE: Antitrust
DATE STAMP:
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. Sec. 16(b)-(h), files this Competitive
Impact Statement relating to the proposed Final Judgment submitted for
entry in this civil antitrust proceeding.
I. Nature and Purpose of the Proceeding
The United States filed a civil antitrust Complaint on August 1,
2006, seeking to obtain equitable and other relief against defendant
Mittal Steel Company N.V. (``Mittal Steel'') to prevent its proposed
acquisition of
[[Page 50093]]
Arcelor S.A. (``Arcelor''). Mittal Steel and Arcelor, including its
Canadian subsidiary Dofasco Inc. (``Dofasco'' or the ``Dofasco
Business''), are two of only a limited number of suppliers to the
portion of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains (the ``Eastern
United States'') of finely rolled tin or chrome coated steel sheets
(``Tin Mill Products''). Tin Mill Products are used in manufacturing
steel cans for packaging a wide range of food products, such as soup,
fruits, and vegetables, and non-food products, such as paints,
aerosols, and shaving cream. The Complaint alleges that the likely
effect of this acquisition would be to lessen competition substantially
in the development, manufacture and sale of Tin Mill Products in the
Eastern United States, 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 Eastern United States Tin Mill Products 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 remedy the anticompetitive effects of the
acquisition while permitting Mittal Steel to complete its acquisition
of Arcelor. Under the proposed Final Judgment, which is explained more
fully below, the defendants are required to divest certain assets
including Arcelor's Dofasco subsidiary to ThyssenKrupp AG
(``ThyssenKrupp''), a German corporation with its headquarters in
Dusseldorf, Germany, or, if defendant chooses, to another acquirer of
the divested business (``Acquirer'') acceptable to the United States in
its sole discretion. If the defendant is unable to sell the Dofasco
Business to ThyssenKrupp or an alternative acceptable buyer, then the
defendant is required to divest, at the United States's option, either
Mittal Steel's Sparrows Point, Maryland, facility (``Sparrows Point
Business'') or Mittal Steel's Weirton, West Virginia, facility
(``Weirton Business'') to an Acquirer acceptable to the United States
in its sole discretion (with the business so selected referred to as
the ``Selected Business''). The divestiture of either the Dofasco
Business or the Selected Business is designed to enable the Acquirer to
become a viable and active competitor in the Eastern United States Tin
Mill Products market.
The United States and defendant 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 Defendant and the Proposed Transaction
Mittal Steel, a Netherlands corporation, has its corporate
headquarters and principal place of business in Rotterdam, The
Netherlands, and has operations in sixteen countries, located on four
continents. As one of the largest steel producers in the world, Mittal
Steel is primarily engaged in making a variety of steel products for
all the major steel consuming sectors, including automotive, appliance,
machinery, and construction. Among its many steel product lines is Tin
Mill Products. In 2005, Mittal Steel reported total worldwide revenues
that exceeded $28 billion and total annual steel production that
exceeded 55 million tons. Mittal Steel maintains seventeen production
facilities within the United States, and produces Tin Mill Products in
Sparrows Point and Weirton. Mittal Steel operates in the United States
through its wholly-owned subsidiary Mittal Steel USA, located in
Chicago, Illinois, which markets and sells in the United States Tin
Mill Products and other products manufactured by Mittal Steel. Tin Mill
Products manufactured at Mittal Steel's U.S. tin mills are shipped
primarily to customers in the United States. In 2005, Mittal Steel sold
over 800,000 tons of Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United States.
Arcelor, a Luxembourg corporation, has its corporate headquarters
and principal place of business in the City of Luxembourg. Like Mittal
Steel, Arcelor is one of the world's largest steel producers and makes
a variety of steel products for the automotive, appliance, packaging,
and other industries. In 2005, Arcelor reported total worldwide
revenues of approximately $41.5 billion and steel production of 46
million tons. In February 2006, Arcelor acquired Dofasco, a wholly-
owned Canadian subsidiary with its principal place of business in
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. In 2005, Dofasco shipped 4.8 million tons
and had $3.9 billion in revenues. Among Arcelor's many steel product
lines is Tin Mill Products, which it makes at mills in Europe and
Brazil and at Dofasco's Hamilton mill. In 2005, Arcelor, which shipped
Tin Mill Products to the Eastern United States primarily from its
European facilities, and Dofasco, which shipped Tin Mill Products to
the Eastern United States from its Canadian facility, sold a combined
170,615 tons of Tin Mill Products in the Eastern United States.
On January 27, 2006, Mittal Steel an