United States v. Cookson Group PLC, et. al.; Proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement, 14489-14499 [E8-5129]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 53 / Tuesday, March 18, 2008 / Notices
human health and the environment.
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[FR Doc. E8–5380 Filed 3–17–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–15–P
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Notice of Lodging of Settlement
Agreement Under the Comprehensive
Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act
(CERCLA)
Notice is hereby given that on
February 22, 2008, a proposed
Settlement Agreement was filed with
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the United States Bankruptcy Court for
the Southern District of Texas in In re
ASARCO LLC, et al., No. 05–21207
(Bankr. S.D. Tex.). The Settlement
Agreement addresses the Barker
Hughesville (Block P) Site in Cascade
and Judith Basin Counties, Montana.
Under the proposed settlement, the
United States will have an allowed
general unsecured claim of $1 million
and the State of Montana will have an
allowed general unsecured claim of $7.1
million.
For thirty (30) days after the date of
this publication, the Department of
Justice will receive comments relating to
the Settlement Agreement. Comments
should be addressed to the Assistant
Attorney General, Environment and
Natural Resources Division, and either
e-mailed to pubcommentees.enrd@usdoj.gov or mailed to
Environmental Enforcement Section,
U.S. Department of Justice, P.O. Box.
7611, Washington, DC 20044–7611. In
either case, comments should refer to In
re Asarco LLC, No. 05–21207 (Bankr.
S.D. Tex.), D.J. Ref. No. 90–11–3–08633.
Commenters may request an
opportunity for a public meeting in the
affected area, in accordance with
Section 7003(d) of RCRA, 42 U.S.C.
6973(d).
The proposed Settlement Agreement
may be examined at the office of the
United States Attorney for the Southern
District of Texas, 800 North Shoreline
Blvd, #500, Corpus Christi, TX 78476–
2001, and at the Region 7 office of the
United States Environmental Protection
Agency, 901 North Fifth Street, Kansas
City, KS 66101. During the comment
period, the proposed Settlement
Agreement may also be examined on the
following Department of Justice website:
https://www.usdoj.gov/enrd/
Consent_Decrees.html. A copy of the
proposed Settlement Agreement may
also be obtained by mail from the
Department of Justice 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
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in that amount to the Consent Decree
Library at the stated address.
Robert E. Maher, Jr.,
Assistant Section Chief, Environmental
Enforcement Section, Environment and
Natural Resources Division.
[FR Doc. E8–5350 Filed 3–17–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States v. Cookson Group PLC,
et. al.; 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 proposed
Final Judgment and Competitive Impact
Statement have been filed with the
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia in United States v.
Cookson Group plc, et. al., Civil Action
No. 1:08–cv–00389. On March 4, 2008,
the United States filed a Complaint to
obtain equitable and other relief against
defendants Cookson Group plc and
Cookson America Inc. (‘‘Cookson’’), and
Foseco plc and Foseco Metallurgical
Inc. (‘‘Foseco’’) to prevent Cookson’s
proposed acquisition of Foseco. The
Complaint alleges that Cookson’s
acquisition of Foseco’s United States
carbon-bonded ceramic refractory
(‘‘CBC’’) business would substantially
lessen competition in the United States
in the development, manufacture, and
sale of certain CBCs, in violation of
section 7 of the Clayton Act, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. 18. The proposed
Final Judgment, filed on March 4, 2008,
requires defendants to divest Foseco’s
entire United States CBC business,
including its plant in Saybrook, Ohio
and related assets.
Copies of the Complaint, proposed
Final Judgment, and Competitive Impact
Statement are available for inspection at
the Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, Antitrust Documents Group,
325 7th Street, NW., Room 215,
Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202–
514–2481), on the Department of
Justice’s Web site at https://
www.usdoj.gov/atr, and at the Office of
the Clerk of the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia,
Washington, DC. Copies of these
materials may be obtained from the
Antitrust Division upon request and
payment of a copying fee set by
Department of Justice regulations.
Public comment is invited within 60
days of the date of this notice. Such
comments, and Responses thereto, will
be published in the Federal Register
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and filed with the Court. Comments
should be directed to Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section, Antitrust
Division, U.S. Department of Justice,
1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000,
Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202–
307–0924).
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations, Antitrust Division.
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
United States of America, Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, 1401 H
Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington,
DC 20530, Plaintiff, v. Cookson Group,
PLC, 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A
2AE, England; Cookson America, Inc., I
Cookson Place, Providence, RI 02903–
3248; FOSECO PLC, Coleshill Road,
Fazeley, Tamworth, Staffordshire B78
3TL, England; and FOSECO
Metallurgical Inc., 20200 Sheldon Road,
Cleveland, OH 44142, Defendants; Civil
Action No. 1:08–cv–00389; Judge:
Urbina, Ricardo M.; Deck Type:
Antitrust; Date Stamp: March 4, 2008
Complaint
The United States of America, acting
under the direction of the Attorney
General of the United States, brings this
civil antitrust action to enjoin the
proposed acquisition by Cookson Group
plc of Foseco plc and to obtain equitable
and other relief. The United States
complains and alleges as follows:
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I. Nature of the Action
1. On October 11, 2007, Cookson and
Foseco announced that they had
reached agreement on the terms of a
recommended cash offer by Cookson for
the entire issued and to-be-issued share
capital of Foseco in a transaction valued
at approximately $1 billion.
2. Cookson and Foseco both
manufacture and sell isostatically
pressed carbon bonded ceramics
products (‘‘CBCs’’), which are used to
control the flow and enhance the quality
of steel produced in the continuous
casting steelmaking process. Cookson’s
proposed acquisition of Foseco would
combine two of only three North
American manufacturers of certain
CBCs.
3. The United States brings this action
to enjoin Cookson’s proposed
acquisition of Foseco because it would
substantially lessen competition in the
markets for certain CBCs in violation of
section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
18.
II. Parties to the Proposed Acquisition
4. Cookson Group plc (‘‘Cookson’’), a
United Kingdom corporation with its
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headquarters in London, England, is a
manufacturer and processor of ceramics,
electronics, and precious metals.
Cookson’s total 2006 worldwide
revenues were approximately $3.3
billion, and its total 2006 U.S. revenues
were about $356 million. Cookson
America Inc., a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Cookson Group plc, is a
Delaware corporation with its
headquarters in Providence, Rhode
Island. Cookson, through its
subsidiaries, manufactures CBCs in the
United States and Mexico and
distributes them throughout the United
States. In 2006, Cookson’s U.S. CBC
revenues were about $75 million.
5. Foseco plc, a United Kingdom
corporation with its headquarters in
Staffordshire, England, manufactures
refractories and related products for
sale, and offers services worldwide to
the steel and foundry industries. Its total
2006 worldwide revenues were
approximately $817 million, and its
total 2006 U.S. revenues were about
$110 million. Foseco Metallurgical Inc.,
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Foseco
plc, is a Delaware corporation with its
headquarters in Cleveland, Ohio
(together with Foseco plc, ‘‘Foseco’’).
Foseco manufactures CBCs in the
United States and distributes them
throughout the United States. In 2006,
Foseco’s U.S. CBC revenues were about
$4 million.
III. Jurisdiction and Venue
6. The United States brings this action
under section 15 of the Clayton Act, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to prevent and
restrain the Defendants from violating
section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
18.
7. Defendants manufacture and sell
CBCs in the flow of interstate
commerce. Defendants’ activities in
manufacturing and selling these
products substantially affect interstate
commerce. This Court has subject
matter jurisdiction over this action
pursuant to section 12 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 22, and 28 U.S.C. 1331,
1337(a), and 1345.
8. Defendants have consented to
venue and personal jurisdiction in this
judicial district and venue is proper
under 28 U.S.C. 1391(d).
IV. Trade and Commerce
A. CBCs Generally
9. Refractories are non-metallic
ceramics that serve as a heat buffer or
lining in industrial devices because they
withstand extremely high temperatures.
In the steelmaking process, refractory
products serve as barriers between hot
molten steel and the non-consumable
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equipment such as the furnaces, ladles,
and tundishes. A ladle is a large
container that receives molten steel
from a furnace; a tundish is a receptacle
that receives steel from the ladle and to
controls the flow of steel into molds
during the continuous casting process.
10. CBCs are consumable, isostatically
pressed refractory products that control
the flow of molten steel from the ladle
to the tundish and onto the continuous
casting mold during the continuous
casting process. CBCs are consumed
through exposure to molten steel and
must be replaced frequently.
11. Isostatic pressing is a process used
in the manufacture of CBCs to increase
the refractory materials’ density and
homogeneity, resulting in a CBC with
increased thermal shock resistance and
resistivity to chemical attack. Carbonbonded alumina graphite is the main
refractory material used to make CBCs.
12. The ‘‘design’’ of a CBC refers to
both its shape and the alumina graphite
recipe. Each customer uses different
designs tailored to the equipment it uses
in the casting process. Customers with
multiple plants require custom-designed
CBCs for each plant and may require
multiple custom-designed CBCs within
each plant. Designs depend on variables
such as the customer’s cast strand size
and shape, casting speed, and the steel
grades produced. Customers change
CBC recipes and/or shapes in order to
improve steel quality, meet new steel
specifications, or save on CBC costs.
13. CBCs undergo rigorous testing by
the manufacturer and the customer to
ensure reliable performance and value
under actual casting conditions.
Because CBCs are critical to the
steelmaking process, most customers
have a policy of splitting sales between
at least two suppliers to ensure supply.
B. The Relevant Product Markets
1. Ladle Shrouds
14. Ladle shrouds are CBCs that
prevent molten steel from re-oxidizing
and ensure the steel transfers safely
from the ladle to the tundish.
15. There are no good substitutes for
ladle shrouds. A small but significant
post-acquisition increase in the price of
ladle shrouds would not cause
customers to substitute another product
or otherwise reduce their usage of ladle
shrouds in sufficient quantities so as to
make such a price increase unprofitable.
16. The manufacture and sale of ladle
shrouds is a line of commerce and a
relevant product market within the
meaning of section 7 of the Clayton Act.
2. Stopper Rods
17. Stopper rods are CBCs used to
control the flow of steel out of the
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tundish and are one of two types of
devices, the other being slide gate
systems, that can perform this function.
Customers use only one device or the
other in a given tundish. The choice of
device depends on the design of the
tundish. Once the choice of tundish
design has been made, a customer
cannot switch from a stopper rod to a
slide gate system without also replacing
or substantially reconfiguring the
tundish-significantly disrupting their
operations.
18. Because of high switching costs, a
small but significant post-acquisition
increase in the price of stopper rods
would not cause customers to switch to
slide gate systems or otherwise reduce
their usage of stopper rods in sufficient
quantities so as to make such a price
increase unprofitable.
19. The manufacture and sale of
stopper rods is a line of commerce and
a relevant product market within the
meaning of section 7 of the Clayton Act.
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C. The Relevant Geographic Markets
20. Cookson and Foseco manufacture
ladle shrouds and stopper rods at
facilities in North America for sale in
the United States.
21. Virtually all ladle shrouds and
stopper rods purchased by customers in
the United States are produced in plants
located in North America. Although a
few manufacturers outside of North
America make ladle shrouds and
stopper rods, firms with production
facilities in North America have a
significant advantage over these foreign
manufacturers in delivered cost and/or
in competing for customers that value
shorter lead times in their supply chain.
22. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of ladle
shrouds and stopper rods would not
cause customers in North America to
switch to purchases from manufacturers
outside of North America in sufficient
numbers so as to make such a price
increase unprofitable.
23. Accordingly, within the meaning
of section 7 of the Clayton Act, the
relevant geographic market for ladle
shrouds and stopper rods is North
America.
D. Anticompetitive Effects: The
Proposed Transaction Will Harm
Competition in the Markets for Ladle
Shrouds and Stopper Rods
24. The production of ladle shrouds
and stopper rods involves similar
materials and manufacturing processes.
In general, manufacturers that are
successful in selling ladle shrouds to
U.S. customers are also successful in
selling stopper rods to U.S. customers,
and vice versa.
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25. Cookson and Foseco are two of
only three firms that manufacture and
sell the vast majority of ladle shrouds
and stopper rods to U.S. customers.
Cookson and Foseco have competed
with one another on price, service, and
innovation in the markets for stopper
rods and ladle shrouds. The markets for
ladle shrouds and stopper rods would
become substantially more concentrated
if Cookson acquires Foseco. Cookson
and Foseco would have a combined
share of approximately 75 percent.
Using a measure of market
concentration called the HerfindahlHirschman Index (‘‘HHI’’) (defined and
explained in Appendix A), the proposed
transaction would increase the HHI in
both markets by approximately 700
points to a post-transaction level in
excess of 6000.
26. Customers request bids from ladle
shroud and stopper rod suppliers and
consider price, quality, service, and
innovation in selecting the winning
bidder. The proposed acquisition will
eliminate Foseco as an independent
bidder.
27. This reduction in the number of
active bidders from three to two will
reduce competition and likely will
result in higher prices and/or reductions
in service and innovation for a
significant number of customers in the
markets for ladle shrouds and stopper
rods. The likely anticompetitive effect is
heightened due to customers’
preferences to maintain supply
relationships with two independent
suppliers simultaneously. In light of
such preferences, the proposed
acquisition will eliminate competition
to be a customer’s second supplier.
28. Foreign manufacturers likely will
not have the incentive or ability to
defeat an anticompetitive increase in
price or reduction in service or
innovation because of their high
delivered costs, customers’ preferences
for North American suppliers, and/or
the poor quality and reputation of their
products.
29. The proposed acquisition will
substantially lessen competition in the
manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds
and stopper rods in the United States in
violation of section 7 of the Clayton Act.
E. Entry: New Entrants Will Not Defeat
an Exercise of Market Power
30. Successful entry into the ladle
shroud and stopper rod markets would
not be timely, likely, or sufficient to
deter the anticompetitive effects
resulting from this transaction. Timely
entry sufficient to replace the market
impact of Foseco would be difficult for
several reasons. A new entrant would
need to acquire manufacturing facilities
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in North America and capital
equipment; assemble or develop
manufacturing, technical expertise, and
personnel; conduct extensive customer
trials; and establish a reputation for
quality and reliability among U.S.
customers. An entrant undertaking these
steps would be unable to enter in less
than two years.
31. There are foreign firms with a
share of the U.S. market for more
complex CBCs, known as subentry
nozzles and subentry shrouds. Because
of the expertise and reputation they
have developed in these markets,
theoretically they would be capable of
entering the domestic market for ladle
shrouds and stopper rods. None of these
firms, however, are likely to open U.S.
manufacturing facilities within the next
several years.
V. Violation Alleged
32. The proposed acquisition of
Foseco by Cookson would substantially
lessen competition in interstate trade
and commerce in violation of section 7
of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
33. Unless restrained, the acquisition
will have the following anticompetitive
effects, among others:
a. Competition in the markets for the
manufacture and sale of ladle shroud
and stopper rods in the United States
will be lessened substantially;
b. Actual and potential competition
between Cookson and Foseco in the
manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds
and stopper rods in the United States
will be eliminated; and
c. Prices for ladle shrouds and stopper
rods in the United States likely will
increase, and/or service and innovation
likely will decline.
VI. Request for Relief
34. Plaintiff requests that:
a. Cookson’s proposed acquisition of
Foseco be adjudged and decreed to be
unlawful and in violation of section 7 of
the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18;
b. Defendants and all persons acting
on their behalf be permanently enjoined
and restrained from consummating the
proposed acquisition or from entering
into or carrying out any contract,
agreement, plan, or understanding, the
effect of which would be to combine
Cookson with the operations of Foseco;
c. Plaintiff be awarded its costs for
this action; and
d. Plaintiff receive such other and
further relief as the Court deems just
and proper.
Respectfully submitted,
For Plaintiff United States of America:
/s/
Thomas O. Barnett,
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Assistant Attorney General
DC Bar #426840.
/s/
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section
D.C. Bar #435204.
/s/
David L. Meyer,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General
DC Bar #414420.
/s/
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations and
Civil Enforcement
/s/
Dorothy B. Fountain,
Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section
DC Bar #439469
/s/
Leslie Peritz,
Helena Gardner,
Attorneys, United States Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, Litigation II
Section 1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000,
Washington, DC 20530 (202) 307–0924.
Dated: March 4, 2008.
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Appendix A—Definition of ‘‘HHI’’
The term ‘‘HHI’’ means the HerfindahlHirschman Index, a commonly accepted
measure of market concentration. The HHI 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 30, 30, 20, and 20 percent, the
HHI is 2,600 (302+302+202+202=2,600). The
HHI takes into account the relative size and
distribution of the firms in a market. It
approaches zero when a market is occupied
by a large number of firms of relatively equal
size and reaches its maximum of 10,000
when a market is controlled by a single firm.
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 markets 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 significant
antitrust concerns under the Department of
Justice and Federal Trade Commission 1992
Horizontal Merger Guidelines.
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v.
Cookson Group PLC, Cookson America
Inc., FOSECO PLC, and FOSECO
Metallurgical Inc., Defendants; Case No.:
1:08–cv–00389, Judge: Urbina, Ricardo
M. Deck Type: Antitrust; Date Stamp:
March 4, 2008
Final Judgment
Whereas, Plaintiff, United States of
America, filed its Complaint on March
4, 2008, the United States and
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defendants, Cookson Group plc and
Cookson America Inc. and Foseco plc
and Foseco Metallurgical Inc., by their
respective attorneys, have consented to
the entry of this Final Judgment without
trial or adjudication of any issue of fact
or law, And without this Final Judgment
constituting any evidence against or
admission by any party regarding any
issue of fact or law;
And whereas, defendants agree to be
bound by the provisions of this Final
Judgment pending its approval by the
Court;
And whereas, the essence of this Final
Judgment is the prompt and certain
divestiture of certain rights or assets by
the defendants to assure that
competition is not substantially
lessened;
And whereas, the United States
requires defendants to make a certain
divestiture for the purpose of remedying
the loss of competition alleged in the
Complaint;
And whereas, defendants have
represented to the United States that the
divestiture required below can and will
be made and that defendants will later
raise no claim of hardship or difficulty
as grounds for asking the Court to
modify any of the divestiture provisions
contained below;
Now therefore, before any testimony
is taken, without trial or adjudication of
any issue of fact or law, and upon
consent of the parties, it is ordered,
adjudged and decreed:
I. Jurisdiction
This Court has jurisdiction over the
subject matter of and each of the parties
to this action. The Complaint states a
claim upon which relief may be granted
against defendants under section 7 of
the Clayton Act, as amended (15 U.S.C.
18).
II. Definitions
As used in this Final Judgment:
A. ‘‘Cookson’’ means defendant
Cookson Group plc, a United Kingdom
corporation with its headquarters in
London, England, and Cookson America
Inc., a Delaware Corporation with its
headquarters in Providence, Rhode
Island and includes its successors and
assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions,
groups, affiliates, partnerships and joint
ventures, and their directors, officers,
managers, agents, and employees.
B. ‘‘Foseco’’ means defendant Foseco
plc, a United Kingdom corporation with
its headquarters in Tamworth,
Staffordshire, England, and Foseco
Metallurgical Inc., a Delaware
corporation with its headquarters in
Cleveland, Ohio and includes its
successors and assigns, and its
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subsidiaries, divisions, groups,
affiliates, partnerships and joint
ventures, and their directors, officers,
managers, agents, and employees.
C. ‘‘CBCs’’ means consumable,
isostatically pressed refractory products
made of carbon-bonded alumina
graphite that control the flow of molten
steel from the steel ladle to the
continuous casting mold during the
continuous casting of steel.
D. ‘‘Divestiture Business’’ means
Foseco’s entire business engaged in the
development, design, production,
servicing, distribution, and sale of CBCs
in the United States, including:
1. Foseco’s Saybrook, Ohio facility,
and the related leasehold;
2. all tangible assets used in the
development, design, production,
servicing, distribution, and sale of CBCs
in the United States, including but not
limited to all research data and
activities and development activities; all
manufacturing equipment, including
but not limited to batch mix equipment,
presses, drying and oven/kilning,
finishing, packaging, and tooling; all
fixed assets, real property (leased or
owned), personal property, inventory,
office furniture, materials, supplies, onor off-site warehouses or storage
facilities relating to the factory and
property, and all other tangible
property; all licenses, permits and
authorizations issued by any
governmental organization; all
contracts, teaming arrangements,
agreements, leases (including renewal
rights), commitments, certifications, and
understandings, including supply
agreements; all customer lists, contracts,
accounts, and credit records or similar
records of all sales and potential sales;
all sales support and promotional
materials, advertising materials, and
production, sales and marketing files;
all repair and performance records; all
other records; and, at the option of the
Acquirer, Foseco’s U.S. water-modeling
assets;
3. all intangible assets used in the
development, design, production,
servicing, distribution, and sale of CBCs
in the United States, including, but not
limited to, all patents, all pending
patent applications, licenses and
sublicenses, intellectual property,
copyrights, trademarks (registered and
unregistered), trade names, service
marks, and service names relating to the
Divestiture Business, but excluding the
corporate-level name and device and
trademark of Foseco; all technical
information, computer software and
related documentation, know-how,
trade secrets, drawings, blueprints,
designs, design protocols, specifications
for materials, specifications for parts
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and devices, safety procedures for the
handling of materials and substances,
all research data concerning historic and
current research and development;
quality assurance and control
procedures, design tools, and simulation
capability; all manuals and technical
information provided to employees,
customers, suppliers, agents or
licensees, and all research data
concerning historic and current research
and development efforts relating to the
Divestiture Business, including, but not
limited to, designs of CBCs, and the
results of successful and unsuccessful
designs and trials; and
4. notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in this Final Judgment, if
requested by an Acquirer, and subject to
the approval of the United States in its
sole discretion, defendants shall offer to
enter into a transition services
agreement for a limited period with
respect to certain support services (e.g.,
HR, IT, and/or health and safety).
E. ‘‘Bonnybridge Business’’ means
Foseco’s European CBC business and its
facilities in Bonnybridge, Stirlingshire,
Scotland, which the European
Commission has required to be divested
along with the Divestiture Business.
F. ‘‘Acquirer’’ means the entity to
which defendants divest the Divestiture
Business.
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III. Applicability
A. This Final Judgment applies to
Cookson and Foseco, as defined above,
and all other persons in active concert
or participation with any of them who
receive actual notice of this Final
Judgment by personal service or
otherwise.
B. If, prior to complying with section
IV and V of this Final Judgment,
defendants sell or otherwise dispose of
all or substantially all of their assets or
of lesser business units that include the
Divestiture Business, they shall require
the purchaser to be bound by the
provisions of this Final Judgment.
Defendants need not obtain such an
agreement from the Acquirer of the
assets divested pursuant to this Final
Judgment.
IV. Divestiture
A. Defendants are ordered and
directed, within ninety (90) calendar
days after the filing of the Complaint in
this matter, or five (5) calendar days
after notice of the entry of this Final
Judgment by the Court, whichever is
later, to divest the Divestiture Business
in a manner consistent with this Final
Judgment to an Acquirer acceptable to
the United States, in its sole discretion
after consultation with the European
Commission. The United States, in its
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sole discretion, may agree to one or
more extensions of this time period not
to exceed 60 calendar days in total, and
shall notify the Court in such
circumstances. Defendants agree to use
their best efforts to divest the
Divestiture Business as expeditiously as
possible.
B. In accomplishing the divestiture
ordered by this Final Judgment,
defendants promptly shall make known,
by usual and customary means, the
availability of the Divestiture Business.
Defendants shall inform any person
making inquiry regarding a possible
purchase of the Divestiture Business
that it is being divested pursuant to this
Final Judgment and provide that person
with a copy of this Final Judgment.
Defendants shall offer to furnish to all
prospective Acquirers, subject to
customary confidentiality assurances,
all information and documents relating
to the Divestiture Business customarily
provided in a due diligence process
except such information or documents
subject to the attorney-client privileges
or work-product doctrine. Defendants
shall make available such information to
the United States at the same time that
such information is made available to
any other person.
C. Defendants shall provide the
Acquirer and the United States
information relating to the personnel
involved in the production, operation,
research and development, design, and
sale of CBCs to enable the Acquirer to
make offers of employment. Defendants
shall not interfere with any negotiations
by the Acquirer to employ or contract
with any defendant employee
responsible for any such activity related
to the Divestiture Business.
D. Defendants shall permit
prospective Acquirers of the Divestiture
Business to have reasonable access to
personnel responsible for the
Divestiture Business; to make
inspections of the physical facilities of
the Divestiture Business; to have access
to any and all environmental, zoning,
and other permit documents and
information; and to have access to any
and all financial, operational, or other
documents and information customarily
provided as part of a due diligence
process.
E. Defendants shall warrant to the
Acquirer that the Divestiture Business
will be operational on the date of sale.
F. Defendants shall not take any
action that will impede in any way the
permitting, operation, or divestiture of
the Divestiture Business.
G. Defendants shall warrant to the
Acquirer that there are no material
defects in the environmental, zoning or
other permits pertaining to the
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operation of the Divestiture Business,
and that following the sale of the
Divestiture Business, defendants will
not undertake, directly or indirectly,
any challenges to the environmental,
zoning, or other permits relating to the
operation of the Divestiture Business.
H. 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
Divestiture Business, and shall be
accomplished in such a way as to satisfy
the United States, in its sole discretion,
that the Divestiture Business can and
will be used by the Acquirer as part of
a viable, ongoing business for the
manufacture and sale of CBCs in the
United States. The divestiture, whether
pursuant to section IV or section V of
this Final Judgment,
1. shall be made to the acquirer of the
Bonnybridge Business;
2. 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) of
competing effectively in the
manufacture and sale of CBCs in the
United States; and
3. 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
defendants give defendants the ability
unreasonably to raise the Acquirer’s
costs, to lower the Acquirer’s efficiency,
or otherwise to interfere in the ability of
the Acquirer to compete effectively in
the manufacture and sale of CBCs in the
United States.
V. Appointment of Trustee
A. If defendants have not divested the
Divestiture Business within the time
period specified in section IV(A),
defendants shall notify the United
States of that fact in writing. Upon
application of the United States, the
Court shall appoint a trustee selected by
the United States, in consultation with
the European Commission to ensure
selection of a trustee acceptable to both
the United States and the European
Commission, and approved by the Court
to effect the divestiture of the
Divestiture Business.
B. After the appointment of a trustee
becomes effective, only the trustee shall
have the right to sell the Divestiture
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
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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
defendants any investment bankers,
attorneys, or other agents, who shall be
solely accountable to the trustee,
reasonably necessary in the trustee’s
judgment to assist in the divestiture.
C. Defendants shall not object to a sale
by the trustee on any ground other than
the trustee’s malfeasance or that the
Acquirer has not been approved by the
European Commission. Any objection
by defendants on the ground of trustee
malfeasance 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; any objection
by defendants based on lack of approval
from the European Commission must be
conveyed in writing to the United States
and the trustee within the later of (i) five
(5) days after the United States provides
defendants with written notice,
pursuant to section VI(C), stating that it
does not object to the proposed
divestiture of the Divestiture Business
or (ii) two (2) business days after the
European Commission notifies
defendants that it does not approve of
the proposed Acquirer. D. The trustee
shall serve at the cost and expense of
defendants, on such terms and
conditions as the United States
approves, and shall account for all
monies derived from the sale of the
assets sold by the trustee and all costs
and expenses so incurred. After
approval by the Court of the trustee’s
accounting, including fees for its
services and those of any professionals
and agents retained by the trustee, all
remaining money shall be paid to
defendants and the trust shall then be
terminated. The compensation of the
trustee and any professionals and agents
retained by the trustee shall be
reasonable in light of the value of the
Divestiture 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. Defendants shall use their best
efforts to assist the trustee in
accomplishing the required divestiture.
The trustee and any consultants,
accountants, attorneys, and other
persons retained by the trustee shall
have full and complete access to the
personnel, books, records, and facilities
of the business to be divested, and
defendants shall develop financial and
other information relevant to such
business as the trustee may reasonably
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request, subject to reasonable protection
for trade secret or other confidential
research, development, or commercial
information. Defendants shall take no
action to interfere with or to impede the
trustee’s accomplishment of the
divestiture.
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, any interest in the Divestiture
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 Divestiture
Business.
G. If the trustee has not accomplished
the divestiture ordered under this Final
Judgment within six months after its
appointment, the trustee shall promptly
file with the Court a report setting forth
(1) the trustee’s efforts to accomplish the
required divestiture, (2) the reasons, in
the trustee’s judgment, why the required
divestiture has not been accomplished,
and (3) the trustee’s recommendations.
To the extent such reports contain
information that the trustee deems
confidential, such reports shall not be
filed in the public docket of the Court.
The trustee shall at the same time
furnish such report to the United States
which 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, defendants 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 defendants. The notice
shall set forth the details of the
proposed divestiture and list the name,
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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 Divestiture Business, together
with full details of the same.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of
receipt by the United States of such
notice, the United States may request
from defendants, the proposed
Acquirer(s), any other third party, or the
trustee, if applicable, additional
information concerning the proposed
divestiture, the proposed Acquirer(s),
and any other potential Acquirer.
Defendants and the trustee shall furnish
any additional information requested
within fifteen (15) calendar days of the
receipt of the request, unless the parties
shall otherwise agree.
C. Within thirty (30) calendar days
after receipt of the notice or within
twenty (20) calendar days after the
United States has been provided the
additional information requested from
defendants, the proposed Acquirer(s),
any third party, and the trustee,
whichever is later, the United States
shall provide written notice to
defendants and the trustee, if there is
one, stating whether or not it objects to
the proposed divestiture. If the United
States provides written notice that it
does not object, the divestiture may be
consummated, subject only to
defendants’ limited right to object to the
sale under section V(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 defendants under section
V(C), a divestiture proposed under
section V shall not be consummated
unless approved by the Court.
VII. Financing
Defendants 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,
defendants shall take all steps necessary
to comply with the Hold Separate
Stipulation and Order entered by this
Court. Defendants shall take no action
that would jeopardize the divestiture
ordered by this Court.
IX. Affidavits
A. Within twenty (20) calendar days
of the filing of the Complaint in this
matter, and every thirty (30) calendar
days thereafter until the divestiture has
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been completed under section IV or V,
defendants 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 Judgment. Each
such affidavit shall include the name,
address, and telephone number of each
person who, during the preceding thirty
(30) calendar 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 Divestiture 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 defendants
have taken to solicit buyers for the
Divestiture Business, and to provide
required information to prospective
Acquirers, 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 defendants, including limitations on
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, defendants shall deliver to the
United States an affidavit that describes
in reasonable detail all actions
defendants have taken and all steps
defendants have implemented on an
ongoing basis to comply with section
VIII of this Final Judgment. Defendants
shall deliver to the United States an
affidavit describing any changes to the
efforts and actions outlined in
defendants’ earlier affidavits filed
pursuant to this section within fifteen
(15) calendar days after the change is
implemented.
C. Defendants shall keep all records of
all efforts made to preserve and divest
the Divestiture Business until one year
after such divestiture has been
completed.
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X. Compliance Inspection
A. For the 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
authorized representatives of the United
States Department of Justice, including
consultants and other persons retained
by the United States, shall, upon written
request of an authorized representative
of the Assistant Attorney General in
charge of the Antitrust Division, and on
reasonable notice to defendants, be
permitted:
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1. Access during defendants’ office
hours to inspect and copy, or at the
option of the United States, to require
defendants to provide hard copy or
electronic copies of, all books, ledgers,
accounts, records, data, and documents
in the possession, custody, or control of
defendants, relating to any matters
contained in this Final Judgment; and
2. to interview, either informally or on
the record, defendants’ officers,
employees, or agents, who may have
their individual counsel present,
regarding such matters. The interviews
shall be subject to the reasonable
convenience of the interviewee and
without restraint or interference by
defendants.
B. Upon the written request of an
authorized representative of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of
the Antitrust Division, defendants shall
submit written reports or responses to
written interrogatories, under oath if
requested, relating to any of the matters
contained in this Final Judgment as may
be requested.
C. No information or documents
obtained by the means provided in this
section shall be divulged by the United
States to any person other than an
authorized representative of the
executive branch of the United States,
except in the course of legal proceedings
to which the United States is a party
(including grand jury proceedings), or
for the purpose of securing compliance
with this Final Judgment, or as
otherwise required by law.
D. If at the time information or
documents are furnished by defendants
to the United States, defendants
represent and identify in writing the
material in any such information or
documents to which a claim of
protection may be asserted under Rule
26(c)(7) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, and defendants mark each
pertinent page of such material,
‘‘Subject to claim of protection under
Rule 26(c)(7) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure,’’ then the United States
shall give defendants ten (10) calendar
days notice prior to divulging such
material in any legal proceeding (other
than a grand jury proceeding).
XI. No Reacquisition
Defendants may not reacquire any
part of the Divestiture Business during
the term of this Final Judgment.
XII. Retention of Jurisdiction
This Court retains jurisdiction to
enable any party to this Final Judgment
to apply to this Court at any time for
further orders and directions as may be
necessary or appropriate to carry out or
construe this Final Judgment, to modify
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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’s 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
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15
U.S.C. 16.
United States District Judge.
The United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v.
Cookson Group PLC, Cookson America
Inc., FOSECO PLC, and FOSECO
Metallurgical Inc., Defendants; Case No.:
1:08–cv–00389; Judge: Urbina, Ricardo
M.; Deck Type: Antitrust; Date Stamp:
March 4, 2008.
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
Defendant Cookson Group plc and
Defendant Foseco plc have entered into
an agreement whereby Cookson will
acquire Foseco. The United States filed
a civil antitrust Complaint on March,
2008 seeking to enjoin the proposed
acquisition. The Complaint alleges that
the likely effect of this acquisition
would be to lessen competition
substantially in the markets for certain
isostatically pressed carbon bonded
ceramics products (‘‘CBCs’’), in
violation of section 7 of the Clayton Act,
15 U.S.C. 18. This loss of competition
likely would result in increased prices
and/or a reduction in service and
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innovation in the manufacture and sale
of such CBCs in the United States.
At the same time the Complaint was
filed, the United States also filed a Hold
Separate Stipulation and Order (‘‘Hold
Separate’’) and proposed Final
Judgment, which are designed to
eliminate the anticompetitive effects of
the acquisition. Under the proposed
Final Judgment, which is explained
more fully below, defendants are
required to divest Foseco’s business
engaged in the development, design,
production, servicing, distribution, and
sale of CBCs in the United States,
including the CBC plant in Saybrook,
Ohio and related assets (hereafter the
‘‘Divestiture Business’’). Under the
terms of the Hold Separate, defendants
will take certain steps to ensure that the
Divestiture Business is operated as a
competitively independent,
economically viable, and ongoing
business concern; that it will remain
independent and uninfluenced by the
consummation of the acquisition; and
that competition in the market for CBCs
is maintained during the pendency of
the ordered divestiture.
The United States and defendants
have stipulated that the proposed Final
Judgment may be entered after
compliance with the APPA. Entry of the
proposed Final Judgment would
terminate this action, except that the
Court would retain jurisdiction to
construe, modify, or enforce the
provisions of the proposed Final
Judgment and to punish violations
thereof.
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II. Description of the Events Giving Rise
to the Alleged Violation
A. The Defendants and the Proposed
Transaction
Cookson, a United Kingdom
corporation with its headquarters in
London, England, is a manufacturer and
processor of ceramics, electronics, and
precious metals. Cookson, through its
subsidiary, Cookson America Inc.,
manufactures CBCs in the United States
and Mexico and sells them throughout
the United States. In 2006, Cookson’s
U.S. CBC revenues were about $75
million.
Foseco, a United Kingdom
corporation with its headquarters in
Staffordshire, England, manufactures
refractories and related products for sale
and offers services worldwide to the
steel and foundry industries. Foseco,
through its subsidiary, Foseco
Metallurgical Inc., manufactures CBCs
in the United States and sells them
throughout the United States. In 2006,
Foseco’s U.S. CBC revenues were about
$4 million.
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On October 11, 2007, Cookson and
Foseco announced that they had
reached an agreement on the terms of a
recommended cash offer by Cookson for
the entire issued and to-be-issued share
capital of Foseco in a transaction valued
at approximately $1 billion.
B. The Competitive Effects of the
Transaction
1. CBCs Generally
Refractories are non-metallic ceramics
that serve as a heat buffer or lining in
industrial devices because they
withstand extremely high temperatures.
In the steelmaking process, refractory
products serve as barriers between hot
molten steel and the non-consumable
equipment such as the furnaces, ladles
(large containers that receive molten
steel from a furnace), and tundishes
(receptacles that receive steel from the
ladle).
CBCs are consumable, isostatically
pressed refractory products that control
the flow of molten steel from the ladle
to the tundish and onto the continuous
casting mold during the continuous
casting process. Isostatic pressing is a
process used in the manufacture of
CBCs to increase the refractory
materials’ density and homogeneity,
resulting in a CBC with increased
thermal shock resistance and resistivity
to chemical attack. Carbon-bonded
alumina graphite is the main refractory
material used to make CBCs. CBCs are
consumed through exposure to molten
steel and must be replaced frequently.
The ‘‘design’’ of a CBC refers to both
its shape and the alumina graphite
recipe. Each customer uses different
designs tailored to the equipment it uses
in the casting process. Customers with
multiple plants require custom-designed
CBCs for each plant and may require
multiple custom-designed CBCs within
each plant. Designs depend on variables
such as the customer’s cast strand size
and shape, casting speed, and the steel
grades produced. Customers change
CBC recipes and/or shapes in order to
improve steel quality, meet new steel
specifications, or save on CBC costs.
CBCs undergo rigorous testing by the
manufacturer and the customer to
ensure reliable performance and value
under actual casting conditions.
Because CBCs are critical to the
steelmaking process, most customers
have a policy of splitting sales between
at least two suppliers to ensure supply.
2. Relevant Product Markets
Ladle Shrouds
The Complaint alleges that the
manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds is
a line of commerce and a relevant
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product market within the meaning of
section 7 of the Clayton Act. Ladle
shrouds are CBCs that prevent molten
steel from re-oxidizing and ensure the
steel transfers safely from the ladle to
the tundish.
There are no good substitutes for ladle
shrouds. The Complaint alleges that a
small but significant post-acquisition
increase in the price of ladle shrouds
would not cause customers to substitute
another product or otherwise reduce
their usage of ladle shrouds in sufficient
quantities so as to make such a price
increase unprofitable. Accordingly, the
manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds is
a relevant product market.
Stopper Rods
The Complaint alleges that the
manufacture and sale of stopper rods is
a line of commerce and a relevant
product market within the meaning of
section 7 of the Clayton Act. Stopper
rods are CBCs used to control the flow
of steel out of the tundish and are one
of two types of devices, the other being
slide gate systems, that can perform this
function. The choice of device depends
on the design of the tundish. Once the
choice of tundish design has been made,
a customer cannot switch from a stopper
rod to a slide gate system without also
replacing or substantially reconfiguring
the tundish-significantly disrupting
their operations.
The Complaint alleges that, because of
high switching costs, a small but
significant post-acquisition increase in
the price of stopper rods would not
cause customers to switch to slide gate
systems or otherwise reduce their usage
of stopper rods in sufficient quantities
so as to make such a price increase
unprofitable. Accordingly, the
manufacture and sales of stopper rods is
a relevant product market.
3. Relevant Geographic Market
Cookson and Foseco manufacture
ladle shrouds and stopper rods at
facilities in North America for sale in
the United States. The Complaint
alleges that virtually all ladle shrouds
and stopper rods purchased by
customers in the United States are
produced in plants located in North
America. Although a few manufacturers
outside of North America make ladle
shrouds and stopper rods, firms with
production facilities in North America
have a significant advantage over these
foreign manufacturers in delivered cost
and/or in competing for customers that
value shorter lead times in their supply
chain.
The Complaint alleges that a small but
significant post-acquisition increase in
the price of ladle shrouds and stopper
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rods would not cause customers in
North America to switch to purchases
from manufacturers outside of North
America in sufficient numbers so as to
make such a price increase unprofitable.
Accordingly, the relevant geographic
market for ladle shrouds and stopper
rods is North America.
4. Anticompetitive Effects
Cookson and Foseco are two of only
three firms that manufacture and sell
the vast majority of ladle shrouds and
stopper rods to U.S. customers. Cookson
and Foseco have competed with one
another on price, service, and
innovation in the markets for stopper
rods and ladle shrouds. The markets for
ladle shrouds and stopper rods would
become substantially more concentrated
if Cookson acquires Foseco. For
example, Cookson and Foseco would
have a combined share of approximately
75 percent. Using a measure of market
concentration called the HerfindahlHirschman Index (‘‘HHI’’) (defined and
explained in Appendix A), the proposed
transaction will increase the HHI in
both markets by approximately 700
points to a post-transaction level in
excess of 6000.
Customers request bids from ladle
shroud and stopper rod suppliers and
consider price, quality, service, and
innovation when selecting the winning
bidder. The proposed acquisition will
eliminate Foseco as an independent
bidder. This reduction in the number of
active bidders from three to two will
reduce competition and likely will
result in higher prices and/or reductions
in service and innovation for a
significant number of customers in the
markets for ladle shrouds and stopper
rods. The likely anticompetitive effects
are heightened due to customers’
preferences to maintain supply
relationships with two independent
suppliers simultaneously. In light of
such preferences, the proposed
acquisition will eliminate competition
to be a customer’s second supplier.
Moreover, manufacturers outside of
North America likely will not have the
incentive or ability to defeat an
anticompetitive increase in price or
reduction in service or innovation
because of their high delivered costs,
customers’ preferences for North
American suppliers, and/or the poor
quality and reputation of their products.
Further, successful entry into the
ladle shroud and stopper rod markets
would not be timely, likely, or sufficient
to deter the anticompetitive effects
resulting from this transaction. Timely
entry sufficient to replace the market
impact of Foseco would be difficult for
several reasons. A new entrant would
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need to acquire capital equipment and
manufacturing facilities in North
America; assemble or develop
manufacturing, technical, and personnel
expertise; conduct extensive customer
trials; and establish a reputation for
quality and reliability among U.S.
customers. An entrant undertaking these
steps would need to undertake these
steps would be unable to enter in less
than two years.
There are foreign firms with a share
of the U.S. market for more complex
CBCs. Because of the expertise and
reputation they have developed in these
markets, theoretically they are capable
of entering the domestic market for ladle
shrouds and stopper rods. None of these
firms, however, is likely to open North
American manufacturing facilities
within the next several years.
As a result of these barriers to entry
into the North American market for
ladle shrouds and stopper rods, entry by
any other firm into the manufacture and
sale of ladle shrouds and stopper rods
will not be timely, likely, or sufficient
to deter the anticompetitive effects
resulting from this transaction.
divestiture quickly and shall cooperate
with prospective purchasers.
In the event that defendants do not
accomplish the divestiture within the
period prescribed in the proposed Final
Judgment, the Final Judgment provides
that the Court will appoint a trustee
selected by the United States to effect
the divestiture. If a trustee is appointed,
the proposed Final Judgment provides
that defendants will pay all costs and
expenses of the trustee. The trustee’s
commission will be structured so as to
provide an incentive for the trustee
based on the price obtained 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, 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.
III. Explanation of the Proposed Final
Judgment
Selected Provisions of the Proposed
Final Judgment
Section IV(H) of the proposed Final
Judgment requires defendants to sell the
Divestiture Business—Foseco’s CBC
business in the United States—to the
acquirer of Foseco’s European CBC
business, which includes assets in
Bonnybridge, Stirlingshire, Scotland
(the ‘‘Bonnybridge Business’’). This
requirement is warranted because the
European Commission is requiring
defendants to divest the Bonnybridge
Business, and because of the practical
difficulties of splitting between two
acquirers rights to certain intellectual
property and know-how used by both
businesses.
Because the United States and the
European Commission both must
approve the same acquirer, section
IV(A) of the proposed Final Judgment
provides that the United States will
consult with the European Commission
in exercising its review of defendants’
sale of the Divestiture Business in a
manner consistent with the proposed
Final Judgment, to an acquirer
acceptable to the United States in its
sole discretion. As noted above, if the
defendants do not divest the Divestiture
Business within the required time
period, the Court, upon application of
the United States, is to appoint a trustee
to complete the divestiture. Because the
European Commission also requires
selection of a trustee if the divestiture is
not completed within a certain time,
The divestiture requirement of the
proposed Final Judgment will eliminate
the anticompetitive effects of the
acquisition in the markets for ladle
shrouds and stopper rods by
establishing a new, independent, and
economically viable competitor. The
proposed Final Judgment requires
defendants, within 90 days after the
filing of the Complaint, or five days after
notice of the entry of the Final Judgment
by the Court, whichever is later, to
divest, as a viable ongoing business, the
Divestiture Business, which includes
Foseco’s CBC plant in Saybrook, Ohio
and related tangible and intangible
assets.1 The assets must be divested in
such a way as to satisfy the United
States, in its sole discretion, that the
Divestiture Business can and will be
operated by the purchaser as a viable,
ongoing business capable of competing
effectively in the relevant markets.
Defendants must take all reasonable
steps necessary to accomplish the
1 The parties agreed to remedy the adverse effects
in the markets for ladle shrouds and stopper rods
by divesting the entire U.S. CBC business, including
the Saybrook facility where Foseco manufactures all
of the CBCs it sells in the United States. The
proposed remedy would enable the purchaser to
offer the ‘‘full line’’ of CBCs currently being sold by
Foseco—including, for instance, subentry nozzles
and subentry shrouds—which would ensure that
the purchaser would have the incentive and all the
assets necessary to be an effective, long-term
competitor in these products.
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 53 / Tuesday, March 18, 2008 / Notices
Written comments should be
submitted to: Maribeth Petrizzi, Chief,
Litigation II Section, Antitrust Division,
United States Department of Justice,
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 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 defendants.
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section V(A) of the proposed Final
Judgment provides that the United
States shall select a trustee after
consultation with the European
Commission to ensure selection of a
trustee acceptable to both the United
States and the European Commission.
The divestiture provisions of the
proposed Final Judgment will eliminate
the anticompetitive effects of the
acquisition in the manufacture and sale
of ladle shrouds and stopper rods in the
United States.
VI. Alternatives to the Proposed Final
Judgment
V. Procedures Available for
Modification of the Proposed Final
Judgment
The United States and defendants
have stipulated that the proposed Final
Judgment may be entered by the Court
after compliance with the provisions of
the APPA, provided that the United
States has not withdrawn its consent.
The APPA conditions entry upon the
Court’s determination that the proposed
Final Judgment is in the public interest.
The APPA provides a period of at
least sixty (60) 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 (60)
days of the date of publication of this
Competitive Impact Statement in the
Federal Register, or the last date of
publication in a newspaper of the
summary of this Competitive Impact
Statement, whichever is later. All
comments received during this period
will be considered by the United States
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.
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The United States considered, as an
alternative to the proposed Final
Judgment, a full trial on the merits
against defendants. The United States
could have continued the litigation and
sought preliminary and permanent
injunctions against Cookson’s
acquisition of Foseco. The United States
is satisfied, however, that the divestiture
of assets described in the proposed
Final Judgment will preserve
competition for the provision of ladle
shrouds and stopper rods in the United
States. Thus, the proposed Final
Judgment would achieve all or
substantially all of the relief the United
States would have obtained through
litigation, but avoids the time, expense,
and uncertainty of a full trial on the
merits of the Complaint.
VII. Standard of Review Under the
APPA for the Proposed Final Judgment
The Clayton Act, as amended by the
APPA, requires that proposed consent
judgments in antitrust cases brought by
the United States be subject to a sixtyday 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)(l). In
making that determination, the court, in
accordance with the statute as amended
in 2004, is required to consider:
(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.
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15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1) (A) & (B). In
considering these statutory factors, the
court’s inquiry is necessarily a limited
one as the government is entitled to
‘‘broad discretion to settle with the
defendant within the reaches of the
public interest.’’ United States v.
Microsoft Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1461
(D.C. Cir. 1995); see generally United
States v. SBC Commc’ns, Inc., 489 F.
Supp. 2d I (D.D.C. 2007) (assessing
public interest standard under the
Tunney Act).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 Microsoft, 56
F.3d at 1458–62. 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; United States v. Alcoa, Inc.,
152 F. Supp. 2d 37, 40 (D.D.C. 2001).
Courts have held that:
[t]he balancing of competing social and
political interests affected by a proposed
antitrust consent decree must be left, in the
first instance, to the discretion of the
Attorney General. The court’s role in
protecting the public interest is one of
insuring that the government has not
breached its duty to the public in consenting
to the decree. The court is required to
determine not whether a particular decree is
the one that will best serve society, but
whether the settlement is ‘‘within the reaches
of the public interest.’’ More elaborate
requirements might undermine the
effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by
consent decree.
Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis
added) (citations omitted).3 In
2 The 2004 amendments substituted ‘‘shall’’ for
‘‘may’’ in directing relevant factors for a court to
consider and amended the list of factors to focus on
competitive considerations and to address
potentially ambiguous judgment terms. Compare 15
U.S.C. 16(e) (2004), with 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1) (2006);
see also SBC Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11
(concluding that the 2004 amendments ‘‘effected
minimal changes’’ to Tunney Act review).
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
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determining whether a proposed
settlement is in the public interest, a
district court ‘‘must accord deference to
the government’s predictions about the
efficacy of its remedies, and may not
require that the remedies perfectly
match the alleged violations.’’ SBC
Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17; see
also Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 (noting
the need for courts to be ‘‘deferential to
the government’s predictions as to the
effect of the proposed remedies’’);
United States v. Archer-DanielsMidland Co., 272 F. Supp. 2d 1, 6
(D.D.C. 2003) (noting that the court
should grant due respect to the United
States’ prediction as to the effect of
proposed remedies, its perception of the
market structure, and its views of the
nature of the case).
Courts have greater flexibility in
approving proposed consent decrees
than in crafting their own decrees
following a finding of liability in a
litigated matter. ‘‘[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). To
meet this standard, the United States
‘‘need only provide a factual basis for
concluding that the settlements are
reasonably adequate remedies for the
alleged harms.’’ SBC Commc’ns, 489 F.
Supp. 2d at 17.
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. As this Court
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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recently confirmed in SBC
Communications, courts ‘‘cannot look
beyond the complaint in making the
public interest determination unless the
complaint is drafted so narrowly as to
make a mockery of judicial power.’’ SBC
Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 15.
In its 2004 amendments, Congress
made clear its intent to preserve the
practical benefits of utilizing consent
decrees in antitrust enforcement, adding
the unambiguous instruction that
‘‘[n]othing in this section shall be
construed to require the court to
conduct an evidentiary hearing or to
require the court to permit anyone to
intervene.’’ 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(2). The
language wrote into the statute what
Congress intended when it enacted the
Tunney Act in 1974, as Senator Tunney
explained: ‘‘[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, the
procedure for the public interest
determination is left to the discretion of
the court, with the recognition that the
court’s ‘‘scope of review remains
sharply proscribed by precedent and the
nature of Tunney Act proceedings.’’
SBC Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11.4
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: March 4, 2008.
Respectfully submitted,
Leslie Peritz, Helena Gardner,
Attorneys United States Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, Litigation II, 1401
H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC
20530, (202) 307–0924.
[FR Doc. E8–5129 Filed 3–17–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–11–M
4 See United States v. Enova Corp., 107 F. Supp.
2d 10, 17 (D.D.C. 2000) (noting that the ‘‘Tunney
Act expressly allows the court to make its public
interest determination on the basis of the
competitive impact statement and response to
comments alone’’); S. Rep. No. 93–298, 93d Cong.,
1st Sess., at 6 (1973) (‘‘Where the public interest can
be meaningfully evaluated simply on the basis of
briefs and oral arguments, that is the approach that
should be utilized.’’); United States v. Mid-Am.
Dairymen, Inc., 1977–1 Trade Cas. (CCH) 61,508, at
71,980 (W.D. Mo. 1977) (‘‘Absent 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.’’).
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14499
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of the Secretary
Submission for OMB Review:
Comment Request
March 13, 2008.
The Department of Labor (DOL)
hereby announces the submission of the
following public information collection
request (ICR) to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval in accordance with
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(Pub. L. 104–13, 44 U.S.C. chapter 35).
A copy of this ICR, with applicable
supporting documentation; including
among other things a description of the
likely respondents, proposed frequency
of response, and estimated total burden
may be obtained from the RegInfo.gov
Web site at https://www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRAMain or by contacting
Darrin King on 202–693–4129 (this is
not a toll-free number) / e-mail:
king.darrin@dol.gov.
Interested parties are encouraged to
send comments to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Attn: OMB Desk Officer for
Departmental Management (DM), Office
of Management and Budget, Room
10235, Washington, DC 20503,
Telephone: 202–395–7316 / Fax: 202–
395–6974 (these are not a toll-free
numbers), E-mail:
OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov within
30 days from the date of this publication
in the Federal Register. In order to
ensure the appropriate consideration,
comments should reference the OMB
Control Number (see below).
The OMB is particularly interested in
comments which:
• Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
• Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
• Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses.
Agency: Office of Small Business
Programs.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 53 (Tuesday, March 18, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 14489-14499]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-5129]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States v. Cookson Group PLC, et. al.; 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 proposed Final Judgment and
Competitive Impact Statement have been filed with the United States
District Court for the District of Columbia in United States v. Cookson
Group plc, et. al., Civil Action No. 1:08-cv-00389. On March 4, 2008,
the United States filed a Complaint to obtain equitable and other
relief against defendants Cookson Group plc and Cookson America Inc.
(``Cookson''), and Foseco plc and Foseco Metallurgical Inc.
(``Foseco'') to prevent Cookson's proposed acquisition of Foseco. The
Complaint alleges that Cookson's acquisition of Foseco's United States
carbon-bonded ceramic refractory (``CBC'') business would substantially
lessen competition in the United States in the development,
manufacture, and sale of certain CBCs, in violation of section 7 of the
Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 18. The proposed Final Judgment,
filed on March 4, 2008, requires defendants to divest Foseco's entire
United States CBC business, including its plant in Saybrook, Ohio and
related assets.
Copies of the Complaint, proposed Final Judgment, and Competitive
Impact Statement are available for inspection at the Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, Antitrust Documents Group, 325 7th Street,
NW., Room 215, Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202-514-2481), on the
Department of Justice's Web site at https://www.usdoj.gov/atr, and at
the Office of the Clerk of the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia, Washington, DC. Copies of these materials may be
obtained from the Antitrust Division upon request and payment of a
copying fee set by Department of Justice regulations.
Public comment is invited within 60 days of the date of this
notice. Such comments, and Responses thereto, will be published in the
Federal Register
[[Page 14490]]
and filed with the Court. Comments should be directed to Maribeth
Petrizzi, Chief, Litigation II Section, Antitrust Division, U.S.
Department of Justice, 1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC
20530 (telephone: 202-307-0924).
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations, Antitrust Division.
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America, Department of Justice, Antitrust Division,
1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC 20530, Plaintiff, v.
Cookson Group, PLC, 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AE, England; Cookson
America, Inc., I Cookson Place, Providence, RI 02903-3248; FOSECO PLC,
Coleshill Road, Fazeley, Tamworth, Staffordshire B78 3TL, England; and
FOSECO Metallurgical Inc., 20200 Sheldon Road, Cleveland, OH 44142,
Defendants; Civil Action No. 1:08-cv-00389; Judge: Urbina, Ricardo M.;
Deck Type: Antitrust; Date Stamp: March 4, 2008
Complaint
The United States of America, acting under the direction of the
Attorney General of the United States, brings this civil antitrust
action to enjoin the proposed acquisition by Cookson Group plc of
Foseco plc and to obtain equitable and other relief. The United States
complains and alleges as follows:
I. Nature of the Action
1. On October 11, 2007, Cookson and Foseco announced that they had
reached agreement on the terms of a recommended cash offer by Cookson
for the entire issued and to-be-issued share capital of Foseco in a
transaction valued at approximately $1 billion.
2. Cookson and Foseco both manufacture and sell isostatically
pressed carbon bonded ceramics products (``CBCs''), which are used to
control the flow and enhance the quality of steel produced in the
continuous casting steelmaking process. Cookson's proposed acquisition
of Foseco would combine two of only three North American manufacturers
of certain CBCs.
3. The United States brings this action to enjoin Cookson's
proposed acquisition of Foseco because it would substantially lessen
competition in the markets for certain CBCs in violation of section 7
of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
II. Parties to the Proposed Acquisition
4. Cookson Group plc (``Cookson''), a United Kingdom corporation
with its headquarters in London, England, is a manufacturer and
processor of ceramics, electronics, and precious metals. Cookson's
total 2006 worldwide revenues were approximately $3.3 billion, and its
total 2006 U.S. revenues were about $356 million. Cookson America Inc.,
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Cookson Group plc, is a Delaware
corporation with its headquarters in Providence, Rhode Island. Cookson,
through its subsidiaries, manufactures CBCs in the United States and
Mexico and distributes them throughout the United States. In 2006,
Cookson's U.S. CBC revenues were about $75 million.
5. Foseco plc, a United Kingdom corporation with its headquarters
in Staffordshire, England, manufactures refractories and related
products for sale, and offers services worldwide to the steel and
foundry industries. Its total 2006 worldwide revenues were
approximately $817 million, and its total 2006 U.S. revenues were about
$110 million. Foseco Metallurgical Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Foseco plc, is a Delaware corporation with its headquarters in
Cleveland, Ohio (together with Foseco plc, ``Foseco''). Foseco
manufactures CBCs in the United States and distributes them throughout
the United States. In 2006, Foseco's U.S. CBC revenues were about $4
million.
III. Jurisdiction and Venue
6. The United States brings this action under section 15 of the
Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to prevent and restrain the
Defendants from violating section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
7. Defendants manufacture and sell CBCs in the flow of interstate
commerce. Defendants' activities in manufacturing and selling these
products substantially affect interstate commerce. This Court has
subject matter jurisdiction over this action pursuant to section 12 of
the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 22, and 28 U.S.C. 1331, 1337(a), and 1345.
8. Defendants have consented to venue and personal jurisdiction in
this judicial district and venue is proper under 28 U.S.C. 1391(d).
IV. Trade and Commerce
A. CBCs Generally
9. Refractories are non-metallic ceramics that serve as a heat
buffer or lining in industrial devices because they withstand extremely
high temperatures. In the steelmaking process, refractory products
serve as barriers between hot molten steel and the non-consumable
equipment such as the furnaces, ladles, and tundishes. A ladle is a
large container that receives molten steel from a furnace; a tundish is
a receptacle that receives steel from the ladle and to controls the
flow of steel into molds during the continuous casting process.
10. CBCs are consumable, isostatically pressed refractory products
that control the flow of molten steel from the ladle to the tundish and
onto the continuous casting mold during the continuous casting process.
CBCs are consumed through exposure to molten steel and must be replaced
frequently.
11. Isostatic pressing is a process used in the manufacture of CBCs
to increase the refractory materials' density and homogeneity,
resulting in a CBC with increased thermal shock resistance and
resistivity to chemical attack. Carbon-bonded alumina graphite is the
main refractory material used to make CBCs.
12. The ``design'' of a CBC refers to both its shape and the
alumina graphite recipe. Each customer uses different designs tailored
to the equipment it uses in the casting process. Customers with
multiple plants require custom-designed CBCs for each plant and may
require multiple custom-designed CBCs within each plant. Designs depend
on variables such as the customer's cast strand size and shape, casting
speed, and the steel grades produced. Customers change CBC recipes and/
or shapes in order to improve steel quality, meet new steel
specifications, or save on CBC costs.
13. CBCs undergo rigorous testing by the manufacturer and the
customer to ensure reliable performance and value under actual casting
conditions. Because CBCs are critical to the steelmaking process, most
customers have a policy of splitting sales between at least two
suppliers to ensure supply.
B. The Relevant Product Markets
1. Ladle Shrouds
14. Ladle shrouds are CBCs that prevent molten steel from re-
oxidizing and ensure the steel transfers safely from the ladle to the
tundish.
15. There are no good substitutes for ladle shrouds. A small but
significant post-acquisition increase in the price of ladle shrouds
would not cause customers to substitute another product or otherwise
reduce their usage of ladle shrouds in sufficient quantities so as to
make such a price increase unprofitable.
16. The manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds is a line of commerce
and a relevant product market within the meaning of section 7 of the
Clayton Act.
2. Stopper Rods
17. Stopper rods are CBCs used to control the flow of steel out of
the
[[Page 14491]]
tundish and are one of two types of devices, the other being slide gate
systems, that can perform this function. Customers use only one device
or the other in a given tundish. The choice of device depends on the
design of the tundish. Once the choice of tundish design has been made,
a customer cannot switch from a stopper rod to a slide gate system
without also replacing or substantially reconfiguring the tundish-
significantly disrupting their operations.
18. Because of high switching costs, a small but significant post-
acquisition increase in the price of stopper rods would not cause
customers to switch to slide gate systems or otherwise reduce their
usage of stopper rods in sufficient quantities so as to make such a
price increase unprofitable.
19. The manufacture and sale of stopper rods is a line of commerce
and a relevant product market within the meaning of section 7 of the
Clayton Act.
C. The Relevant Geographic Markets
20. Cookson and Foseco manufacture ladle shrouds and stopper rods
at facilities in North America for sale in the United States.
21. Virtually all ladle shrouds and stopper rods purchased by
customers in the United States are produced in plants located in North
America. Although a few manufacturers outside of North America make
ladle shrouds and stopper rods, firms with production facilities in
North America have a significant advantage over these foreign
manufacturers in delivered cost and/or in competing for customers that
value shorter lead times in their supply chain.
22. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of ladle shrouds and stopper rods would not cause customers in North
America to switch to purchases from manufacturers outside of North
America in sufficient numbers so as to make such a price increase
unprofitable.
23. Accordingly, within the meaning of section 7 of the Clayton
Act, the relevant geographic market for ladle shrouds and stopper rods
is North America.
D. Anticompetitive Effects: The Proposed Transaction Will Harm
Competition in the Markets for Ladle Shrouds and Stopper Rods
24. The production of ladle shrouds and stopper rods involves
similar materials and manufacturing processes. In general,
manufacturers that are successful in selling ladle shrouds to U.S.
customers are also successful in selling stopper rods to U.S.
customers, and vice versa.
25. Cookson and Foseco are two of only three firms that manufacture
and sell the vast majority of ladle shrouds and stopper rods to U.S.
customers. Cookson and Foseco have competed with one another on price,
service, and innovation in the markets for stopper rods and ladle
shrouds. The markets for ladle shrouds and stopper rods would become
substantially more concentrated if Cookson acquires Foseco. Cookson and
Foseco would have a combined share of approximately 75 percent. Using a
measure of market concentration called the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index
(``HHI'') (defined and explained in Appendix A), the proposed
transaction would increase the HHI in both markets by approximately 700
points to a post-transaction level in excess of 6000.
26. Customers request bids from ladle shroud and stopper rod
suppliers and consider price, quality, service, and innovation in
selecting the winning bidder. The proposed acquisition will eliminate
Foseco as an independent bidder.
27. This reduction in the number of active bidders from three to
two will reduce competition and likely will result in higher prices
and/or reductions in service and innovation for a significant number of
customers in the markets for ladle shrouds and stopper rods. The likely
anticompetitive effect is heightened due to customers' preferences to
maintain supply relationships with two independent suppliers
simultaneously. In light of such preferences, the proposed acquisition
will eliminate competition to be a customer's second supplier.
28. Foreign manufacturers likely will not have the incentive or
ability to defeat an anticompetitive increase in price or reduction in
service or innovation because of their high delivered costs, customers'
preferences for North American suppliers, and/or the poor quality and
reputation of their products.
29. The proposed acquisition will substantially lessen competition
in the manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds and stopper rods in the
United States in violation of section 7 of the Clayton Act.
E. Entry: New Entrants Will Not Defeat an Exercise of Market Power
30. Successful entry into the ladle shroud and stopper rod markets
would not be timely, likely, or sufficient to deter the anticompetitive
effects resulting from this transaction. Timely entry sufficient to
replace the market impact of Foseco would be difficult for several
reasons. A new entrant would need to acquire manufacturing facilities
in North America and capital equipment; assemble or develop
manufacturing, technical expertise, and personnel; conduct extensive
customer trials; and establish a reputation for quality and reliability
among U.S. customers. An entrant undertaking these steps would be
unable to enter in less than two years.
31. There are foreign firms with a share of the U.S. market for
more complex CBCs, known as subentry nozzles and subentry shrouds.
Because of the expertise and reputation they have developed in these
markets, theoretically they would be capable of entering the domestic
market for ladle shrouds and stopper rods. None of these firms,
however, are likely to open U.S. manufacturing facilities within the
next several years.
V. Violation Alleged
32. The proposed acquisition of Foseco by Cookson would
substantially lessen competition in interstate trade and commerce in
violation of section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
33. Unless restrained, the acquisition will have the following
anticompetitive effects, among others:
a. Competition in the markets for the manufacture and sale of ladle
shroud and stopper rods in the United States will be lessened
substantially;
b. Actual and potential competition between Cookson and Foseco in
the manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds and stopper rods in the
United States will be eliminated; and
c. Prices for ladle shrouds and stopper rods in the United States
likely will increase, and/or service and innovation likely will
decline.
VI. Request for Relief
34. Plaintiff requests that:
a. Cookson's proposed acquisition of Foseco be adjudged and decreed
to be unlawful and in violation of section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15
U.S.C. 18;
b. Defendants and all persons acting on their behalf be permanently
enjoined and restrained from consummating the proposed acquisition or
from entering into or carrying out any contract, agreement, plan, or
understanding, the effect of which would be to combine Cookson with the
operations of Foseco;
c. Plaintiff be awarded its costs for this action; and
d. Plaintiff receive such other and further relief as the Court
deems just and proper.
Respectfully submitted,
For Plaintiff United States of America:
/s/
Thomas O. Barnett,
[[Page 14492]]
Assistant Attorney General
DC Bar 426840.
/s/
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section
D.C. Bar 435204.
/s/
David L. Meyer,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General
DC Bar 414420.
/s/
J. Robert Kramer II,
Director of Operations and
Civil Enforcement
/s/
Dorothy B. Fountain,
Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section
DC Bar 439469
/s/
Leslie Peritz,
Helena Gardner,
Attorneys, United States Department of Justice, Antitrust Division,
Litigation II Section 1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC
20530 (202) 307-0924.
Dated: March 4, 2008.
Appendix A--Definition of ``HHI''
The term ``HHI'' means the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, a
commonly accepted measure of market concentration. The HHI 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 30, 30, 20, and 20
percent, the HHI is 2,600 (30\2\+30\2\+20\2\+20\2\=2,600). The HHI
takes into account the relative size and distribution of the firms
in a market. It approaches zero when a market is occupied by a large
number of firms of relatively equal size and reaches its maximum of
10,000 when a market is controlled by a single firm. 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 markets 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
significant antitrust concerns under the Department of Justice and
Federal Trade Commission 1992 Horizontal Merger Guidelines.
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v. Cookson Group PLC, Cookson
America Inc., FOSECO PLC, and FOSECO Metallurgical Inc., Defendants;
Case No.: 1:08-cv-00389, Judge: Urbina, Ricardo M. Deck Type:
Antitrust; Date Stamp: March 4, 2008
Final Judgment
Whereas, Plaintiff, United States of America, filed its Complaint
on March 4, 2008, the United States and defendants, Cookson Group plc
and Cookson America Inc. and Foseco plc and Foseco Metallurgical Inc.,
by their respective attorneys, have consented to the entry of this
Final Judgment without trial or adjudication of any issue of fact or
law, And without this Final Judgment constituting any evidence against
or admission by any party regarding any issue of fact or law;
And whereas, defendants agree to be bound by the provisions of this
Final Judgment pending its approval by the Court;
And whereas, the essence of this Final Judgment is the prompt and
certain divestiture of certain rights or assets by the defendants to
assure that competition is not substantially lessened;
And whereas, the United States requires defendants to make a
certain divestiture for the purpose of remedying the loss of
competition alleged in the Complaint;
And whereas, defendants have represented to the United States that
the divestiture required below can and will be made and that defendants
will later raise no claim of hardship or difficulty as grounds for
asking the Court to modify any of the divestiture provisions contained
below;
Now therefore, before any testimony is taken, without trial or
adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
parties, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed:
I. Jurisdiction
This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of and each of
the parties to this action. The Complaint states a claim upon which
relief may be granted against defendants under section 7 of the Clayton
Act, as amended (15 U.S.C. 18).
II. Definitions
As used in this Final Judgment:
A. ``Cookson'' means defendant Cookson Group plc, a United Kingdom
corporation with its headquarters in London, England, and Cookson
America Inc., a Delaware Corporation with its headquarters in
Providence, Rhode Island and includes its successors and assigns, and
its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, affiliates, partnerships and joint
ventures, and their directors, officers, managers, agents, and
employees.
B. ``Foseco'' means defendant Foseco plc, a United Kingdom
corporation with its headquarters in Tamworth, Staffordshire, England,
and Foseco Metallurgical Inc., a Delaware corporation with its
headquarters in Cleveland, Ohio and includes its successors and
assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, affiliates,
partnerships and joint ventures, and their directors, officers,
managers, agents, and employees.
C. ``CBCs'' means consumable, isostatically pressed refractory
products made of carbon-bonded alumina graphite that control the flow
of molten steel from the steel ladle to the continuous casting mold
during the continuous casting of steel.
D. ``Divestiture Business'' means Foseco's entire business engaged
in the development, design, production, servicing, distribution, and
sale of CBCs in the United States, including:
1. Foseco's Saybrook, Ohio facility, and the related leasehold;
2. all tangible assets used in the development, design, production,
servicing, distribution, and sale of CBCs in the United States,
including but not limited to all research data and activities and
development activities; all manufacturing equipment, including but not
limited to batch mix equipment, presses, drying and oven/kilning,
finishing, packaging, and tooling; all fixed assets, real property
(leased or owned), personal property, inventory, office furniture,
materials, supplies, on-or off-site warehouses or storage facilities
relating to the factory and property, and all other tangible property;
all licenses, permits and authorizations issued by any governmental
organization; all contracts, teaming arrangements, agreements, leases
(including renewal rights), commitments, certifications, and
understandings, including supply agreements; all customer lists,
contracts, accounts, and credit records or similar records of all sales
and potential sales; all sales support and promotional materials,
advertising materials, and production, sales and marketing files; all
repair and performance records; all other records; and, at the option
of the Acquirer, Foseco's U.S. water-modeling assets;
3. all intangible assets used in the development, design,
production, servicing, distribution, and sale of CBCs in the United
States, including, but not limited to, all patents, all pending patent
applications, licenses and sublicenses, intellectual property,
copyrights, trademarks (registered and unregistered), trade names,
service marks, and service names relating to the Divestiture Business,
but excluding the corporate-level name and device and trademark of
Foseco; all technical information, computer software and related
documentation, know-how, trade secrets, drawings, blueprints, designs,
design protocols, specifications for materials, specifications for
parts
[[Page 14493]]
and devices, safety procedures for the handling of materials and
substances, all research data concerning historic and current research
and development; quality assurance and control procedures, design
tools, and simulation capability; all manuals and technical information
provided to employees, customers, suppliers, agents or licensees, and
all research data concerning historic and current research and
development efforts relating to the Divestiture Business, including,
but not limited to, designs of CBCs, and the results of successful and
unsuccessful designs and trials; and
4. notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Final Judgment,
if requested by an Acquirer, and subject to the approval of the United
States in its sole discretion, defendants shall offer to enter into a
transition services agreement for a limited period with respect to
certain support services (e.g., HR, IT, and/or health and safety).
E. ``Bonnybridge Business'' means Foseco's European CBC business
and its facilities in Bonnybridge, Stirlingshire, Scotland, which the
European Commission has required to be divested along with the
Divestiture Business.
F. ``Acquirer'' means the entity to which defendants divest the
Divestiture Business.
III. Applicability
A. This Final Judgment applies to Cookson and Foseco, as defined
above, and all other persons in active concert or participation with
any of them who receive actual notice of this Final Judgment by
personal service or otherwise.
B. If, prior to complying with section IV and V of this Final
Judgment, defendants sell or otherwise dispose of all or substantially
all of their assets or of lesser business units that include the
Divestiture Business, they shall require the purchaser to be bound by
the provisions of this Final Judgment. Defendants need not obtain such
an agreement from the Acquirer of the assets divested pursuant to this
Final Judgment.
IV. Divestiture
A. Defendants are ordered and directed, within ninety (90) calendar
days after the filing of the Complaint in this matter, or five (5)
calendar days after notice of the entry of this Final Judgment by the
Court, whichever is later, to divest the Divestiture Business in a
manner consistent with this Final Judgment to an Acquirer acceptable to
the United States, in its sole discretion after consultation with the
European Commission. The United States, in its sole discretion, may
agree to one or more extensions of this time period not to exceed 60
calendar days in total, and shall notify the Court in such
circumstances. Defendants agree to use their best efforts to divest the
Divestiture Business as expeditiously as possible.
B. In accomplishing the divestiture ordered by this Final Judgment,
defendants promptly shall make known, by usual and customary means, the
availability of the Divestiture Business. Defendants shall inform any
person making inquiry regarding a possible purchase of the Divestiture
Business that it is being divested pursuant to this Final Judgment and
provide that person with a copy of this Final Judgment. Defendants
shall offer to furnish to all prospective Acquirers, subject to
customary confidentiality assurances, all information and documents
relating to the Divestiture Business customarily provided in a due
diligence process except such information or documents subject to the
attorney-client privileges or work-product doctrine. Defendants shall
make available such information to the United States at the same time
that such information is made available to any other person.
C. Defendants shall provide the Acquirer and the United States
information relating to the personnel involved in the production,
operation, research and development, design, and sale of CBCs to enable
the Acquirer to make offers of employment. Defendants shall not
interfere with any negotiations by the Acquirer to employ or contract
with any defendant employee responsible for any such activity related
to the Divestiture Business.
D. Defendants shall permit prospective Acquirers of the Divestiture
Business to have reasonable access to personnel responsible for the
Divestiture Business; to make inspections of the physical facilities of
the Divestiture Business; to have access to any and all environmental,
zoning, and other permit documents and information; and to have access
to any and all financial, operational, or other documents and
information customarily provided as part of a due diligence process.
E. Defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer that the Divestiture
Business will be operational on the date of sale.
F. Defendants shall not take any action that will impede in any way
the permitting, operation, or divestiture of the Divestiture Business.
G. Defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer that there are no
material defects in the environmental, zoning or other permits
pertaining to the operation of the Divestiture Business, and that
following the sale of the Divestiture Business, defendants will not
undertake, directly or indirectly, any challenges to the environmental,
zoning, or other permits relating to the operation of the Divestiture
Business.
H. 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 Divestiture
Business, and shall be accomplished in such a way as to satisfy the
United States, in its sole discretion, that the Divestiture Business
can and will be used by the Acquirer as part of a viable, ongoing
business for the manufacture and sale of CBCs in the United States. The
divestiture, whether pursuant to section IV or section V of this Final
Judgment,
1. shall be made to the acquirer of the Bonnybridge Business;
2. 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) of
competing effectively in the manufacture and sale of CBCs in the United
States; and
3. 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 defendants give defendants the ability unreasonably to
raise the Acquirer's costs, to lower the Acquirer's efficiency, or
otherwise to interfere in the ability of the Acquirer to compete
effectively in the manufacture and sale of CBCs in the United States.
V. Appointment of Trustee
A. If defendants have not divested the Divestiture Business within
the time period specified in section IV(A), defendants shall notify the
United States of that fact in writing. Upon application of the United
States, the Court shall appoint a trustee selected by the United
States, in consultation with the European Commission to ensure
selection of a trustee acceptable to both the United States and the
European Commission, and approved by the Court to effect the
divestiture of the Divestiture Business.
B. After the appointment of a trustee becomes effective, only the
trustee shall have the right to sell the Divestiture 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
[[Page 14494]]
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 defendants
any investment bankers, attorneys, or other agents, who shall be solely
accountable to the trustee, reasonably necessary in the trustee's
judgment to assist in the divestiture.
C. Defendants shall not object to a sale by the trustee on any
ground other than the trustee's malfeasance or that the Acquirer has
not been approved by the European Commission. Any objection by
defendants on the ground of trustee malfeasance 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; any objection by defendants based on lack of approval from the
European Commission must be conveyed in writing to the United States
and the trustee within the later of (i) five (5) days after the United
States provides defendants with written notice, pursuant to section
VI(C), stating that it does not object to the proposed divestiture of
the Divestiture Business or (ii) two (2) business days after the
European Commission notifies defendants that it does not approve of the
proposed Acquirer. D. The trustee shall serve at the cost and expense
of defendants, on such terms and conditions as the United States
approves, and shall account for all monies derived from the sale of the
assets sold by the trustee and all costs and expenses so incurred.
After approval by the Court of the trustee's accounting, including fees
for its services and those of any professionals and agents retained by
the trustee, all remaining money shall be paid to defendants and the
trust shall then be terminated. The compensation of the trustee and any
professionals and agents retained by the trustee shall be reasonable in
light of the value of the Divestiture 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. Defendants shall use their best efforts to assist the trustee in
accomplishing the required divestiture. The trustee and any
consultants, accountants, attorneys, and other persons retained by the
trustee shall have full and complete access to the personnel, books,
records, and facilities of the business to be divested, and defendants
shall develop financial and other information relevant to such business
as the trustee may reasonably request, subject to reasonable protection
for trade secret or other confidential research, development, or
commercial information. Defendants shall take no action to interfere
with or to impede the trustee's accomplishment of the divestiture.
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, any interest in the Divestiture 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
Divestiture Business.
G. If the trustee has not accomplished the divestiture ordered
under this Final Judgment within six months after its appointment, the
trustee shall promptly file with the Court a report setting forth (1)
the trustee's efforts to accomplish the required divestiture, (2) the
reasons, in the trustee's judgment, why the required divestiture has
not been accomplished, and (3) the trustee's recommendations. To the
extent such reports contain information that the trustee deems
confidential, such reports shall not be filed in the public docket of
the Court. The trustee shall at the same time furnish such report to
the United States which 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, defendants 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 defendants. 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 Divestiture Business, together with full details of the same.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of receipt by the United
States of such notice, the United States may request from defendants,
the proposed Acquirer(s), any other third party, or the trustee, if
applicable, additional information concerning the proposed divestiture,
the proposed Acquirer(s), and any other potential Acquirer. Defendants
and the trustee shall furnish any additional information requested
within fifteen (15) calendar days of the receipt of the request, unless
the parties shall otherwise agree.
C. Within thirty (30) calendar days after receipt of the notice or
within twenty (20) calendar days after the United States has been
provided the additional information requested from defendants, the
proposed Acquirer(s), any third party, and the trustee, whichever is
later, the United States shall provide written notice to defendants and
the trustee, if there is one, stating whether or not it objects to the
proposed divestiture. If the United States provides written notice that
it does not object, the divestiture may be consummated, subject only to
defendants' limited right to object to the sale under section V(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 defendants under section V(C), a
divestiture proposed under section V shall not be consummated unless
approved by the Court.
VII. Financing
Defendants 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, defendants shall take all steps necessary to comply with
the Hold Separate Stipulation and Order entered by this Court.
Defendants shall take no action that would jeopardize the divestiture
ordered by this Court.
IX. Affidavits
A. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the Complaint
in this matter, and every thirty (30) calendar days thereafter until
the divestiture has
[[Page 14495]]
been completed under section IV or V, defendants 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 Judgment. Each such affidavit shall
include the name, address, and telephone number of each person who,
during the preceding thirty (30) calendar 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 Divestiture 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 defendants have taken
to solicit buyers for the Divestiture Business, and to provide required
information to prospective Acquirers, 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 defendants, including limitations on
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, defendants shall deliver to the United States an
affidavit that describes in reasonable detail all actions defendants
have taken and all steps defendants have implemented on an ongoing
basis to comply with section VIII of this Final Judgment. Defendants
shall deliver to the United States an affidavit describing any changes
to the efforts and actions outlined in defendants' earlier affidavits
filed pursuant to this section within fifteen (15) calendar days after
the change is implemented.
C. Defendants shall keep all records of all efforts made to
preserve and divest the Divestiture Business until one year after such
divestiture has been completed.
X. Compliance Inspection
A. For the 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 authorized representatives of the United States
Department of Justice, including consultants and other persons retained
by the United States, shall, upon written request of an authorized
representative of the Assistant Attorney General in charge of the
Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice to defendants, be
permitted:
1. Access during defendants' office hours to inspect and copy, or
at the option of the United States, to require defendants to provide
hard copy or electronic copies of, all books, ledgers, accounts,
records, data, and documents in the possession, custody, or control of
defendants, relating to any matters contained in this Final Judgment;
and
2. to interview, either informally or on the record, defendants'
officers, employees, or agents, who may have their individual counsel
present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be subject to the
reasonable convenience of the interviewee and without restraint or
interference by defendants.
B. Upon the written request of an authorized representative of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division,
defendants shall submit written reports or responses to written
interrogatories, under oath if requested, relating to any of the
matters contained in this Final Judgment as may be requested.
C. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in
this section shall be divulged by the United States to any person other
than an authorized representative of the executive branch of the United
States, except in the course of legal proceedings to which the United
States is a party (including grand jury proceedings), or for the
purpose of securing compliance with this Final Judgment, or as
otherwise required by law.
D. If at the time information or documents are furnished by
defendants to the United States, defendants represent and identify in
writing the material in any such information or documents to which a
claim of protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(7) of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure, and defendants mark each pertinent page of
such material, ``Subject to claim of protection under Rule 26(c)(7) of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then the United States shall
give defendants ten (10) calendar days notice prior to divulging such
material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand jury proceeding).
XI. No Reacquisition
Defendants may not reacquire any part of the Divestiture Business
during the term of this Final Judgment.
XII. Retention of Jurisdiction
This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this Final
Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders and
directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or construe
this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to enforce
compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.
XIII. Expiration of Final Judgment
Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall
expire ten years from the date of its entry.
XIV. Public Interest Determination
Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The parties
have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16, including making copies available to the
public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement, and
any comments thereon and the United States's 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 Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16.
United States District Judge.
The United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v. Cookson Group PLC, Cookson
America Inc., FOSECO PLC, and FOSECO Metallurgical Inc., Defendants;
Case No.: 1:08-cv-00389; Judge: Urbina, Ricardo M.; Deck Type:
Antitrust; Date Stamp: March 4, 2008.
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
Defendant Cookson Group plc and Defendant Foseco plc have entered
into an agreement whereby Cookson will acquire Foseco. The United
States filed a civil antitrust Complaint on March, 2008 seeking to
enjoin the proposed acquisition. The Complaint alleges that the likely
effect of this acquisition would be to lessen competition substantially
in the markets for certain isostatically pressed carbon bonded ceramics
products (``CBCs''), in violation of section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15
U.S.C. 18. This loss of competition likely would result in increased
prices and/or a reduction in service and
[[Page 14496]]
innovation in the manufacture and sale of such CBCs in the United
States.
At the same time the Complaint was filed, the United States also
filed a Hold Separate Stipulation and Order (``Hold Separate'') and
proposed Final Judgment, which are designed to eliminate the
anticompetitive effects of the acquisition. Under the proposed Final
Judgment, which is explained more fully below, defendants are required
to divest Foseco's business engaged in the development, design,
production, servicing, distribution, and sale of CBCs in the United
States, including the CBC plant in Saybrook, Ohio and related assets
(hereafter the ``Divestiture Business''). Under the terms of the Hold
Separate, defendants will take certain steps to ensure that the
Divestiture Business is operated as a competitively independent,
economically viable, and ongoing business concern; that it will remain
independent and uninfluenced by the consummation of the acquisition;
and that competition in the market for CBCs is maintained during the
pendency of the ordered divestiture.
The United States and defendants have stipulated that the proposed
Final Judgment may be entered after compliance with the APPA. Entry of
the proposed Final Judgment would terminate this action, except that
the Court would retain jurisdiction to construe, modify, or enforce the
provisions of the proposed Final Judgment and to punish violations
thereof.
II. Description of the Events Giving Rise to the Alleged Violation
A. The Defendants and the Proposed Transaction
Cookson, a United Kingdom corporation with its headquarters in
London, England, is a manufacturer and processor of ceramics,
electronics, and precious metals. Cookson, through its subsidiary,
Cookson America Inc., manufactures CBCs in the United States and Mexico
and sells them throughout the United States. In 2006, Cookson's U.S.
CBC revenues were about $75 million.
Foseco, a United Kingdom corporation with its headquarters in
Staffordshire, England, manufactures refractories and related products
for sale and offers services worldwide to the steel and foundry
industries. Foseco, through its subsidiary, Foseco Metallurgical Inc.,
manufactures CBCs in the United States and sells them throughout the
United States. In 2006, Foseco's U.S. CBC revenues were about $4
million.
On October 11, 2007, Cookson and Foseco announced that they had
reached an agreement on the terms of a recommended cash offer by
Cookson for the entire issued and to-be-issued share capital of Foseco
in a transaction valued at approximately $1 billion.
B. The Competitive Effects of the Transaction
1. CBCs Generally
Refractories are non-metallic ceramics that serve as a heat buffer
or lining in industrial devices because they withstand extremely high
temperatures. In the steelmaking process, refractory products serve as
barriers between hot molten steel and the non-consumable equipment such
as the furnaces, ladles (large containers that receive molten steel
from a furnace), and tundishes (receptacles that receive steel from the
ladle).
CBCs are consumable, isostatically pressed refractory products that
control the flow of molten steel from the ladle to the tundish and onto
the continuous casting mold during the continuous casting process.
Isostatic pressing is a process used in the manufacture of CBCs to
increase the refractory materials' density and homogeneity, resulting
in a CBC with increased thermal shock resistance and resistivity to
chemical attack. Carbon-bonded alumina graphite is the main refractory
material used to make CBCs. CBCs are consumed through exposure to
molten steel and must be replaced frequently.
The ``design'' of a CBC refers to both its shape and the alumina
graphite recipe. Each customer uses different designs tailored to the
equipment it uses in the casting process. Customers with multiple
plants require custom-designed CBCs for each plant and may require
multiple custom-designed CBCs within each plant. Designs depend on
variables such as the customer's cast strand size and shape, casting
speed, and the steel grades produced. Customers change CBC recipes and/
or shapes in order to improve steel quality, meet new steel
specifications, or save on CBC costs.
CBCs undergo rigorous testing by the manufacturer and the customer
to ensure reliable performance and value under actual casting
conditions. Because CBCs are critical to the steelmaking process, most
customers have a policy of splitting sales between at least two
suppliers to ensure supply.
2. Relevant Product Markets
Ladle Shrouds
The Complaint alleges that the manufacture and sale of ladle
shrouds is a line of commerce and a relevant product market within the
meaning of section 7 of the Clayton Act. Ladle shrouds are CBCs that
prevent molten steel from re-oxidizing and ensure the steel transfers
safely from the ladle to the tundish.
There are no good substitutes for ladle shrouds. The Complaint
alleges that a small but significant post-acquisition increase in the
price of ladle shrouds would not cause customers to substitute another
product or otherwise reduce their usage of ladle shrouds in sufficient
quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable.
Accordingly, the manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds is a relevant
product market.
Stopper Rods
The Complaint alleges that the manufacture and sale of stopper rods
is a line of commerce and a relevant product market within the meaning
of section 7 of the Clayton Act. Stopper rods are CBCs used to control
the flow of steel out of the tundish and are one of two types of
devices, the other being slide gate systems, that can perform this
function. The choice of device depends on the design of the tundish.
Once the choice of tundish design has been made, a customer cannot
switch from a stopper rod to a slide gate system without also replacing
or substantially reconfiguring the tundish-significantly disrupting
their operations.
The Complaint alleges that, because of high switching costs, a
small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price of stopper
rods would not cause customers to switch to slide gate systems or
otherwise reduce their usage of stopper rods in sufficient quantities
so as to make such a price increase unprofitable. Accordingly, the
manufacture and sales of stopper rods is a relevant product market.
3. Relevant Geographic Market
Cookson and Foseco manufacture ladle shrouds and stopper rods at
facilities in North America for sale in the United States. The
Complaint alleges that virtually all ladle shrouds and stopper rods
purchased by customers in the United States are produced in plants
located in North America. Although a few manufacturers outside of North
America make ladle shrouds and stopper rods, firms with production
facilities in North America have a significant advantage over these
foreign manufacturers in delivered cost and/or in competing for
customers that value shorter lead times in their supply chain.
The Complaint alleges that a small but significant post-acquisition
increase in the price of ladle shrouds and stopper
[[Page 14497]]
rods would not cause customers in North America to switch to purchases
from manufacturers outside of North America in sufficient numbers so as
to make such a price increase unprofitable. Accordingly, the relevant
geographic market for ladle shrouds and stopper rods is North America.
4. Anticompetitive Effects
Cookson and Foseco are two of only three firms that manufacture and
sell the vast majority of ladle shrouds and stopper rods to U.S.
customers. Cookson and Foseco have competed with one another on price,
service, and innovation in the markets for stopper rods and ladle
shrouds. The markets for ladle shrouds and stopper rods would become
substantially more concentrated if Cookson acquires Foseco. For
example, Cookson and Foseco would have a combined share of
approximately 75 percent. 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 both
markets by approximately 700 points to a post-transaction level in
excess of 6000.
Customers request bids from ladle shroud and stopper rod suppliers
and consider price, quality, service, and innovation when selecting the
winning bidder. The proposed acquisition will eliminate Foseco as an
independent bidder. This reduction in the number of active bidders from
three to two will reduce competition and likely will result in higher
prices and/or reductions in service and innovation for a significant
number of customers in the markets for ladle shrouds and stopper rods.
The likely anticompetitive effects are heightened due to customers'
preferences to maintain supply relationships with two independent
suppliers simultaneously. In light of such preferences, the proposed
acquisition will eliminate competition to be a customer's second
supplier.
Moreover, manufacturers outside of North America likely will not
have the incentive or ability to defeat an anticompetitive increase in
price or reduction in service or innovation because of their high
delivered costs, customers' preferences for North American suppliers,
and/or the poor quality and reputation of their products.
Further, successful entry into the ladle shroud and stopper rod
markets would not be timely, likely, or sufficient to deter the
anticompetitive effects resulting from this transaction. Timely entry
sufficient to replace the market impact of Foseco would be difficult
for several reasons. A new entrant would need to acquire capital
equipment and manufacturing facilities in North America; assemble or
develop manufacturing, technical, and personnel expertise; conduct
extensive customer trials; and establish a reputation for quality and
reliability among U.S. customers. An entrant undertaking these steps
would need to undertake these steps would be unable to enter in less
than two years.
There are foreign firms with a share of the U.S. market for more
complex CBCs. Because of the expertise and reputation they have
developed in these markets, theoretically they are capable of entering
the domestic market for ladle shrouds and stopper rods. None of these
firms, however, is likely to open North American manufacturing
facilities within the next several years.
As a result of these barriers to entry into the North American
market for ladle shrouds and stopper rods, entry by any other firm into
the manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds and stopper rods will not be
timely, likely, or sufficient to deter the anticompetitive effects
resulting from this transaction.
III. Explanation of the Proposed Final Judgment
The divestiture requirement of the proposed Final Judgment will
eliminate the anticompetitive effects of the acquisition in the markets
for ladle shrouds and stopper rods by establishing a new, independent,
and economically viable competitor. The proposed Final Judgment
requires defendants, within 90 days after the filing of the Complaint,
or five days after notice of the entry of the Final Judgment by the
Court, whichever is later, to divest, as a viable ongoing business, the
Divestiture Business, which includes Foseco's CBC plant in Saybrook,
Ohio and related tangible and intangible assets.\1\ The assets must be
divested in such a way as to satisfy the United States, in its sole
discretion, that the Divestiture Business can and will be operated by
the purchaser as a viable, ongoing business capable of competing
effectively in the relevant markets. Defendants must take all
reasonable steps necessary to accomplish the divestiture quickly and
shall cooperate with prospective purchasers.
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\1\ The parties agreed to remedy the adverse effects in the
markets for ladle shrouds and stopper rods by divesting the entire
U.S. CBC business, including the Saybrook facility where Foseco
manufactures all of the CBCs it sells in the United States. The
proposed remedy would enable the purchaser to offer the ``full
line'' of CBCs currently being sold by Foseco--including, for
instance, subentry nozzles and subentry shrouds--which would ensure
that the purchaser would have the incentive and all the assets
necessary to be an effective, long-term competitor in these
products.
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In the event that defendants do not accomplish the divestiture
within the period prescribed in the proposed Final Judgment, the Final
Judgment provides that the Court will appoint a trustee selected by the
United States to effect the divestiture. If a trustee is appointed, the
proposed Final Judgment provides that defendants will pay all costs and
expenses of the trustee. The trustee's commission will be structured so
as to provide an incentive for the trustee based on the price obtained
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, 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.
Selected Provisions of the Proposed Final Judgment
Section IV(H) of the proposed Final Judgment requires defendants to
sell the Divestiture Business--Foseco's CBC business in the United
States--to the acquirer of Foseco's European CBC business, which
includes assets in Bonnybridge, Stirlingshire, Scotland (the
``Bonnybridge Business''). This requirement is warranted because the
European Commission is requiring defendants to divest the Bonnybridge
Business, and because of the practical difficulties of splitting
between two acquirers rights to certain intellectual property and know-
how used by both businesses.
Because the United States and the European Commission both must
approve the same acquirer, section IV(A) of the proposed Final Judgment
provides that the United States will consult with the European
Commission in exercising its review of defendants' sale of the
Divestiture Business in a manner consistent with the proposed Final
Judgment, to an acquirer acceptable to the United States in its sole
discretion. As noted above, if the defendants do not divest the
Divestiture Business within the required time period, the Court, upon
application of the United States, is to appoint a trustee to complete
the divestiture. Because the European Commission also requires
selection of a trustee if the divestiture is not completed within a
certain time,
[[Page 14498]]
section V(A) of the proposed Final Judgment provides that the United
States shall select a trustee after consultation with the European
Commission to ensure selection of a trustee acceptable to both the
United States and the European Commission.
The divestiture provisions of the proposed Final Judgment will
eliminate the anticompetitive effects of the acquisition in the
manufacture and sale of ladle shrouds and stopper rods in the United
States.
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 defendants.
V. Procedures Available for Modification of the Proposed Final Judgment
The United States and defendants have stipulated that the proposed
Final Judgment may be entered by the Court after compliance with the
provisions of the APPA, provided that the United States has not
withdrawn its consent. The APPA conditions entry upon the Court's
determination that the proposed Final Judgment is in the public
interest.
The APPA provides a period of at least sixty (60) 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 (60) days of the date of publication of this Competitive
Impact Statement in the Federal Register, or the last date of
publication in a newspaper of the summary of this Competitive Impact
Statement, whichever is later. All comments received during this period
will be considered by the United States 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, Antitrust Division, United States Department of
Justice, 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 Final Judgment.
VI. Alternatives to the Proposed Final Judgment
The United States considered, as an alternative to the proposed
Final Judgment, a full trial on the merits against defendants. The
United States could have continued the litigation and sought
preliminary and permanent injunctions against Cookson's acquisition of
Foseco. The United States is satisfied, however, that the divestiture
of assets described in the proposed Final Judgment will preserve
competition for the provision of ladle shrouds and stopper rods in the
United States. Thus, the proposed Final Judgment would achieve all or
substantially all of the relief the United States would have obtained
through litigation, but avoids the time, expense, and uncertainty of a
full trial on the merits of the Complaint.
VII. Standard of Review Under the APPA for the Proposed Final Judgment
The Clayton Act, as amend