TC Group L.L.C., Riverstone Holdings LLC, Carlyle/Riverstone Global Energy and Power Fund II, L.P., and Carlyle/Riverstone Global Energy and Power Fund III, L.P.; Analysis of Proposed Agreement Containing Consent Orders To Aid Public Comment, 4508-4511 [E7-1479]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 20 / Wednesday, January 31, 2007 / Notices
indicated for that notice or to the offices
of the Board of Governors. Comments
must be received not later than February
15, 2007.
A. Federal Reserve Bank of
Philadelphia (Michael E. Collins, Senior
Vice President) 100 North 6th Street,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19105-1521:
1. George W. Connell, Radnor,
Pennsylvania, to acquire voting shares
of Bryn Mawr Bank Corporation, Bryn
Mawr, Pennsylvania, and thereby
acquire Bryn Mawr Trust Company,
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.
B. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
(Andre Anderson, Vice President) 1000
Peachtree Street, N.E., Atlanta, Georgia
30309:
1. Brenda Morris Griner, to acquire
additional voting shares of First Federal
Bancorp and thereby indirectly acquire
additional voting shares of First
Southern Bank, all of Columbia,
Mississippi.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, January 26, 2007.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E7–1536 Filed 1–30–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–S
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
[File No. 061 0197]
TC Group L.L.C., Riverstone Holdings
LLC, Carlyle/Riverstone Global Energy
and Power Fund II, L.P., and Carlyle/
Riverstone Global Energy and Power
Fund III, L.P.; Analysis of Proposed
Agreement Containing Consent Orders
To Aid Public Comment
Federal Trade Commission.
Proposed Consent Agreement.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The consent agreement in this
matter settles alleged violations of
federal law prohibiting unfair or
deceptive acts or practices or unfair
methods of competition. The attached
Analysis to Aid Public Comment
describes both the allegations in the
draft complaint and the terms of the
consent order—embodied in the consent
agreement—that would settle these
allegations.
Comments must be received on
or before February 26, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are
invited to submit written comments.
Comments should refer to ‘‘TC Group, et
al., File No. 061 0197,’’ to facilitate the
organization of comments. A comment
filed in paper form should include this
reference both in the text and on the
envelope, and should be mailed or
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DATES:
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15:08 Jan 30, 2007
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delivered to the following address:
Federal Trade Commission/Office of the
Secretary, Room 135–H, 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20580. Comments
containing confidential material must be
filed in paper form, must be clearly
labeled ‘‘Confidential,’’ and must
comply with Commission Rule 4.9(c).
16 CFR 4.9(c) (2005).1 The FTC is
requesting that any comment filed in
paper form be sent by courier or
overnight service, if possible, because
U.S. postal mail in the Washington area
and at the Commission is subject to
delay due to heightened security
precautions. Comments that do not
contain any nonpublic information may
instead be filed in electronic form as
part of or as an attachment to e-mail
messages directed to the following email box: consentagreement@ftc.gov.
The FTC Act and other laws the
Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. All timely and responsive
public comments, whether filed in
paper or electronic form, will be
considered by the Commission, and will
be available to the public on the FTC
Web site, to the extent practicable, at
https://www.ftc.gov. As a matter of
discretion, the FTC makes every effort to
remove home contact information for
individuals from the public comments it
receives before placing those comments
on the FTC Web site. More information,
including routine uses permitted by the
Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC’s
privacy policy, at
https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dennis F. Johnson, Bureau of
Competition, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20580, (202) 326–
2712.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to section 6(f) of the Federal Trade
Commission Act, 38 Stat. 721, 15 U.S.C.
46(f), and § 2.34 of the Commission
Rules of Practice, 16 CFR 2.34, notice is
hereby given that the above-captioned
consent agreement containing a consent
order to cease and desist, having been
filed with and accepted, subject to final
approval, by the Commission, has been
placed on the public record for a period
of thirty (30) days. The following
Analysis to Aid Public Comment
1 The comment must be accompanined by an
explicit request for confidential treatment,
including the factual and legal basis for the request,
and must identify the specific portions of the
comment to be withheld from the public record.
The request will be granted or denied by the
Commission’s General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See
Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).
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describes the terms of the consent
agreement, and the allegations in the
complaint. An electronic copy of the
full text of the consent agreement
package can be obtained from the FTC
Home Page (for January 25, 2007), on
the World Wide Web, at https://
www.ftc.gov/os/2007/01/index.htm. A
paper copy can be obtained from the
FTC Public Reference Room, Room 130–
H, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20580, either in person
or by calling (202) 326–2222.
Public comments are invited, and may
be filed with the Commission in either
paper or electronic form. All comments
should be filed as prescribed in the
ADDRESSES section above, and must be
received on or before the date specified
in the DATES section.
Analysis of Agreement Containing
Consent Order To Aid Public Comment
The Federal Trade Commission,
subject to its final approval, has
accepted for public comment an
Agreement Containing Consent Orders
(‘‘Consent Agreement’’) with TC Group,
L.L.C. (‘‘Carlyle’’), Riverstone Holdings
LLC (‘‘Riverstone’’), Carlyle/Riverstone
Global Energy and Power Fund II, L.P.
(‘‘CR–II’’), and Carlyle/Riverstone
Global Energy and Power Fund III, L.P.
(‘‘CR–III’’). The proposed Consent
Agreement remedies the anticompetitive
effects that otherwise would be likely to
result from the acquisition described
herein.
On August 28, 2006, Kinder Morgan,
Inc. (‘‘KMI’’) announced that it had
entered into a definitive merger
agreement pursuant to which a group of
investors, including CR–III, a private
equity fund managed and controlled by
Carlyle and Riverstone, and Carlyle
Partners IV, L.P. (‘‘CP–IV’’), an affiliate
of Carlyle, would acquire all
outstanding shares of KMI for
approximately $22 billion, including the
assumption of approximately $7 billion
of debt (the ‘‘Acquisition’’).
Carlyle and Riverstone have worked
together to form, manage, and operate
several private equity funds that focus
on energy-related investments. One of
these funds is CR–III, which, through
the Acquisition, will acquire
approximately 11.3% of the equity in
KMI. In addition, CP–IV will also
acquire approximately 11.3% of the
equity in KMI. Another fund that is
jointly controlled and managed by
Carlyle and Riverstone, CR–II, holds
interests in various energy firms,
including, as relevant here, a 50%
interest in the general partner that
controls Magellan Midstream Partners,
L.P. (‘‘Magellan’’), a midstream terminal
and pipeline company that competes
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with KMI in various terminaling and
pipeline operations.
Without some form of relief, the
proposed Acquisition is likely to result
in anticompetitive effects from
combining KMI and Magellan under
Carlyle and Riverstone. KMI and
Magellan compete directly with each
other in at least eleven terminal markets
in the southeastern United States. These
markets include: Birmingham, Alabama;
Albany and Atlanta (Doraville), Georgia;
North Augusta and Spartanburg, South
Carolina; Charlotte, Greensboro, and
Selma, North Carolina; Knoxville,
Tennessee; and Roanoke and Richmond,
Virginia. In addition, KMI and Magellan
are two of only three significant
‘‘independent’’ (i.e. not owned by a
refiner) terminaling companies in the
Southeast. A reduction in competition,
particularly competition among
independent terminaling companies,
may result in higher prices of gasoline
and other light petroleum products,
reduced supply, or other
anticompetitive effects in these markets.
CR–II has representatives on
Magellan’s board and has significant
veto power over Magellan’s activities.
Carlyle and CR–III also will have the
right to appoint one director each to the
eleven-member KMI board. Carlyle and
Riverstone therefore may have the
ability to reduce competition between
the terminals owned by KMI and
Magellan through their board
representation on both competitors, by
exercising veto power at Magellan, by
exchanging competitively sensitive nonpublic information between KMI and
Magellan, and by using information
learned from one firm in connection
with their activities on the other.
The proposed Consent Agreement
effectively remedies these possible
anticompetitive effects by, among other
things, prohibiting CR–II from having
representation on any Magellan board,
prohibiting the Respondents from
influencing or attempting to influence
Magellan’s business activities, and
requiring that Respondents implement
firewalls designed to prevent the
exchange of competitively sensitive
information between Magellan and KMI.
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I. The Proposed Respondents and Other
Relevant Entities
A. Carlyle and Riverstone
Founded in 1987, Carlyle is a private
equity firm based in Washington, DC,
with more than $44.3 billion under
management. Carlyle invests in buyouts,
venture and growth capital, real estate,
and leveraged finance in Asia, Australia,
Europe, and North America, focusing on
aerospace and defense, automotive and
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transportation, consumer and retail,
energy and power, healthcare,
industrial, technology and business
services, and telecommunications and
media. Carlyle’s investors include
public and private institutional
investors and high net worth
individuals.
Founded in 2000, Riverstone
Holdings LLC is a $6 billion private
investment firm that invests solely in
the energy and power sectors.
Riverstone has partnered with Carlyle to
create a series of energy-focused
investment funds, which include CR–II
and CR–III.
Carlyle and Riverstone launched CR–
II in 2002, and in the last four years the
fund has invested more than $1 billion
in transactions in the energy and power
sector. Currently, CR–II holds interests
in more than a dozen energy firms,
including Magellan. In 2005, Carlyle
and Riverstone launched CR–III, with
more than $3.8 billion in capital. CR–III,
through the Acquisition, proposes to
acquire shares that would constitute
approximately 11.3% of KMI. CP–IV,
another fund controlled and managed
by Carlyle, also plans to acquire shares
that would constitute approximately
11.3% of KMI, so that Carlyle and
Riverstone together would hold
approximately 22.6% of the equity of
KMI.
B. KMI
KMI is one of the largest energy
transportation, storage, and distribution
companies in North America. Through
various operating affiliates, KMI owns
or operates pipelines that transport
natural gas, crude oil, petroleum
products and carbon dioxide, and
terminals that store, transfer, and handle
energy products such as gasoline and
other light petroleum products,
including terminals in the southeastern
United States. KMI holds the general
partner interest of Kinder Morgan
Energy Partners, L.P. (‘‘KMP’’), which is
one of the largest publicly traded energy
limited partnerships in the United
States.
C. Magellan
Magellan Midstream Partners, L.P., is
a publicly traded limited partnership
that is primarily engaged in the storage,
transportation, and distribution of
refined petroleum products and
ammonia. Its assets include an 8,500
mile petroleum products pipeline
system, including petroleum product
terminals serving the mid-continent
region of the United States, and other
inland petroleum products terminals
located in the southeastern United
States, mostly along the Colonial
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Pipeline. Magellan has a complex
organizational structure. CR–II holds a
50% interest in MGG Midstream
Holdings GP, LLC—the general partner
that ultimately controls Magellan—as
well as certain limited partnership
interests. Interests affiliated with
Madison Dearborn Partners (‘‘MDP’’),
another investment firm, hold the other
50% interest. CR–II and MDP have the
right to designate two representatives
each on a four-member Board of
Managers, and each has veto power over
actions taken by the Board of Managers.
CR–II and MDP also have two directors
each on the boards of the other general
partners that control Magellan.
II. Market Structure and Competitive
Effects
Relevant markets in which to analyze
the effects of the Acquisition are the
terminaling of gasoline and other light
petroleum products in eleven
metropolitan areas in the southeastern
United States, including Birmingham,
Alabama; Albany and Atlanta
(Doraville), Georgia; North Augusta and
Spartanburg, South Carolina; Charlotte,
Greensboro, and Selma, North Carolina;
Knoxville, Tennessee; and Roanoke and
Richmond, Virginia. Terminals are
essential to the efficient flow of gasoline
and other products from refineries to
retail stations and have no effective
substitutes. A terminal is the only
method of safely and economically
receiving, storing, and distributing bulk
supplies of gasoline and other refined
products in the large quantities needed
for delivery to retail stations. Large
quantities of gasoline and other light
petroleum products can be shipped
economically over long distances only
by means of pipelines or marine vessels,
not by trucks. Local deliveries to retail
stations and commercial accounts,
however, can be handled effectively
only by tank trucks. Terminals serve as
the link between pipelines that
transport products from refineries and
local modes of transportation.
Terminals typically serve limited
geographic areas. Although the size of a
terminal’s service area may vary from
one metropolitan area to another based
on the relative proximity of terminals,
traffic congestion, natural barriers, and
other factors impacting tank truck
delivery, terminals often are clustered
near each other and compete primarily
to supply a nearby metropolitan area.
The eleven local metropolitan areas in
which both KMI and Magellan own
terminals are relevant geographic
markets in which to assess the possible
effects of the Acquisition.
Each of the eleven markets already is
either moderately or highly
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31JAN1
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concentrated prior to the Acquisition,
and an acquisition that combines KMI
and Magellan through partial common
ownership or control would
significantly increase those levels of
concentration. Moreover, KMI and
Magellan are two of only three major
independent terminaling systems in the
Southeast—the third being
TransMontaigne. Independent shippers
and marketers frequently depend on
independent terminals to obtain
competitive access to certain markets
because proprietary terminals are
sometimes either not available to them
or only available on a limited basis. In
a number of the relevant markets, KMI
and Magellan are either the only
independent terminals available or two
of a small number of independent
terminals in service.
As a result, a direct combination of
KMI and Magellan would remove a
significant supplier of terminal services
in markets where customers have few
competitive alternatives. The
combination would make the exercise of
unilateral market power more likely
because many customers view KMI’s
and Magellan’s terminals as their first
and second choices, and the other
suppliers in the market are likely to be
either incapable of replacing or
unwilling to replace the competition
lost as a result of the combination.
Indeed, there is evidence that when
customers have few independent
terminal options, they can have
difficulty obtaining storage and
terminaling services and pay higher
prices for those services that are
available. Such a transaction also would
increase the likelihood of coordinated
interaction because of the small number
of competitors remaining in many of the
markets at issue and because the
transaction would remove one of the
few remaining independent participants
that may serve as an important
competitive influence.
Although the proposed transaction
will not directly merge KMI and
Magellan, it will have the effect of
combining the two companies through
partial common ownership. Carlyle and
Riverstone, through their funds, will
acquire a combined 22.6% interest in
KMI, in addition to their existing 50%
interest in the general partner
controlling Magellan. After the
transaction, it is likely that Carlyle and
Riverstone would reduce competition
between KMI and Magellan through
their board representation on both
competitors, by exercising veto power at
Magellan, by exchanging competitively
sensitive non-public information
between KMI and Magellan, and by
using information learned from one firm
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in connection with their activities on
the other.
III. Entry
Entry into the market for terminaling
of gasoline and other light petroleum
products in each of the identified
markets in the southeastern United
States is unlikely to deter or counteract
the likely anticompetitive effects. Entry
is difficult and time-consuming and
potential entrants would face
substantial barriers in the form of permit
requirements and land use restrictions.
IV. Terms of the Proposed Agreement
Containing Consent Orders
The proposed Consent Agreement
effectively remedies the Acquisition’s
alleged anticompetitive effects by,
among other things, prohibiting
representatives of Carlyle or Riverstone
from serving on any of the Magellan
boards, prohibiting Carlyle and
Riverstone from exerting control or
influence over Magellan as long as they
hold an interest in or can influence
KMI, and requiring Respondents to set
firewalls to prevent the exchange of
competitively sensitive non-public
information. The purpose of the Consent
Agreement is to ensure that KMI and
Magellan are operated independently of,
and in competition with, each other,
and to remedy the lessening of
competition resulting from the
Acquisition as alleged in the
Commission’s Complaint.
A. Proposed Respondents’ Current and
Future Magellan Investments Must Be
Passive
In order to achieve the purposes of the
Consent Agreement, Paragraph II.A. of
the Commission’s proposed Decision
and Order (‘‘Order’’) prohibits the
proposed Respondents from
consummating the Acquisition unless
and until (1) they have removed all of
their appointed or elected agents from
all Magellan boards, and (2) they have
agreed with MDP that they will remove
such directors and will no longer have
the right to have any representation on
any Magellan board. Paragraph II.B of
the proposed Order provides that as
long as either Carlyle, Riverstone, or
CR–III holds any interest in KMI, has
the ability or right to elect or appoint a
KMI director, or has the right to obtain
non-public information about KMI, the
proposed Respondents shall not: (1)
Elect or appoint a director to any
Magellan board, (2) have a director on
any Magellan board, (3) influence or
attempt to influence, directly or
indirectly, Magellan (with exceptions
that would allow Respondents to
monitor certain actions of their partner
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MDP in Magellan entities that are not
directly involved in the operation or
management of the entities engaged in
Magellan’s terminaling business), or (4)
receive or attempt to receive non-public
information about Magellan. CR–II has
agreed with MDP to modify their
partnership agreement to effectuate the
removal of CR–II’s representatives on
the Magellan boards, to ensure that CR–
II does not have the ability through the
general partnership agreement to elect
or appoint a director to any Magellan
board, and to otherwise comply with the
terms of the Order.
Paragraph II.B of the Order further
provides that as long as either Carlyle,
Riverstone, or CR–III holds any interest
in KMI, has the ability or right to elect
or appoint a KMI director, or has the
right to obtain non-public information
about KMI, Carlyle, Riverstone, and CR–
II shall: (1) Not discuss with, or provide,
disclose or otherwise make available to
KMI or any KMI director any non-public
information relating to Magellan, (2)
prohibit any Magellan director from
discussing with, or providing,
disclosing or otherwise making
available to KMI or any KMI director,
directly or indirectly, any non-public
information relating to Magellan; and (3)
institute procedures and requirements
throughout the various entities of the
proposed Respondents to ensure that
non-public information is protected as
required by the proposed Order. This
prohibition, however, would not
prevent either David M. Leuschen or
Pierre F. Lapeyre, Jr., who are principals
with Riverstone, from serving as a
director on any KMI board. Although
these individuals have served on
Magellan boards in the past, they are not
currently directors of Magellan and have
not been Magellan directors for several
years. As a result, any direct non-public
information they might have about
Magellan from serving on the board in
the past is out of date and would be
competitively insignificant. In addition,
such individuals still are prohibited
from divulging such information to KMI
or other KMI directors.
B. KMI Information and Investment
Limitations
The Order also limits the flow of nonpublic KMI information to Magellan and
places restrictions on the proposed
Respondents’ additional investments in
KMI. Specifically, paragraph II.C. of the
proposed Order provides that Carlyle,
Riverstone, and CR–III shall: (1) Not
discuss with, or provide, disclose or
otherwise make available to, Magellan,
any non-public information relating to
KMI; (2) prohibit all KMI directors from
discussing with, or providing,
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disclosing or otherwise making
available to Magellan, any non-public
information relating to KMI; and (3)
institute procedures and requirements
throughout the various entities of the
proposed respondents to ensure that
non-public information is protected as
required by the proposed Order.
Paragraph II.D. provides that, for the
time period that Carlyle or Riverstone
holds, directly or indirectly, any interest
in Magellan, Carlyle and Riverstone
shall not, without providing thirty days
advance written notification, acquire
any stock, share capital, equity or other
interest in KMI other than the interest
acquired through the Acquisition. This
prior notice gives the Commission the
opportunity to analyze additional
purchases of KMI by the proposed
Respondents that may change the
economic incentives of the proposed
Respondents. Advance notice is not
required in certain limited situations
where investments are effectively
passive or where the Respondents’
relative ownership interests would not
change. In such situations, the
Respondents must provide notification
under Paragraph II.E. within ten days
after such acquisitions.
mstockstill on PROD1PC62 with NOTICES
C. Implementation Monitor
To assure that the firewall provisions
of Paragraphs II.B. and II.C. of the Order
are properly implemented and enforced,
the Order requires an Implementation
Monitor to monitor these obligations.
Pursuant to Paragraph IV, Mr. Kevin
Sudy, an Associate Director at Navigant
Consulting, will be appointed as the
Implementation Monitor and shall serve
until such time as he reports to the
Commission that the parties have
established adequate procedures under
the terms of the proposed Order and the
Commission notifies the parties that
such procedures are acceptable. The
Commission reserves the right
subsequently to reinstate the monitor as
necessary and appropriate to ensure
compliance by Respondents with the
terms of the proposed Order. The
Implementation Monitor is important to
assuring compliance with the firewall
provisions of the Order.
D. Notice Provisions
Paragraph II.E. requires the proposed
Respondents to provide the Commission
with written notice within ten days if
they (1) no longer hold any interest in
Magellan, other than a wholly passive
investment, (2) no longer hold any
interest in Magellan, (3) no longer hold
any interest in KMI or no longer have
the ability to influence or have
representation at KMI, (4) acquire
interest in interest in KMI through a
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15:08 Jan 30, 2007
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passive investment fund, or (5) acquire
any interest in Magellan.
Paragraph III of the proposed Order
requires the proposed Respondents to
send notice of the Order, Complaint,
and Analysis to Aid Public Comment in
this matter to certain persons likely to
have competitively sensitive
information subject to this Order or
likely to be impacted by the firewall
provisions of the Order, including
persons on the Magellan and KMI
Boards of Directors, and other persons
involved in the Acquisition of KMI.
Paragraph V.A. requires periodic
reports until the Implementation
Monitor and the Commission are
satisfied that the firewalls are properly
established and adequately protect the
flow of non-public information as
required by the Order. Paragraph V.B.
requires annual reports until the Order
terminates in ten years.
Paragraph VI requires the proposed
Respondents to give the Commission
prior notice of certain events that may
change their obligations under the
Order.
E. Additional Provisions
Paragraph VII allows the Commission
to have access to personnel and
documents at the offices of the proposed
Respondents with proper notice for
purposes of determining or securing
compliance with this Order.
Paragraph VIII provides that the Order
shall terminate after ten years.
V. The Order to Maintain Assets
The Commission has also issued an
Order to Maintain Assets in this
proceeding, which effectively requires
the proposed Respondents to adhere to
the terms of the proposed Order during
the time period leading up to their
proposed Acquisition of equity interests
in KMI.
VI. Opportunity for Public Comment
The proposed Consent Agreement has
been placed on the public record for
thirty (30) days for receipt of comments
by interested persons. The Commission
has also issued its Complaint in this
matter. Comments received during this
comment period will become part of the
public record. After thirty days, the
Commission will again review the
proposed Consent Agreement and the
comments received and will decide
whether it should withdraw from the
Agreement or make final the
Agreement’s proposed Order.
By accepting the proposed Consent
Agreement subject to final approval, the
Commission anticipates that the
competitive problems alleged in the
Complaint will be resolved. The
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4511
purpose of this analysis is to invite
public comment on the proposed Order
to aid the Commission in its
determination of whether it should
make final the proposed Order
contained in the Agreement. This
analysis is not intended to constitute an
official interpretation of the proposed
Order, nor is it intended to modify the
terms of the proposed Order in any way.
By direction of the Commission,
Commissioner Leibowitz dissenting and
Commissioner Rosch recused.
Donald S. Clark,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7–1479 Filed 1–30–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
[Document Identifier: OS–0990–0220; 60Day Notice]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comment Request
Office of the Secretary, HHS.
In compliance with the requirement
of section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
Office of the Secretary (OS), Department
of Health and Human Services, is
publishing the following summary of a
proposed collection for public
comment. Interested persons are invited
to send comments regarding this burden
estimate or any other aspect of this
collection of information, including any
of the following subjects: (1) The
necessity and utility of the proposed
information collection for the proper
performance of the agency’s functions;
(2) the accuracy of the estimated
burden; (3) ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and (4) the use of
automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology to
minimize the information collection
burden.
Type of Information Collection
Request: Extension.
Title of Information Collection:
Voluntary Academic and Industry
Partner Surveys to Implement Executive
Order 12862 and 5 U.S.C. 305 for the
Dept. of Health and Human Services.
Form/OMB No.: 0990–0220.
Use: The Office of Acquisition
Management Policy (OAMP) under the
Assistant Secretary for Administration
and Management (ASAM) and the
Office of Grants (OG) under the
Assistant Secretary for Resources and
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\31JAN1.SGM
31JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 20 (Wednesday, January 31, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 4508-4511]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-1479]
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FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
[File No. 061 0197]
TC Group L.L.C., Riverstone Holdings LLC, Carlyle/Riverstone
Global Energy and Power Fund II, L.P., and Carlyle/Riverstone Global
Energy and Power Fund III, L.P.; Analysis of Proposed Agreement
Containing Consent Orders To Aid Public Comment
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
ACTION: Proposed Consent Agreement.
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SUMMARY: The consent agreement in this matter settles alleged
violations of federal law prohibiting unfair or deceptive acts or
practices or unfair methods of competition. The attached Analysis to
Aid Public Comment describes both the allegations in the draft
complaint and the terms of the consent order--embodied in the consent
agreement--that would settle these allegations.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before February 26, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments.
Comments should refer to ``TC Group, et al., File No. 061 0197,'' to
facilitate the organization of comments. A comment filed in paper form
should include this reference both in the text and on the envelope, and
should be mailed or delivered to the following address: Federal Trade
Commission/Office of the Secretary, Room 135-H, 600 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20580. Comments containing confidential
material must be filed in paper form, must be clearly labeled
``Confidential,'' and must comply with Commission Rule 4.9(c). 16 CFR
4.9(c) (2005).\1\ The FTC is requesting that any comment filed in paper
form be sent by courier or overnight service, if possible, because U.S.
postal mail in the Washington area and at the Commission is subject to
delay due to heightened security precautions. Comments that do not
contain any nonpublic information may instead be filed in electronic
form as part of or as an attachment to e-mail messages directed to the
following e-mail box: consentagreement@ftc.gov.
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\1\ The comment must be accompanined by an explicit request for
confidential treatment, including the factual and legal basis for
the request, and must identify the specific portions of the comment
to be withheld from the public record. The request will be granted
or denied by the Commission's General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c),
16 CFR 4.9(c).
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The FTC Act and other laws the Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. All timely and responsive public comments, whether filed
in paper or electronic form, will be considered by the Commission, and
will be available to the public on the FTC Web site, to the extent
practicable, at https://www.ftc.gov. As a matter of discretion, the FTC
makes every effort to remove home contact information for individuals
from the public comments it receives before placing those comments on
the FTC Web site. More information, including routine uses permitted by
the Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC's privacy policy, at https://
www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dennis F. Johnson, Bureau of
Competition, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20580, (202)
326-2712.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant to section 6(f) of the Federal
Trade Commission Act, 38 Stat. 721, 15 U.S.C. 46(f), and Sec. 2.34 of
the Commission Rules of Practice, 16 CFR 2.34, notice is hereby given
that the above-captioned consent agreement containing a consent order
to cease and desist, having been filed with and accepted, subject to
final approval, by the Commission, has been placed on the public record
for a period of thirty (30) days. The following Analysis to Aid Public
Comment describes the terms of the consent agreement, and the
allegations in the complaint. An electronic copy of the full text of
the consent agreement package can be obtained from the FTC Home Page
(for January 25, 2007), on the World Wide Web, at https://www.ftc.gov/
os/2007/01/index.htm. A paper copy can be obtained from the FTC Public
Reference Room, Room 130-H, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20580, either in person or by calling (202) 326-2222.
Public comments are invited, and may be filed with the Commission
in either paper or electronic form. All comments should be filed as
prescribed in the ADDRESSES section above, and must be received on or
before the date specified in the DATES section.
Analysis of Agreement Containing Consent Order To Aid Public Comment
The Federal Trade Commission, subject to its final approval, has
accepted for public comment an Agreement Containing Consent Orders
(``Consent Agreement'') with TC Group, L.L.C. (``Carlyle''), Riverstone
Holdings LLC (``Riverstone''), Carlyle/Riverstone Global Energy and
Power Fund II, L.P. (``CR-II''), and Carlyle/Riverstone Global Energy
and Power Fund III, L.P. (``CR-III''). The proposed Consent Agreement
remedies the anticompetitive effects that otherwise would be likely to
result from the acquisition described herein.
On August 28, 2006, Kinder Morgan, Inc. (``KMI'') announced that it
had entered into a definitive merger agreement pursuant to which a
group of investors, including CR-III, a private equity fund managed and
controlled by Carlyle and Riverstone, and Carlyle Partners IV, L.P.
(``CP-IV''), an affiliate of Carlyle, would acquire all outstanding
shares of KMI for approximately $22 billion, including the assumption
of approximately $7 billion of debt (the ``Acquisition'').
Carlyle and Riverstone have worked together to form, manage, and
operate several private equity funds that focus on energy-related
investments. One of these funds is CR-III, which, through the
Acquisition, will acquire approximately 11.3% of the equity in KMI. In
addition, CP-IV will also acquire approximately 11.3% of the equity in
KMI. Another fund that is jointly controlled and managed by Carlyle and
Riverstone, CR-II, holds interests in various energy firms, including,
as relevant here, a 50% interest in the general partner that controls
Magellan Midstream Partners, L.P. (``Magellan''), a midstream terminal
and pipeline company that competes
[[Page 4509]]
with KMI in various terminaling and pipeline operations.
Without some form of relief, the proposed Acquisition is likely to
result in anticompetitive effects from combining KMI and Magellan under
Carlyle and Riverstone. KMI and Magellan compete directly with each
other in at least eleven terminal markets in the southeastern United
States. These markets include: Birmingham, Alabama; Albany and Atlanta
(Doraville), Georgia; North Augusta and Spartanburg, South Carolina;
Charlotte, Greensboro, and Selma, North Carolina; Knoxville, Tennessee;
and Roanoke and Richmond, Virginia. In addition, KMI and Magellan are
two of only three significant ``independent'' (i.e. not owned by a
refiner) terminaling companies in the Southeast. A reduction in
competition, particularly competition among independent terminaling
companies, may result in higher prices of gasoline and other light
petroleum products, reduced supply, or other anticompetitive effects in
these markets.
CR-II has representatives on Magellan's board and has significant
veto power over Magellan's activities. Carlyle and CR-III also will
have the right to appoint one director each to the eleven-member KMI
board. Carlyle and Riverstone therefore may have the ability to reduce
competition between the terminals owned by KMI and Magellan through
their board representation on both competitors, by exercising veto
power at Magellan, by exchanging competitively sensitive non-public
information between KMI and Magellan, and by using information learned
from one firm in connection with their activities on the other.
The proposed Consent Agreement effectively remedies these possible
anticompetitive effects by, among other things, prohibiting CR-II from
having representation on any Magellan board, prohibiting the
Respondents from influencing or attempting to influence Magellan's
business activities, and requiring that Respondents implement firewalls
designed to prevent the exchange of competitively sensitive information
between Magellan and KMI.
I. The Proposed Respondents and Other Relevant Entities
A. Carlyle and Riverstone
Founded in 1987, Carlyle is a private equity firm based in
Washington, DC, with more than $44.3 billion under management. Carlyle
invests in buyouts, venture and growth capital, real estate, and
leveraged finance in Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America,
focusing on aerospace and defense, automotive and transportation,
consumer and retail, energy and power, healthcare, industrial,
technology and business services, and telecommunications and media.
Carlyle's investors include public and private institutional investors
and high net worth individuals.
Founded in 2000, Riverstone Holdings LLC is a $6 billion private
investment firm that invests solely in the energy and power sectors.
Riverstone has partnered with Carlyle to create a series of energy-
focused investment funds, which include CR-II and CR-III.
Carlyle and Riverstone launched CR-II in 2002, and in the last four
years the fund has invested more than $1 billion in transactions in the
energy and power sector. Currently, CR-II holds interests in more than
a dozen energy firms, including Magellan. In 2005, Carlyle and
Riverstone launched CR-III, with more than $3.8 billion in capital. CR-
III, through the Acquisition, proposes to acquire shares that would
constitute approximately 11.3% of KMI. CP-IV, another fund controlled
and managed by Carlyle, also plans to acquire shares that would
constitute approximately 11.3% of KMI, so that Carlyle and Riverstone
together would hold approximately 22.6% of the equity of KMI.
B. KMI
KMI is one of the largest energy transportation, storage, and
distribution companies in North America. Through various operating
affiliates, KMI owns or operates pipelines that transport natural gas,
crude oil, petroleum products and carbon dioxide, and terminals that
store, transfer, and handle energy products such as gasoline and other
light petroleum products, including terminals in the southeastern
United States. KMI holds the general partner interest of Kinder Morgan
Energy Partners, L.P. (``KMP''), which is one of the largest publicly
traded energy limited partnerships in the United States.
C. Magellan
Magellan Midstream Partners, L.P., is a publicly traded limited
partnership that is primarily engaged in the storage, transportation,
and distribution of refined petroleum products and ammonia. Its assets
include an 8,500 mile petroleum products pipeline system, including
petroleum product terminals serving the mid-continent region of the
United States, and other inland petroleum products terminals located in
the southeastern United States, mostly along the Colonial Pipeline.
Magellan has a complex organizational structure. CR-II holds a 50%
interest in MGG Midstream Holdings GP, LLC--the general partner that
ultimately controls Magellan--as well as certain limited partnership
interests. Interests affiliated with Madison Dearborn Partners
(``MDP''), another investment firm, hold the other 50% interest. CR-II
and MDP have the right to designate two representatives each on a four-
member Board of Managers, and each has veto power over actions taken by
the Board of Managers. CR-II and MDP also have two directors each on
the boards of the other general partners that control Magellan.
II. Market Structure and Competitive Effects
Relevant markets in which to analyze the effects of the Acquisition
are the terminaling of gasoline and other light petroleum products in
eleven metropolitan areas in the southeastern United States, including
Birmingham, Alabama; Albany and Atlanta (Doraville), Georgia; North
Augusta and Spartanburg, South Carolina; Charlotte, Greensboro, and
Selma, North Carolina; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Roanoke and Richmond,
Virginia. Terminals are essential to the efficient flow of gasoline and
other products from refineries to retail stations and have no effective
substitutes. A terminal is the only method of safely and economically
receiving, storing, and distributing bulk supplies of gasoline and
other refined products in the large quantities needed for delivery to
retail stations. Large quantities of gasoline and other light petroleum
products can be shipped economically over long distances only by means
of pipelines or marine vessels, not by trucks. Local deliveries to
retail stations and commercial accounts, however, can be handled
effectively only by tank trucks. Terminals serve as the link between
pipelines that transport products from refineries and local modes of
transportation.
Terminals typically serve limited geographic areas. Although the
size of a terminal's service area may vary from one metropolitan area
to another based on the relative proximity of terminals, traffic
congestion, natural barriers, and other factors impacting tank truck
delivery, terminals often are clustered near each other and compete
primarily to supply a nearby metropolitan area. The eleven local
metropolitan areas in which both KMI and Magellan own terminals are
relevant geographic markets in which to assess the possible effects of
the Acquisition.
Each of the eleven markets already is either moderately or highly
[[Page 4510]]
concentrated prior to the Acquisition, and an acquisition that combines
KMI and Magellan through partial common ownership or control would
significantly increase those levels of concentration. Moreover, KMI and
Magellan are two of only three major independent terminaling systems in
the Southeast--the third being TransMontaigne. Independent shippers and
marketers frequently depend on independent terminals to obtain
competitive access to certain markets because proprietary terminals are
sometimes either not available to them or only available on a limited
basis. In a number of the relevant markets, KMI and Magellan are either
the only independent terminals available or two of a small number of
independent terminals in service.
As a result, a direct combination of KMI and Magellan would remove
a significant supplier of terminal services in markets where customers
have few competitive alternatives. The combination would make the
exercise of unilateral market power more likely because many customers
view KMI's and Magellan's terminals as their first and second choices,
and the other suppliers in the market are likely to be either incapable
of replacing or unwilling to replace the competition lost as a result
of the combination. Indeed, there is evidence that when customers have
few independent terminal options, they can have difficulty obtaining
storage and terminaling services and pay higher prices for those
services that are available. Such a transaction also would increase the
likelihood of coordinated interaction because of the small number of
competitors remaining in many of the markets at issue and because the
transaction would remove one of the few remaining independent
participants that may serve as an important competitive influence.
Although the proposed transaction will not directly merge KMI and
Magellan, it will have the effect of combining the two companies
through partial common ownership. Carlyle and Riverstone, through their
funds, will acquire a combined 22.6% interest in KMI, in addition to
their existing 50% interest in the general partner controlling
Magellan. After the transaction, it is likely that Carlyle and
Riverstone would reduce competition between KMI and Magellan through
their board representation on both competitors, by exercising veto
power at Magellan, by exchanging competitively sensitive non-public
information between KMI and Magellan, and by using information learned
from one firm in connection with their activities on the other.
III. Entry
Entry into the market for terminaling of gasoline and other light
petroleum products in each of the identified markets in the
southeastern United States is unlikely to deter or counteract the
likely anticompetitive effects. Entry is difficult and time-consuming
and potential entrants would face substantial barriers in the form of
permit requirements and land use restrictions.
IV. Terms of the Proposed Agreement Containing Consent Orders
The proposed Consent Agreement effectively remedies the
Acquisition's alleged anticompetitive effects by, among other things,
prohibiting representatives of Carlyle or Riverstone from serving on
any of the Magellan boards, prohibiting Carlyle and Riverstone from
exerting control or influence over Magellan as long as they hold an
interest in or can influence KMI, and requiring Respondents to set
firewalls to prevent the exchange of competitively sensitive non-public
information. The purpose of the Consent Agreement is to ensure that KMI
and Magellan are operated independently of, and in competition with,
each other, and to remedy the lessening of competition resulting from
the Acquisition as alleged in the Commission's Complaint.
A. Proposed Respondents' Current and Future Magellan Investments Must
Be Passive
In order to achieve the purposes of the Consent Agreement,
Paragraph II.A. of the Commission's proposed Decision and Order
(``Order'') prohibits the proposed Respondents from consummating the
Acquisition unless and until (1) they have removed all of their
appointed or elected agents from all Magellan boards, and (2) they have
agreed with MDP that they will remove such directors and will no longer
have the right to have any representation on any Magellan board.
Paragraph II.B of the proposed Order provides that as long as either
Carlyle, Riverstone, or CR-III holds any interest in KMI, has the
ability or right to elect or appoint a KMI director, or has the right
to obtain non-public information about KMI, the proposed Respondents
shall not: (1) Elect or appoint a director to any Magellan board, (2)
have a director on any Magellan board, (3) influence or attempt to
influence, directly or indirectly, Magellan (with exceptions that would
allow Respondents to monitor certain actions of their partner MDP in
Magellan entities that are not directly involved in the operation or
management of the entities engaged in Magellan's terminaling business),
or (4) receive or attempt to receive non-public information about
Magellan. CR-II has agreed with MDP to modify their partnership
agreement to effectuate the removal of CR-II's representatives on the
Magellan boards, to ensure that CR-II does not have the ability through
the general partnership agreement to elect or appoint a director to any
Magellan board, and to otherwise comply with the terms of the Order.
Paragraph II.B of the Order further provides that as long as either
Carlyle, Riverstone, or CR-III holds any interest in KMI, has the
ability or right to elect or appoint a KMI director, or has the right
to obtain non-public information about KMI, Carlyle, Riverstone, and
CR-II shall: (1) Not discuss with, or provide, disclose or otherwise
make available to KMI or any KMI director any non-public information
relating to Magellan, (2) prohibit any Magellan director from
discussing with, or providing, disclosing or otherwise making available
to KMI or any KMI director, directly or indirectly, any non-public
information relating to Magellan; and (3) institute procedures and
requirements throughout the various entities of the proposed
Respondents to ensure that non-public information is protected as
required by the proposed Order. This prohibition, however, would not
prevent either David M. Leuschen or Pierre F. Lapeyre, Jr., who are
principals with Riverstone, from serving as a director on any KMI
board. Although these individuals have served on Magellan boards in the
past, they are not currently directors of Magellan and have not been
Magellan directors for several years. As a result, any direct non-
public information they might have about Magellan from serving on the
board in the past is out of date and would be competitively
insignificant. In addition, such individuals still are prohibited from
divulging such information to KMI or other KMI directors.
B. KMI Information and Investment Limitations
The Order also limits the flow of non-public KMI information to
Magellan and places restrictions on the proposed Respondents'
additional investments in KMI. Specifically, paragraph II.C. of the
proposed Order provides that Carlyle, Riverstone, and CR-III shall: (1)
Not discuss with, or provide, disclose or otherwise make available to,
Magellan, any non-public information relating to KMI; (2) prohibit all
KMI directors from discussing with, or providing,
[[Page 4511]]
disclosing or otherwise making available to Magellan, any non-public
information relating to KMI; and (3) institute procedures and
requirements throughout the various entities of the proposed
respondents to ensure that non-public information is protected as
required by the proposed Order.
Paragraph II.D. provides that, for the time period that Carlyle or
Riverstone holds, directly or indirectly, any interest in Magellan,
Carlyle and Riverstone shall not, without providing thirty days advance
written notification, acquire any stock, share capital, equity or other
interest in KMI other than the interest acquired through the
Acquisition. This prior notice gives the Commission the opportunity to
analyze additional purchases of KMI by the proposed Respondents that
may change the economic incentives of the proposed Respondents. Advance
notice is not required in certain limited situations where investments
are effectively passive or where the Respondents' relative ownership
interests would not change. In such situations, the Respondents must
provide notification under Paragraph II.E. within ten days after such
acquisitions.
C. Implementation Monitor
To assure that the firewall provisions of Paragraphs II.B. and
II.C. of the Order are properly implemented and enforced, the Order
requires an Implementation Monitor to monitor these obligations.
Pursuant to Paragraph IV, Mr. Kevin Sudy, an Associate Director at
Navigant Consulting, will be appointed as the Implementation Monitor
and shall serve until such time as he reports to the Commission that
the parties have established adequate procedures under the terms of the
proposed Order and the Commission notifies the parties that such
procedures are acceptable. The Commission reserves the right
subsequently to reinstate the monitor as necessary and appropriate to
ensure compliance by Respondents with the terms of the proposed Order.
The Implementation Monitor is important to assuring compliance with the
firewall provisions of the Order.
D. Notice Provisions
Paragraph II.E. requires the proposed Respondents to provide the
Commission with written notice within ten days if they (1) no longer
hold any interest in Magellan, other than a wholly passive investment,
(2) no longer hold any interest in Magellan, (3) no longer hold any
interest in KMI or no longer have the ability to influence or have
representation at KMI, (4) acquire interest in interest in KMI through
a passive investment fund, or (5) acquire any interest in Magellan.
Paragraph III of the proposed Order requires the proposed
Respondents to send notice of the Order, Complaint, and Analysis to Aid
Public Comment in this matter to certain persons likely to have
competitively sensitive information subject to this Order or likely to
be impacted by the firewall provisions of the Order, including persons
on the Magellan and KMI Boards of Directors, and other persons involved
in the Acquisition of KMI.
Paragraph V.A. requires periodic reports until the Implementation
Monitor and the Commission are satisfied that the firewalls are
properly established and adequately protect the flow of non-public
information as required by the Order. Paragraph V.B. requires annual
reports until the Order terminates in ten years.
Paragraph VI requires the proposed Respondents to give the
Commission prior notice of certain events that may change their
obligations under the Order.
E. Additional Provisions
Paragraph VII allows the Commission to have access to personnel and
documents at the offices of the proposed Respondents with proper notice
for purposes of determining or securing compliance with this Order.
Paragraph VIII provides that the Order shall terminate after ten
years.
V. The Order to Maintain Assets
The Commission has also issued an Order to Maintain Assets in this
proceeding, which effectively requires the proposed Respondents to
adhere to the terms of the proposed Order during the time period
leading up to their proposed Acquisition of equity interests in KMI.
VI. Opportunity for Public Comment
The proposed Consent Agreement has been placed on the public record
for thirty (30) days for receipt of comments by interested persons. The
Commission has also issued its Complaint in this matter. Comments
received during this comment period will become part of the public
record. After thirty days, the Commission will again review the
proposed Consent Agreement and the comments received and will decide
whether it should withdraw from the Agreement or make final the
Agreement's proposed Order.
By accepting the proposed Consent Agreement subject to final
approval, the Commission anticipates that the competitive problems
alleged in the Complaint will be resolved. The purpose of this analysis
is to invite public comment on the proposed Order to aid the Commission
in its determination of whether it should make final the proposed Order
contained in the Agreement. This analysis is not intended to constitute
an official interpretation of the proposed Order, nor is it intended to
modify the terms of the proposed Order in any way.
By direction of the Commission, Commissioner Leibowitz
dissenting and Commissioner Rosch recused.
Donald S. Clark,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7-1479 Filed 1-30-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750-01-P