United States v. VA Partners I, LLC, et al.; Public Comment and Response on Proposed Final Judgment, 72832-72837 [2016-25525]
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United States v. VA Partners I, LLC, et
al.; Public Comment and Response on
Proposed Final Judgment
JOINT BOARD FOR THE
ENROLLMENT OF ACTUARIES
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Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures
and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(b)–(h),
the United States hereby publishes
below the comment received on the
proposed Final Judgment in United
States v. VA Partners I, LLC, et al., Case
No. 16–cv–01672 (WHA) (N.D. Cal.),
together with the Response of the
United States to Public Comment.
Copies of the comment and the
United States’ Response are available for
inspection at the Department of Justice
Antitrust Division, 450 Fifth Street NW.,
Suite 1010, Washington, DC 20530
(telephone: 202–514–2481), on the
Department of Justice’s Web site at
https://www.justice.gov/atr/case/us-vva-partners-i-llc-et-al, and at the Office
of the Clerk of the United States District
Court for the North District of
California, 450 Golden Gate Avenue,
San Francisco, CA 94102. Copies of any
of these materials may also be obtained
upon request and payment of a copying
fee.
Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement.
Kathleen S. O’Neill
Joseph Chandra Mazumdar
Brian E. Hanna
Robert A. Lepore
U.S. Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
450 Fifth Street NW., Suite 8000
Washington, DC 20530
Tel: (202) 307–2931
Fax: (202) 307–2874
Email: kathleen.oneill@usdoj.gov
Email: chan.mazumdar@usdoj.gov
Email: brian.hanna2@usdoj.gov
Email: robert.lepore@usdoj.gov
Tai Milder
U.S. Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
450 Golden Gate Avenue, Room 10–
0101
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Box 36046
San Francisco, CA 94012
Tel: (415) 934–5300
Fax: (415) 934–5399
Email: tai.milder@usdoj.gov
Attorneys for Plaintiff United States of
America
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO
DIVISION
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff, v.
VA PARTNERS I, LLC, et al.,
Defendants.
Case No. 16–cv–01672 (WHA)
PLAINTIFF’S RESPONSE TO PUBLIC
COMMENT
RESPONSE OF THE UNITED STATES
TO PUBLIC COMMENT ON THE
PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT
Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures
and Penalties Act (‘‘APPA’’), 15 U.S.C.
§ 16(b)–(h), the United States hereby
files the single public comment received
concerning the proposed Final
Judgment in this case and responds to
this comment. After careful
consideration of the comment, the
United States continues to believe that
the proposed Final Judgment provides
an effective and appropriate remedy for
the antitrust violations alleged in the
Complaint. The United States will move
the Court for entry of the proposed Final
Judgment after the public comment and
this response have been published in
the Federal Register pursuant to 15
U.S.C. § 16(d).
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On April 4, 2016, the United States
filed a civil antitrust Complaint against
VA Partners I, LLC, (‘‘VA Partners I’’),
ValueAct Capital Master Fund, L.P.
(‘‘Master Fund’’), and ValueAct CoInvest International, L.P. (‘‘Co-Invest
Fund’’) (collectively, ‘‘ValueAct’’ or
‘‘Defendants’’), to remedy violations of
Section 7A of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
§ 18a, commonly known as the HartScott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements
Act of 1976 (the ‘‘HSR Act’’).
Following the filing of the Complaint,
the parties engaged in settlement
discussions that culminated in a
consensual resolution of this matter. On
July 12, 2016, the United States filed a
proposed Final Judgment, a Stipulation
and Proposed Order, and a Competitive
Impact Statement (‘‘CIS’’) that explains
how the proposed Final Judgment is
designed to apply an appropriate
penalty for, and adequately restrain,
Defendants’ HSR Act violations. (ECF
No. 38, 39.) As required by the APPA,
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the United States published the
proposed Final Judgment and CIS in the
Federal Register on July 25, 2016. See
81 Fed. Reg. 48,450 (July 25, 2016). In
addition, the United States ensured that
a summary of the terms of the proposed
Final Judgment and the CIS, together
with directions for the submission of
written comments, were published in
The Washington Post and the San
Francisco Chronicle on seven different
days during the period of July 18, 2016
to July 24, 2016. See 15 U.S.C. § 16(c).
The 60-day waiting period for public
comments ended on September 23,
2016. One comment was received and
is described below and attached as
Exhibit 1.
II. THE COMPLAINT AND PROPOSED
SETTLEMENT
The Complaint alleges that ValueAct
violated the HSR Act by failing to
comply with the Act’s premerger
notification and reporting requirements
in connection with its acquisition of
voting securities of Halliburton Co.
(‘‘Halliburton’’) and Baker Hughes Inc.
(‘‘Baker Hughes’’) in 2014 and 2015.
The HSR Act states that ‘‘no person
shall acquire, directly or indirectly, any
voting securities of any person’’
exceeding certain thresholds until that
person has filed pre-acquisition
notification and report forms with the
Antitrust Division of the Department of
Justice (‘‘DOJ’’) and the Federal Trade
Commission (‘‘FTC’’) (collectively, the
‘‘Agencies’’) and the post-filing waiting
period has expired. 15 U.S.C. § 18a. A
key purpose of the notification and
waiting period is to protect consumers
and competition from potentially
anticompetitive transactions by
providing the Agencies an opportunity
to conduct an antitrust review of
proposed acquisitions of voting
securities exceeding certain thresholds
before they are consummated.
As alleged in the Complaint and
described further in the CIS, ValueAct
made substantial purchases of stock in
two direct competitors with the intent to
participate in those companies’ business
decisions, without first complying with
the notification and waiting period
requirements of the HSR Act. Through
these purchases, ValueAct
simultaneously became one of the
largest shareholders of both Halliburton
and Baker Hughes. ValueAct established
these positions as Halliburton and Baker
Hughes—the second- and third-largest
providers of oilfield services in the
world—were being investigated for
agreeing to a merger that threatened to
substantially lessen competition in over
twenty product markets in the United
States. The United States filed a lawsuit
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to challenge the merger on April 6,
2016, and Halliburton and Baker
Hughes abandoned the transaction a few
weeks later. ValueAct’s failure to
comply with the HSR Act risked the
government’s ability to protect
competition because it prevented the
United States from reviewing in
advance ValueAct’s stock acquisitions,
which were made with the intent of
participating in the companies’ business
decisions and intervening with the
management of each firm as necessary
to increase the probability of the
Halliburton-Baker Hughes merger being
completed.
The Complaint alleges that
Defendants could not excuse their
failure to file the necessary notification
and reporting forms by relying on the
HSR Act’s limited exemption for
acquisitions made ‘‘solely for the
purposes of investment’’ (the
‘‘investment-only exemption’’). Section
18a(c)(9) of the HSR Act exempts
‘‘acquisitions, solely for the purpose of
investment, of voting securities, if, as a
result of such acquisition, the securities
acquired or held do not exceed 10 per
centum of the outstanding voting
securities of the issuer.’’ As explained in
the regulations implementing the HSR
Act, voting securities are held ‘‘solely
for the purpose of investment’’ if the
acquirer has ‘‘no intention of
participating in the formulation,
determination, or direction of the basic
business decisions of the issuer.’’ 16
C.F.R. § 801.1(i)(1) (‘‘HSR Rule
801.1(i)(1)’’).
As alleged in the Complaint, ValueAct
did not qualify for the investment-only
exemption because it intended from the
time it purchased stock in these
companies to participate in the business
decisions of both companies.
Specifically, ValueAct intended to use
its position as a major shareholder of
both Halliburton and Baker Hughes to
obtain access to management; to learn
information about the companies and
the merger in private conversations with
senior executives; to influence the
decisions of these senior executives in
a manner that increased the likelihood
that Halliburton and Baker Hughes
would be able to complete their
anticompetitive merger; and ultimately
to influence other business decisions
regardless of whether the merger was
consummated. The totality of the
evidence, as described further in the
Complaint, demonstrates that ValueAct
was not entitled to claim the
investment-only exemption.
The proposed Final Judgment
provides for injunctive relief and the
payment of civil penalties, which are
designed to prevent future violations of
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the HSR Act. Specifically, the proposed
Final Judgment prohibits Defendants
from relying on the investment-only
exemption if they intend to take, or their
investment strategy identifies
circumstances in which they may take,
any of several specifically enumerated
actions that reflect active participation
in the company in which they are
investing. The prohibited conduct
provisions are aimed at deterring future
HSR violations of the sort alleged in the
Complaint. While this provision does
not represent a comprehensive list of all
conduct that would disqualify an
acquirer of voting securities from
relying on the investment-only
exemption, it is aimed at deterring
conduct that poses the greatest threat to
competition. The proposed Final
Judgment also provides for compliance,
access, and inspection procedures to
promote Defendants’ compliance with
the proposed Final Judgment and to
enable the United States to monitor
such compliance. Finally, the proposed
Final Judgment imposes an $11 million
civil penalty for Defendants’ HSR Act
violation. This penalty reflects the
gravity of the conduct at issue and will
adequately deter ValueAct and other
companies from future HSR Act
violations.
III. STANDARD OF JUDICIAL REVIEW
The APPA requires that proposed
consent judgments in antitrust cases
brought by the United States be subject
to a sixty (60) day comment period, after
which the court shall determine
whether entry of the proposed Final
Judgment is ‘‘in the public interest.’’ 15
U.S.C. § 16(e)(1). In making this public
interest determination, the Court 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.
15 U.S.C. § 16(e)(1)(A) & (B).
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The public interest inquiry is
necessarily a limited one, as the United
States is entitled to deference in crafting
its antitrust settlements, especially with
respect to the scope of its complaint and
the adequacy of its remedy. See
generally United States v. Microsoft
Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1461 (D.C. Cir.
1995) (holding that government is
entitled to ‘‘broad discretion to settle
with the defendant within the reaches of
the public interest’’); United States v.
SBC Commc’ns, Inc., 489 F. Supp. 2d 1,
10–11 (D.D.C. 2007) (assessing public
interest standard under the Tunney
Act); United States v. US Airways
Group, Inc., 38 F. Supp. 3d 69, 75
(D.D.C. 2014) (noting that the court’s
‘‘inquiry is limited’’ because the
government has ‘‘broad discretion’’ to
determine the adequacy of the relief
secured through a settlement); United
States v. InBev N.V./S.A., No. 08–1965
(JR), 2009–2 Trade Cas. (CCH) ¶ 76,736,
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *3,
(D.D.C. Aug. 11, 2009) (noting that the
court’s review of a consent judgment is
limited and only inquires ‘‘into whether
the government’s determination that the
proposed remedies will cure the
antitrust violations alleged in the
complaint was reasonable, and whether
the mechanism to enforce the final
judgment are clear and manageable’’).
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) (quoting 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);
InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at
*3. 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
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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).
Courts ‘‘may not require that the
remedies perfectly match the alleged
violations.’’ SBC Commc’ns, 489 F.
Supp. 2d at 17. Rather, the ultimate
question is whether ‘‘the remedies
[obtained in the decree are] so
inconsonant with the allegations
charged as to fall outside of the ‘reaches
of the public interest.’’’ Microsoft, 56
F.3d at 1461. Accordingly, 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; see also United States
v. Apple, Inc., 889 F. Supp. 2d 623, 631
(S.D.N.Y. 2012). And, 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 the public
interest.’’ United States v. Am. Tel. &
Tel. Co., 552 F. Supp. 131, 151 (D.D.C.
1982) (citations and internal quotations
omitted); 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).
In its 2004 amendments to the APPA,1
Congress made clear its intent to
preserve the practical benefits of
utilizing consent decrees in antitrust
enforcement by 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 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; see also United States
v. Enova Corp., 107 F. Supp. 2d 10, 17
(D.D.C. 2000) (‘‘[T]he Tunney Act
expressly allows the court to make its
public interest determination based on
1 The 2004 amendments substituted ‘‘shall’’ for
‘‘may’’ when setting forth the relevant factors for
courts 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).
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the basis of the competitive impact
statement and response to public
comments alone.’’); US Airways, 38 F.
Supp. 3d at 76 (same).
IV. SUMMARY OF PUBLIC COMMENT
AND RESPONSE OF THE UNITED
STATES
During the 60-day comment period,
the United States received one
comment, from Phillip Goldstein,
manager of activist hedge fund Bulldog
Investors. Mr. Goldstein does not argue
that the relief set forth in the proposed
Final Judgment is inadequate to address
the allegations in the Complaint, nor
does he assert that the terms of the
decree should be altered in any
particular way. Instead, Mr. Goldstein
claims that it ‘‘appears’’ that ValueAct
settled this matter because the FTC
increased the civil penalties for HSR
violations and took the position that
such increases could apply
retroactively. Mr. Goldstein also claims
that HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1)—the FTC’s
1978 rule explaining the meaning of the
‘‘investment only’’ exemption—
‘‘irrationally’’ draws a distinction
between passive and active investors
and thus should be revised. Mr.
Goldstein further claims that HSR Rule
801.1(i)(1) is unconstitutional because it
violates the First Amendment. In light
of these arguments, Mr. Goldstein urges
the United States to seek a stay of this
enforcement action until this rule is
revised. As explained below, none of
Mr. Goldstein’s arguments warrant
delaying entry of the proposed Final
Judgment.
First, as fully detailed in the CIS, the
United States settled this case because
it determined that the injunction and
$11 million penalty imposed on
ValueAct was in the public interest
because this relief adequately addresses
and reflects the gravity of ValueAct’s
wrongful conduct and will strongly
deter ValueAct and other companies
from violating the HSR Act. None of Mr.
Goldstein’s arguments provide a basis
for questioning, let alone, overruling the
United States’ broad discretion in
reaching this determination.
Second, Mr. Goldstein’s passing
reference to ValueAct’s supposed
‘‘coerced capitulation’’ in agreeing to
settle this action misses the mark
because the sole purpose of the Tunney
Act review process is to determine why
the Agencies—rather than a defendant—
decided to settle a civil antitrust
enforcement action and whether doing
so was in the public interest. Bechtel,
648 F.2d at 666 (‘‘The court’s role in
[the Tunney Act review process] is one
of insuring that the government has not
breached its duty to the public in
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consenting to the decree . . . [and] to
determine . . . whether the settlement
is ‘within the reaches of the public
interest.’’’); Inbev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
84787, at *3 (noting that the relevant
inquiry during the Tunney Act review
process is ‘‘whether the government’s
determination that the proposed
remedies will cure the antitrust
violations alleged in the complaint was
reasonable’’). In any event, Mr.
Goldstein’s assertion that ValueAct was
purportedly forced to settle because the
FTC increased the potential fines during
the pendency of this action ignores the
fact that the $11 million fine that
ValueAct agreed to pay was within the
fine amount that the United States
sought when it filed this action and that
this amount was based on the penalties
in effect prior to publication of the
FTC’s interim final rule on June 30,
2016. See Cmplt. ¶ 6 & Request for
Relief.
Third, Mr. Goldstein’s lengthy
argument that the distinction drawn in
HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1) between passive
and active investors is ‘‘irrational’’ and
should be revised is similarly outside
the scope of this proceeding. As noted
above, the court’s inquiry in a Tunney
Act proceeding is limited to ‘‘whether
the government’s determination that the
proposed remedies will cure the
antitrust violations alleged in the
complaint was reasonable, and whether
the mechanism[s] to enforce the final
judgment are clear and manageable.’’
InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at
*3. Mr. Goldstein’s assertions that HSR
Rule 801.1(i)(1)—a rule that has been in
effect for nearly thirty years—is
‘‘irrational’’ and should be revised are
wholly irrelevant to the sole question
before the Court: whether the proposed
Final Judgment adequately addresses
the harms alleged in the Complaint. In
other words, Mr. Goldstein’s assertions
are plainly outside the scope of the
limited review that Congress established
under the Tunney Act. To the extent Mr.
Goldstein wishes to dispute the
appropriateness of HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1)
and how it is applied, he can direct his
suggestions to the FTC (or could have
commented when the rule was
originally passed 2). He cannot,
however, use his general opposition to
HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1) as a basis to reject
or delay entry of the proposed Final
Judgment.
Finally, Mr. Goldstein’s suggestion
that this Court should reject the
proposed Final Judgment because HSR
2 Contrary to Mr. Goldstein’s comment, the
original revised HSR rules, including 16 C.F.R.
§ 801.1(i)(1), were subject to public comment prior
to being adopted. See 42 Fed. Reg. 39040, 39047
(Aug. 1, 1977).
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Rule 801.1(i)(1) is ‘‘unconstitutional’’
has no merit. To the extent that this
assertion—which has no bearing on
whether the proposed Final Judgment
adequately addresses the antitrust
violations alleged in the Complaint—is
properly before the Court, HSR Rule
801.1(i)(1) is content neutral and does
not violate the First Amendment. Even
if the rule implicated First Amendment
interests, it would readily withstand
review. See Cableamerica Corp. v. FTC,
795 F. Supp. 1082, 1093 (N.D. Ala.
1992) (dismissing claim that the FTC’s
enforcement of the HSR Act’s reporting
requirements violated the plaintiff’s
First Amendment rights).
For all of these reasons, Mr.
Goldstein’s public comment provides no
basis to deny or delay entry of the
proposed Final Judgment.
V. CONCLUSION
After reviewing the public comment,
the United States continues to believe
that the proposed Final Judgment, as
drafted, provides an effective and
appropriate remedy for the antitrust
violations alleged in the Complaint, and
is therefore in the public interest. The
United States will move this Court to
enter the proposed Final Judgment after
the comment and this response are
published in the Federal Register.
Date: October 17, 2016
Respectfully submitted,
/s/Kathleen S. O’Neill
Kathleen S. O’Neill
U.S. Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
450 5th St. NW, 8000
Washington, DC 20530
Tel: (202) 307–2931
Fax: (202) 307–2784
Email: kathleen.oneill@usdoj.gov
Phillip Goldstein, 60 Heritage Drive,
Pleasantville, NY 10570
pgoldstein@bulldoginvestors.com//
(914) 747–5262
Kathleen S. O’Neill, Chief
Antitrust Division
U.S. Department of Justice
450 Fifth Street N.W., Suite 8000
Washington, DC. 20530
July 27, 2016
United States of America v. VA Partners
I, LLC, et al., Case No. 16–cv–01672
(WHA)
Dear Ms. O’Neill,
The announced settlement of the
referenced matter appears to be a
product of coerced capitulation rather
than of the parties’ relative assessments
of the merits. It appears that ValueAct,
in response to the FTC’s post-litigation
decision to dramatically increase the
penalties for violations of the Hart-
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Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements
Act (the ‘‘HSR Act’’) and to apply them
retroactively, made a rational decision
to settle.1 As a result, the settlement
avoids judicial scrutiny of, and
perpetuates (by virtue of its in terrorem
effect) a rule that, as explained below,
should never have been adopted. For
those reasons, the settlement is not in
the public interest.
First, the enforcement action that the
settlement resolves is based on a
dubious premise, i.e., that the statutory
phrase ‘‘solely for the purposes of
investment’’ in connection with
reporting and waiting period
requirements of HSR Act means ‘‘solely
for the purposes of passive investment.’’
(Emphasis added.) While the FTC has
long held that position, to my
knowledge, the rule adopting it has
never been subjected to judicial review
to determine whether the FTC’s
addition of the word ‘‘passive’’ (which
is absent in the statute) is reasonable. As
explained below, it is not only
unreasonable, it is irrational.
Rule 801.1(i)(1), which was
apparently adopted without public
comment in 1978, states: ‘‘Voting
securities are held or acquired ‘solely
for the purpose of investment’ if the
person holding or acquiring such voting
securities has no intention of
participating in the formulation,
determination, or direction of the basic
business decisions of the issuer.’’
However, in the context the HSR Act,
the purpose of which is to permit the
FTC to analyze potential
anticompetitive effects of business
combinations before they occur, any
distinction between an acquisition of
stock by a passive investor and an
investor that seeks to influence
management (in contrast to an
acquisition by a competitor, or a
significant customer, supplier, or
service provider 2) is irrational as the
facts in this case illustrate.
According to the DOJ’s Competitive
Impact statement (‘‘CIS’’):
1 In a statement issued to news media, ValueAct
explained why it settled:
ValueAct Capital fundamentally disagrees with
DOJ’s interpretation of the facts in connection with
our investments in Halliburton and Baker Hughes.
However, due to the sudden and unanticipated 150
percent increase in the potential penalties
associated with alleged Hart Scott Rodino violations
effective August 1, we felt we had no choice but to
resolve this case as quickly as possible. We are
pleased to have come to a resolution to this
litigation that will not impact our business or
strategy going forward.
2 For example, a large acquisition of FedEx stock
by Amazon would clearly raise concerns about a
possible effect on competition in the package
delivery business. The same acquisition by
ValueAct, regardless of whether it was a passive or
active investor, would raise no similar concern.
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ValueAct intended from the time it
made these stock purchases to use its
position as a major shareholder of both
Halliburton and Baker Hughes to obtain
access to management, to learn
information about the companies and
the merger in private conversations with
senior executives, to influence those
executives to improve the chances that
the Halliburton-Baker Hughes merger
would be completed, and ultimately
influence other business decisions
regardless of whether the merger was
consummated. ValueAct executives met
frequently with the top executives of the
companies (both in person and by
teleconference), and sent numerous emails to these the top executives on a
variety of business issues. During these
meetings, ValueAct identified specific
business areas for improvement.
ValueAct also made presentations to
each company’s senior executives,
including presentations on post- merger
integration. The totality of the evidence
described in the Complaint makes clear
that ValueAct could not claim the
limited HSR exemption for passive
investment.
In other words, ValueAct did what a
company’s legal counsel or an
investment bank might do, i.e., provide
advice to management to increase the
chances that a merger would be
successfully completed, the only
difference being that, rather than being
paid for its advice, ValueAct hoped to
profit through an increase in the value
of its investment if the merger
succeeded. Yet, attorneys and
consultants are not required to make a
filing with the FTC or pay a fee of
$45,000 or more before they can speak
with management. There is no good
reason to discriminate against any
stockholder, let alone a stockholder that
owns less than 10% of a company’s
stock, that seeks only to profit from its
investment by requiring it to cease
trading for a period of time or to pay a
large fee before it can exercise its right
to communicate with management (nor,
as explained below, could a law or
regulation do so without violating the
First Amendment).
There has been no allegation that
ValueAct has ever contemplated
merging with any company in which it
owned stock including Halliburton or
Baker Hughes. Nor was ValueAct a
competitor, or a significant supplier,
service provider, or customer of either
company. The FTC and the DOJ do not
seem to understand that active and
passive investors have the same exact
objective, i.e., to see the value of their
investment increase. When a firm like
ValueAct seeks to influence
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management of a company, that is
merely a means to achieve that
objective—not a separate objective.3
Indeed, DOJ’s Competitive Impact
Statement (‘‘CIS’’), in conclusory and
circular fashion, alleges only one actual
risk of harm caused by ValueAct:
‘‘ValueAct’s failure to file the necessary
notifications prevented the Department
from timely reviewing ValueAct’s stock
acquisitions, which risked harming
competition given that they resulted in
ValueAct’s becoming one of the largest
shareholders in two direct competitors
that were pursuing an anticompetitive
merger.’’ But, the CIS is silent about
precisely how ValueAct’s failure to file
caused (or could cause) any real harm
to competition or impaired the FTC or
DOJ from determining whether to
challenge the merger between
Halliburton and Baker Hughes.4 If the
FTC and DOJ cannot cite an example of
harm that resulted from the acquisition
of stock by an activist investor, that
suggests that Rule 801.1(i)(1) is
irrational—and regulators should not be
perpetuating irrational regulations.
In short, for 38 years the FTC has
wrongly interpreted the HSR’s
‘‘investment only’’ exemption and it
should stop treating activist investors
like bogeymen. Notably, the SEC, which
has extensive experience in regulating
investors and investments, has adopted
proxy rules that properly reflect the
difference between actions intended for
investment and non-investment
3 In the film, Terms of Endearment, after Emma’s
funeral, Garrett, her neighbor (played by Jack
Nicholson) supportively pays special attention to
Tommy, Emma’s long-neglected son:
Garrett: I understand you’re a swimmer. Me too.
Tommy: But you’re an astronaut, right?
Garrett: I’m an astronaut and a swimmer
Similarly, an activist and an investor are not
mutually exclusive things as the FTC would have
it.
4 According to the DOJ’s announcement of the
settlement: ‘‘ValueAct acquired substantial stakes in
Halliburton and Baker Hughes in the midst of our
antitrust review of the companies’ proposed merger,
and used its position to try to influence the
outcome of that process and certain other business
decisions,’’ said Principal Deputy Assistant
Attorney General Renata Hesse, head of the Justice
Department’s Antitrust Division. ‘‘ValueAct was not
entitled to avoid the HSR requirements by claiming
to be a passive investor, while at the same time
injecting itself in this manner. The HSR notification
requirements are the backbone of the government’s
merger review process, and crucial to our ability to
prevent anticompetitive mergers and acquisitions.’’
OK but where’s the beef? As Matt Levine of
Bloomberg pointed out: ‘‘Hesse’s last sentence,
about the HSR notification being ‘crucial to our
ability to prevent anticompetitive mergers and
acquisitions,’ might be true in general, but it has
nothing to do with this case. The Justice
Department could—and did—prevent the Baker
Hughes- Halliburton merger without ever giving any
thought to ValueAct.’’ (https://www.bloomberg.com/
view/articles/2016-07-13/sometimes-it-s-hard-forowners-to-talk-to-companies)
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purposes. Thus, SEC Rule 14a–2(b)(ix)
excludes certain solicitations from the
technical requirements of the proxy
rules provided they are not made by or
on behalf of ‘‘[a]ny person who, because
of a substantial interest in the subject
matter of the solicitation, is likely to
receive a benefit from a successful
solicitation that would not be shared
pro rata by all other holders of the same
class of securities. . . .’’ Similarly, SEC
Rule 14a–8(i)(4) allows a company to
exclude a shareholder proposal from its
proxy statement ‘‘[i]f the proposal
relates to the redress of a personal claim
or grievance against the company or any
other person, or if it is designed to result
in a benefit to you, or to further a
personal interest, which is not shared by
the other shareholders at large.’’
The FTC should apply the same
distinguishing principle to revise Rule
801.1(i)(1) to read as follows: ‘‘Voting
securities are held or acquired ‘solely
for the purpose of investment’ if the
person holding or acquiring such voting
securities has no intention of receiving
a benefit that will not be shared pro rata
by all other holders of the same
securities.’’ Unlike the current rule,
such a rule is consistent with, and
faithful to, the purpose of the HSR Act.
Additionally, Rule 801.1(i)(1) violates
the First Amendment because it requires
a stockholder to pay a sizeable fee and
to temporarily refrain from additional
stock purchases in order to exercise his
or her right to communicate with
management about the company. Worse,
it is content-based 5 and thus,
presumptively unconstitutional.6
To conclude, the DOJ should seek a
stay of its enforcement action until Rule
801.1(i)(1) is revised to conform to the
intent of the HSR Act. Even though
ValueAct has agreed to the proposed
settlement it would be morally wrong
for an agency that is supposed use
reason and pursue justice to finalize a
settlement of an enforcement action
5 See Statement of the Federal Trade Commission
In the Matter of Third Point, File No. 121–0019,
(August 24, 2015), (After enumerating Third Point’s
activist oriented communications in connection
with its investment in Yahoo! Stock, the
Commission concluded: ‘‘Given these actions by
Third Point, we do not believe the investment-only
exemption applies.’’ In responding to the statement
of the dissenting Commissioners, it defensively
added: ‘‘In any event, the Commission’s
enforcement action does not prevent Third Point
from engaging in shareholder advocacy that may be
beneficial or procompetitive.’’ In other words, ‘‘We
won’t bring an enforcement action against a
stockholder if we agree with it.’’ That is a contentbased regulation, plain and simple.
6 To save a content-based restriction on speech,
the government must show that the restriction is
narrowly drawn to achieve a compelling
governmental interest. Application of this standard
almost always leads to invalidating the challenged
restriction.
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which is based upon, and perpetuates,
a regulation that is unconstitutional,
irrational, and inconsistent with the
HSR Act.
Very truly yours,
/s/
Phillip Goldstein
LHG, D.J. Ref. No. 90–11–3–07250/2. All
comments must be submitted no later
than sixty (60) days after the publication
date of this notice. Comments may be
submitted either by email or by mail:
Send them to:
By email .......
pubcomment-ees.enrd@
usdoj.gov.
Assistant Attorney General,
U.S. DOJ–ENRD, P.O. Box
7611, Washington, DC
20044–7611.
By mail .........
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Notice of Lodging of Proposed
National Resources Restoration
Consent Decree Under the
Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability
Act
On October 13, 2016, the Department
of Justice lodged a proposed Consent
Decree with the United States District
Court for the District of New Jersey in
the lawsuit entitled United States v.
Wyeth Holdings LLC, Civil Action No.
3:16–cv–07219–AET–LHG.
The United States filed this lawsuit
under the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation
and Liability Act on behalf of the United
States Fish and Wildlife Service and the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration. In its complaint the
United States alleges that Defendant
Wyeth Holdings LLC is liable for
damages for, injury to, destruction of, or
loss of natural resources in connection
with the American Cyanamid
Superfund Site in the Township of
Bridgewater and Borough of Bound
Brook, New Jersey. The proposed
Consent Decree resolves claims brought
by the United States and related claims
brought by the New Jersey Department
of Environmental Protection in a related
action. In exchange for a covenant not
to sue for injury to the Raritan River,
Wyeth Holdings LLC agrees to remove
the Weston Causeway Dam on the
Millstone River; design a fish passage at
the Island Farm Weir on the Raritan
River; pay federal and state future
oversight costs; reimburse federal and
state assessment costs totaling $184,363;
pay fish and habitat survey costs
totaling $50,000; and fund the
evaluation and monitoring of trust
resources prior to and after removal of
the Weston Causeway Dam.
The publication of this notice opens
a period for public comment on the
Consent Decree. Comments should be
addressed to the Assistant Attorney
General, Environment and Natural
Resources Division, and should refer to
United States v. Wyeth Holdings LLC,
Civil Action No. 3:16-cv-07219–AET–
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During the public comment period,
the Consent Decree may be examined
and downloaded at this Justice
Department Web site: https://
www.justice.gov/enrd/consent-decrees.
We will provide a paper copy of the
Consent Decree upon written request
and payment of reproduction costs.
Please mail your request and payment
to: Consent Decree Library, U.S. DOJ–
ENRD, P.O. Box 7611, Washington, DC
20044–7611.
Please enclose a check or money order
for $21.50 (25 cents per page
reproduction cost) payable to the United
States Treasury.
Robert E. Maher Jr.,
Assistant Section Chief, Environmental
Enforcement Section, Environment and
Natural Resources Division.
[FR Doc. 2016–25451 Filed 10–20–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Parole Commission
Sunshine Act Meeting
12:00 p.m., Wednesday,
October 26, 2016.
TIME AND DATE:
U.S. Parole Commission, 90 K
Street NE., 3rd Floor, Washington, DC.
PLACE:
STATUS:
Closed.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED:
Determination on three original
jurisdiction cases.
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Jacqueline Graham, Staff Assistant to
the Chairman, U.S. Parole Commission,
90 K Street NE., 3rd Floor, Washington,
DC 20530, (202) 346–7010.
Dated: October 18, 2016.
J. Patricia W. Smoot,
Chairman, U.S. Parole Commission.
[FR Doc. 2016–25582 Filed 10–19–16; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–31–P
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11:00 a.m., October 26,
2016.
[FR Doc. 2016–25525 Filed 10–20–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–11–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
TIME AND DATE:
To submit
comments:
72837
U.S. Parole Commission, 90 K
Street NE., 3rd Floor, Washington, DC.
STATUS: Open.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED: Approval of
July 27, 2016 minutes.
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Jacqueline Graham, Staff Assistant to
the Chairman, U.S. Parole Commission,
90 K Street NE., 3rd Floor, Washington,
DC 20530, (202) 346–7010.
PLACE:
Dated: October 18, 2016.
J. Patricia W. Smoot,
Chairman, U.S. Parole Commission.
[FR Doc. 2016–25583 Filed 10–19–16; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–31–P
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Sunshine Act Meeting; National
Science Board
The National Science Board, pursuant
to NSF regulations (45 CFR part 614),
the National Science Foundation Act, as
amended (42 U.S.C. 1862n-5), and the
Government in the Sunshine Act (5
U.S.C. 552b), hereby gives short notice
of the scheduling of an Executive
Committee teleconference for the
transaction of National Science Board
business. The Executive Committee
determined that the interests of the
National Science Foundation require the
short notice.
DATE & TIME: Thursday, October 20,
2016 from 5:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. EDT.
SUBJECT MATTER: (1) Committee Chair’s
Opening Remarks; (2) Approval of
Executive Committee Minutes of July
2016; (3) IPA Program Review.
STATUS: Open.
This meeting will be held by
teleconference at the National Science
Foundation, 4201Wilson Blvd.,
Arlington, VA 22230. A public audio
stream will be available for this meeting.
Request the link by contacting
nationalsciencebrd@nsf.gov prior to the
teleconference. Please refer to the
National Science Board Web site for
additional information and schedule
updates (time, place, subject matter or
status of meeting) which may be found
at https://www.nsf.gov/nsb/notices/. The
point of contact for this meeting is
Kathy Jacquart, 4201 Wilson Blvd.,
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[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 204 (Friday, October 21, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 72832-72837]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-25525]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States v. VA Partners I, LLC, et al.; Public Comment and
Response on Proposed Final Judgment
Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C.
16(b)-(h), the United States hereby publishes below the comment
received on the proposed Final Judgment in United States v. VA Partners
I, LLC, et al., Case No. 16-cv-01672 (WHA) (N.D. Cal.), together with
the Response of the United States to Public Comment.
Copies of the comment and the United States' Response are available
for inspection at the Department of Justice Antitrust Division, 450
Fifth Street NW., Suite 1010, Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202-514-
2481), on the Department of Justice's Web site at https://www.justice.gov/atr/case/us-v-va-partners-i-llc-et-al, and at the
Office of the Clerk of the United States District Court for the North
District of California, 450 Golden Gate Avenue, San Francisco, CA
94102. Copies of any of these materials may also be obtained upon
request and payment of a copying fee.
Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement.
Kathleen S. O'Neill
Joseph Chandra Mazumdar
Brian E. Hanna
Robert A. Lepore
U.S. Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
450 Fifth Street NW., Suite 8000
Washington, DC 20530
Tel: (202) 307-2931
Fax: (202) 307-2874
Email: kathleen.oneill@usdoj.gov
Email: chan.mazumdar@usdoj.gov
Email: brian.hanna2@usdoj.gov
Email: robert.lepore@usdoj.gov
Tai Milder
U.S. Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
450 Golden Gate Avenue, Room 10-0101
Box 36046
San Francisco, CA 94012
Tel: (415) 934-5300
Fax: (415) 934-5399
Email: tai.milder@usdoj.gov
Attorneys for Plaintiff United States of America
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
SAN FRANCISCO DIVISION
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff, v.
VA PARTNERS I, LLC, et al.,
Defendants.
Case No. 16-cv-01672 (WHA)
PLAINTIFF'S RESPONSE TO PUBLIC COMMENT
RESPONSE OF THE UNITED STATES TO PUBLIC COMMENT ON THE PROPOSED FINAL
JUDGMENT
Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act (``APPA''),
15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(b)-(h), the United States hereby files the single
public comment received concerning the proposed Final Judgment in this
case and responds to this comment. After careful consideration of the
comment, the United States continues to believe that the proposed Final
Judgment provides an effective and appropriate remedy for the antitrust
violations alleged in the Complaint. The United States will move the
Court for entry of the proposed Final Judgment after the public comment
and this response have been published in the Federal Register pursuant
to 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(d).
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On April 4, 2016, the United States filed a civil antitrust
Complaint against VA Partners I, LLC, (``VA Partners I''), ValueAct
Capital Master Fund, L.P. (``Master Fund''), and ValueAct Co-Invest
International, L.P. (``Co-Invest Fund'') (collectively, ``ValueAct'' or
``Defendants''), to remedy violations of Section 7A of the Clayton Act,
15 U.S.C. Sec. 18a, commonly known as the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust
Improvements Act of 1976 (the ``HSR Act'').
Following the filing of the Complaint, the parties engaged in
settlement discussions that culminated in a consensual resolution of
this matter. On July 12, 2016, the United States filed a proposed Final
Judgment, a Stipulation and Proposed Order, and a Competitive Impact
Statement (``CIS'') that explains how the proposed Final Judgment is
designed to apply an appropriate penalty for, and adequately restrain,
Defendants' HSR Act violations. (ECF No. 38, 39.) As required by the
APPA,
[[Page 72833]]
the United States published the proposed Final Judgment and CIS in the
Federal Register on July 25, 2016. See 81 Fed. Reg. 48,450 (July 25,
2016). In addition, the United States ensured that a summary of the
terms of the proposed Final Judgment and the CIS, together with
directions for the submission of written comments, were published in
The Washington Post and the San Francisco Chronicle on seven different
days during the period of July 18, 2016 to July 24, 2016. See 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 16(c). The 60-day waiting period for public comments ended on
September 23, 2016. One comment was received and is described below and
attached as Exhibit 1.
II. THE COMPLAINT AND PROPOSED SETTLEMENT
The Complaint alleges that ValueAct violated the HSR Act by failing
to comply with the Act's premerger notification and reporting
requirements in connection with its acquisition of voting securities of
Halliburton Co. (``Halliburton'') and Baker Hughes Inc. (``Baker
Hughes'') in 2014 and 2015.
The HSR Act states that ``no person shall acquire, directly or
indirectly, any voting securities of any person'' exceeding certain
thresholds until that person has filed pre-acquisition notification and
report forms with the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice
(``DOJ'') and the Federal Trade Commission (``FTC'') (collectively, the
``Agencies'') and the post-filing waiting period has expired. 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 18a. A key purpose of the notification and waiting period is to
protect consumers and competition from potentially anticompetitive
transactions by providing the Agencies an opportunity to conduct an
antitrust review of proposed acquisitions of voting securities
exceeding certain thresholds before they are consummated.
As alleged in the Complaint and described further in the CIS,
ValueAct made substantial purchases of stock in two direct competitors
with the intent to participate in those companies' business decisions,
without first complying with the notification and waiting period
requirements of the HSR Act. Through these purchases, ValueAct
simultaneously became one of the largest shareholders of both
Halliburton and Baker Hughes. ValueAct established these positions as
Halliburton and Baker Hughes--the second- and third-largest providers
of oilfield services in the world--were being investigated for agreeing
to a merger that threatened to substantially lessen competition in over
twenty product markets in the United States. The United States filed a
lawsuit to challenge the merger on April 6, 2016, and Halliburton and
Baker Hughes abandoned the transaction a few weeks later. ValueAct's
failure to comply with the HSR Act risked the government's ability to
protect competition because it prevented the United States from
reviewing in advance ValueAct's stock acquisitions, which were made
with the intent of participating in the companies' business decisions
and intervening with the management of each firm as necessary to
increase the probability of the Halliburton-Baker Hughes merger being
completed.
The Complaint alleges that Defendants could not excuse their
failure to file the necessary notification and reporting forms by
relying on the HSR Act's limited exemption for acquisitions made
``solely for the purposes of investment'' (the ``investment-only
exemption''). Section 18a(c)(9) of the HSR Act exempts ``acquisitions,
solely for the purpose of investment, of voting securities, if, as a
result of such acquisition, the securities acquired or held do not
exceed 10 per centum of the outstanding voting securities of the
issuer.'' As explained in the regulations implementing the HSR Act,
voting securities are held ``solely for the purpose of investment'' if
the acquirer has ``no intention of participating in the formulation,
determination, or direction of the basic business decisions of the
issuer.'' 16 C.F.R. Sec. 801.1(i)(1) (``HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1)'').
As alleged in the Complaint, ValueAct did not qualify for the
investment-only exemption because it intended from the time it
purchased stock in these companies to participate in the business
decisions of both companies. Specifically, ValueAct intended to use its
position as a major shareholder of both Halliburton and Baker Hughes to
obtain access to management; to learn information about the companies
and the merger in private conversations with senior executives; to
influence the decisions of these senior executives in a manner that
increased the likelihood that Halliburton and Baker Hughes would be
able to complete their anticompetitive merger; and ultimately to
influence other business decisions regardless of whether the merger was
consummated. The totality of the evidence, as described further in the
Complaint, demonstrates that ValueAct was not entitled to claim the
investment-only exemption.
The proposed Final Judgment provides for injunctive relief and the
payment of civil penalties, which are designed to prevent future
violations of the HSR Act. Specifically, the proposed Final Judgment
prohibits Defendants from relying on the investment-only exemption if
they intend to take, or their investment strategy identifies
circumstances in which they may take, any of several specifically
enumerated actions that reflect active participation in the company in
which they are investing. The prohibited conduct provisions are aimed
at deterring future HSR violations of the sort alleged in the
Complaint. While this provision does not represent a comprehensive list
of all conduct that would disqualify an acquirer of voting securities
from relying on the investment-only exemption, it is aimed at deterring
conduct that poses the greatest threat to competition. The proposed
Final Judgment also provides for compliance, access, and inspection
procedures to promote Defendants' compliance with the proposed Final
Judgment and to enable the United States to monitor such compliance.
Finally, the proposed Final Judgment imposes an $11 million civil
penalty for Defendants' HSR Act violation. This penalty reflects the
gravity of the conduct at issue and will adequately deter ValueAct and
other companies from future HSR Act violations.
III. STANDARD OF JUDICIAL REVIEW
The APPA requires that proposed consent judgments in antitrust
cases brought by the United States be subject to a sixty (60) day
comment period, after which the court shall determine whether entry of
the proposed Final Judgment is ``in the public interest.'' 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 16(e)(1). In making this public interest determination, the Court
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.
15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e)(1)(A) & (B).
[[Page 72834]]
The public interest inquiry is necessarily a limited one, as the
United States is entitled to deference in crafting its antitrust
settlements, especially with respect to the scope of its complaint and
the adequacy of its remedy. See generally United States v. Microsoft
Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1461 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (holding that government is
entitled to ``broad discretion to settle with the defendant within the
reaches of the public interest''); United States v. SBC Commc'ns, Inc.,
489 F. Supp. 2d 1, 10-11 (D.D.C. 2007) (assessing public interest
standard under the Tunney Act); United States v. US Airways Group,
Inc., 38 F. Supp. 3d 69, 75 (D.D.C. 2014) (noting that the court's
``inquiry is limited'' because the government has ``broad discretion''
to determine the adequacy of the relief secured through a settlement);
United States v. InBev N.V./S.A., No. 08-1965 (JR), 2009-2 Trade Cas.
(CCH) ] 76,736, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *3, (D.D.C. Aug. 11,
2009) (noting that the court's review of a consent judgment is limited
and only inquires ``into whether the government's determination that
the proposed remedies will cure the antitrust violations alleged in the
complaint was reasonable, and whether the mechanism to enforce the
final judgment are clear and manageable'').
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) (quoting 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); InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *3. 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).
Courts ``may not require that the remedies perfectly match the
alleged violations.'' SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17. Rather, the
ultimate question is whether ``the remedies [obtained in the decree
are] so inconsonant with the allegations charged as to fall outside of
the `reaches of the public interest.''' Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461.
Accordingly, 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; see also
United States v. Apple, Inc., 889 F. Supp. 2d 623, 631 (S.D.N.Y. 2012).
And, 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 the public
interest.'' United States v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 552 F. Supp. 131, 151
(D.D.C. 1982) (citations and internal quotations omitted); 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).
In its 2004 amendments to the APPA,\1\ Congress made clear its
intent to preserve the practical benefits of utilizing consent decrees
in antitrust enforcement by 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. Sec. 16(e)(2). 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; see also United States v. Enova Corp.,
107 F. Supp. 2d 10, 17 (D.D.C. 2000) (``[T]he Tunney Act expressly
allows the court to make its public interest determination based on the
basis of the competitive impact statement and response to public
comments alone.''); US Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 76 (same).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The 2004 amendments substituted ``shall'' for ``may'' when
setting forth the relevant factors for courts 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. Sec. 16(e) (2004), with 15 U.S.C. Sec. 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).
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IV. SUMMARY OF PUBLIC COMMENT AND RESPONSE OF THE UNITED STATES
During the 60-day comment period, the United States received one
comment, from Phillip Goldstein, manager of activist hedge fund Bulldog
Investors. Mr. Goldstein does not argue that the relief set forth in
the proposed Final Judgment is inadequate to address the allegations in
the Complaint, nor does he assert that the terms of the decree should
be altered in any particular way. Instead, Mr. Goldstein claims that it
``appears'' that ValueAct settled this matter because the FTC increased
the civil penalties for HSR violations and took the position that such
increases could apply retroactively. Mr. Goldstein also claims that HSR
Rule 801.1(i)(1)--the FTC's 1978 rule explaining the meaning of the
``investment only'' exemption--``irrationally'' draws a distinction
between passive and active investors and thus should be revised. Mr.
Goldstein further claims that HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1) is unconstitutional
because it violates the First Amendment. In light of these arguments,
Mr. Goldstein urges the United States to seek a stay of this
enforcement action until this rule is revised. As explained below, none
of Mr. Goldstein's arguments warrant delaying entry of the proposed
Final Judgment.
First, as fully detailed in the CIS, the United States settled this
case because it determined that the injunction and $11 million penalty
imposed on ValueAct was in the public interest because this relief
adequately addresses and reflects the gravity of ValueAct's wrongful
conduct and will strongly deter ValueAct and other companies from
violating the HSR Act. None of Mr. Goldstein's arguments provide a
basis for questioning, let alone, overruling the United States' broad
discretion in reaching this determination.
Second, Mr. Goldstein's passing reference to ValueAct's supposed
``coerced capitulation'' in agreeing to settle this action misses the
mark because the sole purpose of the Tunney Act review process is to
determine why the Agencies--rather than a defendant--decided to settle
a civil antitrust enforcement action and whether doing so was in the
public interest. Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (``The court's role in [the
Tunney Act review process] is one of insuring that the government has
not breached its duty to the public in
[[Page 72835]]
consenting to the decree . . . [and] to determine . . . whether the
settlement is `within the reaches of the public interest.'''); Inbev,
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *3 (noting that the relevant inquiry
during the Tunney Act review process is ``whether the government's
determination that the proposed remedies will cure the antitrust
violations alleged in the complaint was reasonable''). In any event,
Mr. Goldstein's assertion that ValueAct was purportedly forced to
settle because the FTC increased the potential fines during the
pendency of this action ignores the fact that the $11 million fine that
ValueAct agreed to pay was within the fine amount that the United
States sought when it filed this action and that this amount was based
on the penalties in effect prior to publication of the FTC's interim
final rule on June 30, 2016. See Cmplt. ] 6 & Request for Relief.
Third, Mr. Goldstein's lengthy argument that the distinction drawn
in HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1) between passive and active investors is
``irrational'' and should be revised is similarly outside the scope of
this proceeding. As noted above, the court's inquiry in a Tunney Act
proceeding is limited to ``whether the government's determination that
the proposed remedies will cure the antitrust violations alleged in the
complaint was reasonable, and whether the mechanism[s] to enforce the
final judgment are clear and manageable.'' InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
84787, at *3. Mr. Goldstein's assertions that HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1)--a
rule that has been in effect for nearly thirty years--is ``irrational''
and should be revised are wholly irrelevant to the sole question before
the Court: whether the proposed Final Judgment adequately addresses the
harms alleged in the Complaint. In other words, Mr. Goldstein's
assertions are plainly outside the scope of the limited review that
Congress established under the Tunney Act. To the extent Mr. Goldstein
wishes to dispute the appropriateness of HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1) and how
it is applied, he can direct his suggestions to the FTC (or could have
commented when the rule was originally passed \2\). He cannot, however,
use his general opposition to HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1) as a basis to reject
or delay entry of the proposed Final Judgment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Contrary to Mr. Goldstein's comment, the original revised
HSR rules, including 16 C.F.R. Sec. 801.1(i)(1), were subject to
public comment prior to being adopted. See 42 Fed. Reg. 39040, 39047
(Aug. 1, 1977).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, Mr. Goldstein's suggestion that this Court should reject
the proposed Final Judgment because HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1) is
``unconstitutional'' has no merit. To the extent that this assertion--
which has no bearing on whether the proposed Final Judgment adequately
addresses the antitrust violations alleged in the Complaint--is
properly before the Court, HSR Rule 801.1(i)(1) is content neutral and
does not violate the First Amendment. Even if the rule implicated First
Amendment interests, it would readily withstand review. See
Cableamerica Corp. v. FTC, 795 F. Supp. 1082, 1093 (N.D. Ala. 1992)
(dismissing claim that the FTC's enforcement of the HSR Act's reporting
requirements violated the plaintiff's First Amendment rights).
For all of these reasons, Mr. Goldstein's public comment provides
no basis to deny or delay entry of the proposed Final Judgment.
V. CONCLUSION
After reviewing the public comment, the United States continues to
believe that the proposed Final Judgment, as drafted, provides an
effective and appropriate remedy for the antitrust violations alleged
in the Complaint, and is therefore in the public interest. The United
States will move this Court to enter the proposed Final Judgment after
the comment and this response are published in the Federal Register.
Date: October 17, 2016
Respectfully submitted,
/s/Kathleen S. O'Neill
Kathleen S. O'Neill
U.S. Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
450 5th St. NW, 8000
Washington, DC 20530
Tel: (202) 307-2931
Fax: (202) 307-2784
Email: kathleen.oneill@usdoj.gov
Phillip Goldstein, 60 Heritage Drive, Pleasantville, NY 10570
pgoldstein@bulldoginvestors.com//(914) 747-5262
Kathleen S. O'Neill, Chief
Antitrust Division
U.S. Department of Justice
450 Fifth Street N.W., Suite 8000
Washington, DC. 20530
July 27, 2016
United States of America v. VA Partners I, LLC, et al., Case No. 16-cv-
01672 (WHA)
Dear Ms. O'Neill,
The announced settlement of the referenced matter appears to be a
product of coerced capitulation rather than of the parties' relative
assessments of the merits. It appears that ValueAct, in response to the
FTC's post-litigation decision to dramatically increase the penalties
for violations of the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act (the
``HSR Act'') and to apply them retroactively, made a rational decision
to settle.\1\ As a result, the settlement avoids judicial scrutiny of,
and perpetuates (by virtue of its in terrorem effect) a rule that, as
explained below, should never have been adopted. For those reasons, the
settlement is not in the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In a statement issued to news media, ValueAct explained why
it settled:
ValueAct Capital fundamentally disagrees with DOJ's
interpretation of the facts in connection with our investments in
Halliburton and Baker Hughes. However, due to the sudden and
unanticipated 150 percent increase in the potential penalties
associated with alleged Hart Scott Rodino violations effective
August 1, we felt we had no choice but to resolve this case as
quickly as possible. We are pleased to have come to a resolution to
this litigation that will not impact our business or strategy going
forward.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, the enforcement action that the settlement resolves is based
on a dubious premise, i.e., that the statutory phrase ``solely for the
purposes of investment'' in connection with reporting and waiting
period requirements of HSR Act means ``solely for the purposes of
passive investment.'' (Emphasis added.) While the FTC has long held
that position, to my knowledge, the rule adopting it has never been
subjected to judicial review to determine whether the FTC's addition of
the word ``passive'' (which is absent in the statute) is reasonable. As
explained below, it is not only unreasonable, it is irrational.
Rule 801.1(i)(1), which was apparently adopted without public
comment in 1978, states: ``Voting securities are held or acquired
`solely for the purpose of investment' if the person holding or
acquiring such voting securities has no intention of participating in
the formulation, determination, or direction of the basic business
decisions of the issuer.'' However, in the context the HSR Act, the
purpose of which is to permit the FTC to analyze potential
anticompetitive effects of business combinations before they occur, any
distinction between an acquisition of stock by a passive investor and
an investor that seeks to influence management (in contrast to an
acquisition by a competitor, or a significant customer, supplier, or
service provider \2\) is irrational as the facts in this case
illustrate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ For example, a large acquisition of FedEx stock by Amazon
would clearly raise concerns about a possible effect on competition
in the package delivery business. The same acquisition by ValueAct,
regardless of whether it was a passive or active investor, would
raise no similar concern.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the DOJ's Competitive Impact statement (``CIS''):
[[Page 72836]]
ValueAct intended from the time it made these stock purchases to use
its position as a major shareholder of both Halliburton and Baker
Hughes to obtain access to management, to learn information about the
companies and the merger in private conversations with senior
executives, to influence those executives to improve the chances that
the Halliburton-Baker Hughes merger would be completed, and ultimately
influence other business decisions regardless of whether the merger was
consummated. ValueAct executives met frequently with the top executives
of the companies (both in person and by teleconference), and sent
numerous e-mails to these the top executives on a variety of business
issues. During these meetings, ValueAct identified specific business
areas for improvement. ValueAct also made presentations to each
company's senior executives, including presentations on post- merger
integration. The totality of the evidence described in the Complaint
makes clear that ValueAct could not claim the limited HSR exemption for
passive investment.
In other words, ValueAct did what a company's legal counsel or an
investment bank might do, i.e., provide advice to management to
increase the chances that a merger would be successfully completed, the
only difference being that, rather than being paid for its advice,
ValueAct hoped to profit through an increase in the value of its
investment if the merger succeeded. Yet, attorneys and consultants are
not required to make a filing with the FTC or pay a fee of $45,000 or
more before they can speak with management. There is no good reason to
discriminate against any stockholder, let alone a stockholder that owns
less than 10% of a company's stock, that seeks only to profit from its
investment by requiring it to cease trading for a period of time or to
pay a large fee before it can exercise its right to communicate with
management (nor, as explained below, could a law or regulation do so
without violating the First Amendment).
There has been no allegation that ValueAct has ever contemplated
merging with any company in which it owned stock including Halliburton
or Baker Hughes. Nor was ValueAct a competitor, or a significant
supplier, service provider, or customer of either company. The FTC and
the DOJ do not seem to understand that active and passive investors
have the same exact objective, i.e., to see the value of their
investment increase. When a firm like ValueAct seeks to influence
management of a company, that is merely a means to achieve that
objective--not a separate objective.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ In the film, Terms of Endearment, after Emma's funeral,
Garrett, her neighbor (played by Jack Nicholson) supportively pays
special attention to Tommy, Emma's long-neglected son:
Garrett: I understand you're a swimmer. Me too.
Tommy: But you're an astronaut, right?
Garrett: I'm an astronaut and a swimmer
Similarly, an activist and an investor are not mutually
exclusive things as the FTC would have it.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indeed, DOJ's Competitive Impact Statement (``CIS''), in conclusory
and circular fashion, alleges only one actual risk of harm caused by
ValueAct: ``ValueAct's failure to file the necessary notifications
prevented the Department from timely reviewing ValueAct's stock
acquisitions, which risked harming competition given that they resulted
in ValueAct's becoming one of the largest shareholders in two direct
competitors that were pursuing an anticompetitive merger.'' But, the
CIS is silent about precisely how ValueAct's failure to file caused (or
could cause) any real harm to competition or impaired the FTC or DOJ
from determining whether to challenge the merger between Halliburton
and Baker Hughes.\4\ If the FTC and DOJ cannot cite an example of harm
that resulted from the acquisition of stock by an activist investor,
that suggests that Rule 801.1(i)(1) is irrational--and regulators
should not be perpetuating irrational regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ According to the DOJ's announcement of the settlement:
``ValueAct acquired substantial stakes in Halliburton and Baker
Hughes in the midst of our antitrust review of the companies'
proposed merger, and used its position to try to influence the
outcome of that process and certain other business decisions,'' said
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Renata Hesse, head of
the Justice Department's Antitrust Division. ``ValueAct was not
entitled to avoid the HSR requirements by claiming to be a passive
investor, while at the same time injecting itself in this manner.
The HSR notification requirements are the backbone of the
government's merger review process, and crucial to our ability to
prevent anticompetitive mergers and acquisitions.''
OK but where's the beef? As Matt Levine of Bloomberg pointed
out: ``Hesse's last sentence, about the HSR notification being
`crucial to our ability to prevent anticompetitive mergers and
acquisitions,' might be true in general, but it has nothing to do
with this case. The Justice Department could--and did--prevent the
Baker Hughes- Halliburton merger without ever giving any thought to
ValueAct.'' (https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2016-07-13/sometimes-it-s-hard-for-owners-to-talk-to-companies)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In short, for 38 years the FTC has wrongly interpreted the HSR's
``investment only'' exemption and it should stop treating activist
investors like bogeymen. Notably, the SEC, which has extensive
experience in regulating investors and investments, has adopted proxy
rules that properly reflect the difference between actions intended for
investment and non-investment purposes. Thus, SEC Rule 14a-2(b)(ix)
excludes certain solicitations from the technical requirements of the
proxy rules provided they are not made by or on behalf of ``[a]ny
person who, because of a substantial interest in the subject matter of
the solicitation, is likely to receive a benefit from a successful
solicitation that would not be shared pro rata by all other holders of
the same class of securities. . . .'' Similarly, SEC Rule 14a-8(i)(4)
allows a company to exclude a shareholder proposal from its proxy
statement ``[i]f the proposal relates to the redress of a personal
claim or grievance against the company or any other person, or if it is
designed to result in a benefit to you, or to further a personal
interest, which is not shared by the other shareholders at large.''
The FTC should apply the same distinguishing principle to revise
Rule 801.1(i)(1) to read as follows: ``Voting securities are held or
acquired `solely for the purpose of investment' if the person holding
or acquiring such voting securities has no intention of receiving a
benefit that will not be shared pro rata by all other holders of the
same securities.'' Unlike the current rule, such a rule is consistent
with, and faithful to, the purpose of the HSR Act.
Additionally, Rule 801.1(i)(1) violates the First Amendment because
it requires a stockholder to pay a sizeable fee and to temporarily
refrain from additional stock purchases in order to exercise his or her
right to communicate with management about the company. Worse, it is
content-based \5\ and thus, presumptively unconstitutional.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See Statement of the Federal Trade Commission In the Matter
of Third Point, File No. 121-0019, (August 24, 2015), (After
enumerating Third Point's activist oriented communications in
connection with its investment in Yahoo! Stock, the Commission
concluded: ``Given these actions by Third Point, we do not believe
the investment-only exemption applies.'' In responding to the
statement of the dissenting Commissioners, it defensively added:
``In any event, the Commission's enforcement action does not prevent
Third Point from engaging in shareholder advocacy that may be
beneficial or procompetitive.'' In other words, ``We won't bring an
enforcement action against a stockholder if we agree with it.'' That
is a content-based regulation, plain and simple.
\6\ To save a content-based restriction on speech, the
government must show that the restriction is narrowly drawn to
achieve a compelling governmental interest. Application of this
standard almost always leads to invalidating the challenged
restriction.
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To conclude, the DOJ should seek a stay of its enforcement action
until Rule 801.1(i)(1) is revised to conform to the intent of the HSR
Act. Even though ValueAct has agreed to the proposed settlement it
would be morally wrong for an agency that is supposed use reason and
pursue justice to finalize a settlement of an enforcement action
[[Page 72837]]
which is based upon, and perpetuates, a regulation that is
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
unconstitutional, irrational, and inconsistent with the HSR Act.
Very truly yours,
/s/
Phillip Goldstein
[FR Doc. 2016-25525 Filed 10-20-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-11-P