United States v. Bayer AG et al., 1493-1506 [2019-00810]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 23 / Monday, February 4, 2019 / Notices
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1493
Dated: January 30, 2019.
Melody Braswell,
Department Clearance Officer for PRA, U.S.
Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. 2019–00840 Filed 2–1–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–14–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
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Antitrust Division
United States v. Bayer AG et al.;
Response to Public Comments
Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures
and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. § 16(b)-(h),
the United States hereby publishes
below the Response to Public Comments
on the Proposed Final Judgment in
United States v. Bayer AG et al., Civil
Action No. 1:18-cv-01241 (JEB), which
was filed in the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia on
January 29, 2019, together with copies
of the 14 comments received by the
United States.
Pursuant to the Court’s January 2,
2019 order, comments were published
electronically and are available to be
viewed and downloaded at the Antitrust
Division’s Web site, at: https://
www.justice.gov/atr/case/us-v-bayer-agand-monsanto-company. A copy of the
United States’ response to the comments
is also available at the same location.
Copies of the comments and the United
States’ response are available for
inspection at the Office of the Clerk of
the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia. Copies of these
materials may also be obtained from the
Antitrust Division upon request and
payment of the copying fee set by
Department of Justice regulations.
Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement.
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v.
Bayer AG, Monsanto Company, and
BASF SE, Defendants.
Civil Action No. 1:18-cv-01241 (JEB)
RESPONSE OF PLAINTIFF UNITED
STATES TO PUBLIC COMMENTS ON
THE PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. Introduction .................................................................................................................................................................................................
II. Procedural History .....................................................................................................................................................................................
III. Standard of Judicial Review .....................................................................................................................................................................
IV. The Investigation and the Proposed Final Judgment .............................................................................................................................
V. Summary of Public Comments and the United States’ Response ..........................................................................................................
a. Comments Regarding BASF’s Suitability as a Divestiture Buyer and Ability to Compete Effectively .........................................
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TABLE OF CONTENTS—Continued
i. The Proposed Divestitures Give BASF Everything Necessary to Preserve Competition .........................................................
ii. BASF Has a Strong Incentive to Compete Aggressively Against Bayer ...................................................................................
b. Comments Regarding BASF’s Ability to Execute the Remedy Successfully and Requests for Ongoing Study ...........................
c. Comments Regarding Seed Treatments ..............................................................................................................................................
i. The Proposed Final Judgment Appropriately Requires Bayer to Supply Seed Treatments to BASF at Variable Cost .........
ii. BASF Cannot Resell Bayer Seed Treatments Supplied under Section IV(G)(1) for Use on Non-BASF Seeds .....................
iii. The Proposed Final Judgment Allows BASF to Sell Seed Treatments to Bayer ...................................................................
iv. Concerns Regarding All Neonicotinoid Seed Treatments Are Outside the Scope of the Complaint ...................................
d. Comments Related to Digital Agriculture and Cross-Product Leveraging .......................................................................................
e. Comments Regarding Procedural Matters, Including Government Oversight and Enforcement of Proposed Final Judgment
Compliance ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
i. The Standard of Review Established by Congress Is Appropriate ............................................................................................
ii. Modifications Concerning the Monitoring Trustee Are Unnecessary ......................................................................................
iii. The Proposed Final Judgment’s Jurisdictional Provisions Are Sufficient ..............................................................................
iv. The Proposed Final Judgment Appropriately Grants the United States Discretion over Certain Decisions ........................
v. The Proposed Final Judgment Is Not the Product of ‘‘Economic Leverage’’ ...........................................................................
f. Additional Issues Raised By Commenters ..........................................................................................................................................
i. Commenters Concerned about Industry Consolidation Fail to Acknowledge the Effect of the Remedy ...............................
ii. Comments Regarding the Environmental Impact of Agricultural Chemicals Are Beyond the Scope of this Action ...........
iii. The United States Conducted an Impartial and Independent Merger Analysis ....................................................................
VI. Conclusion ................................................................................................................................................................................................
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I. Introduction
Pursuant to the requirements of the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act
(the ‘‘APPA’’ or ‘‘Tunney Act’’), 15
U.S.C. §§ 16(b)–(h), the United States
hereby responds to the public comments
received regarding the proposed Final
Judgment in this case. For the reasons
set forth below, the remedy the United
States obtained from Defendants
addresses the competitive harm alleged
in this action and is in the public
interest. Accordingly, the United States
recommends no modifications to the
proposed Final Judgment.
This remedy is a victory for American
farmers and consumers. It fully
addresses the competitive threat posed
by the merger by vesting the divestiture
buyer, BASF, with the full complement
of assets, personnel, and rights needed
to preserve competition in each of the
17 affected markets. It requires
divestitures that go beyond what would
be needed to address the current
horizontal overlaps or vertical concerns
in order to ensure that BASF can step
into Bayer’s shoes, thereby preserving
the competition that otherwise would be
lost through the merger. It provides for
the transfer of over 4,000 Bayer
employees so that BASF will have the
necessary expertise to run these
divested businesses, and it provides for
time-limited interim support agreements
to avoid business disruptions during the
transition period. It also incorporates
further safeguards that allow BASF to
obtain additional assets and personnel,
if necessary, during the first year of
operating these businesses. In short, the
United States has gone to extraordinary
lengths to ensure that BASF will
seamlessly and successfully replace
Bayer as an independent and vigorous
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competitor in each of the affected
markets.
The competitive significance of the
remedy is underscored by the $9 billion
divestiture purchase price, which
exceeds the value of most mergers
reviewed by the United States and far
exceeds the value of most merger
remedies. Indeed, it is among the largest
and most comprehensive remedies
obtained by the United States in a
merger challenge. As one commenter
observes, ‘‘the $9 billion divestiture, by
which BASF would acquire Bayer’s
position in genetically modified seeds
and seed traits, foundational herbicides,
other crop seeds, and related research
and development efforts appears to be
as robust a divestiture as might be
imagined.’’ 1
The United States received fourteen
comments reflecting a wide array of
views. After careful consideration of
these comments, the United States has
determined that nothing in them casts
doubt on its conclusion that the public
interest is well-served by the proposed
remedy. The United States is publishing
the comments and this response on the
Antitrust Division website and is
submitting to the Federal Register this
response and the website address at
which the comments may be viewed
and downloaded, as set forth in the
Court’s order dated January 2, 2019
(Docket No. 21). Following Federal
Register publication, the United States
will move the Court to enter the
proposed Final Judgment pursuant to 15
U.S.C. § 16(d).
II. Procedural History
On September 14, 2016, Bayer AG
entered into an agreement to acquire
1 Ducore
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Monsanto Company in a merger valued
at approximately $66 billion. On May
29, 2018, the United States filed a civil
antitrust Complaint seeking to enjoin
Bayer from acquiring Monsanto. The
Complaint alleges that the proposed
acquisition would substantially lessen
competition for the sale of a range of
agricultural products to farmers in the
United States in violation of Section 7
of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18.
Simultaneously with the filing of the
Complaint, the United States filed a
proposed Final Judgment, a stipulation
signed by the parties that consents to
entry of the proposed Final Judgment
after compliance with the requirements
of the Tunney Act, and a Competitive
Impact Statement describing the
transaction and the proposed Final
Judgment. The United States caused the
Complaint, the proposed Final
Judgment, and Competitive Impact
Statement to be published in the
Federal Register on June 13, 2018, see
83 Fed. Reg. 27652 (June 13, 2018), and
caused notice regarding the same,
together with directions for the
submission of written comments
relating to the proposed Final Judgment,
to be published in The Washington Post
on June 5–11, 2018 and in the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch on June 3, 4, 6, and 8–11,
2018. The 60-day period for public
comment ended on August 13, 2018.
The United States received 14
comments (Exhibits 1 through 14).
III. Standard of Judicial Review
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 60-day
comment period, after which the court
shall determine whether entry of the
proposed Final Judgment ‘‘is in the
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public interest.’’ 15 U.S.C. § 16(e)(1). 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.
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 1 (D.D.C. 2007) (assessing
public interest standard under the
Tunney Act); United States v. U.S.
Airways Group, Inc., 38 F. Supp. 3d 69,
75 (D.D.C. 2014) (explaining that the
‘‘court’s inquiry is limited’’ in Tunney
Act settlements); United States v. InBev
N.V./S.A., No. 08–1965 (JR), 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 mechanisms to enforce the final
judgment are clear and manageable’’).
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 in the government’s
complaint, whether the decree is
sufficiently clear, whether its
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
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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. Instead:
[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).2
In 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 U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 74–
75 (noting that a court should not reject
the proposed remedies because it
believes others are preferable and that
room must be made for the government
to grant concessions in the negotiation
process for settlements); 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-Daniels-Midland Co., 272 F.
Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2003) (noting that
the court should grant ‘‘due respect to
the government’s prediction as to the
effect of proposed remedies, its
perception of the market structure, and
its views of the nature of the case’’). 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
2 See
also 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’’).
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of the public interest.’ ’’ Microsoft, 56
F.3d at 1461 (quoting United States v.
Western Elec. Co., 900 F.2d 283, 309
(D.C. Cir. 1990)). 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; see also U.S. Airways, 38
F. Supp. 3d at 75 (noting that the court
must simply determine whether there is
a factual foundation for the
government’s decisions such that its
conclusions regarding the proposed
settlements are reasonable); InBev, 2009
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *20 (‘‘the
‘public interest’ is not to be measured by
comparing the violations alleged in the
complaint against those the court
believes could have, or even should
have, been alleged’’). 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.
Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1459–60.
In its 2004 amendments to the APPA,3
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); see
also U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 76
(indicating that a court is not required
to hold an evidentiary hearing or to
permit intervenors as part of its review
under the Tunney Act). This language
explicitly wrote into the statute what
Congress intended when it first enacted
the Tunney Act in 1974. As Senator
Tunney explained: ‘‘[t]he court is
nowhere compelled to go to trial or to
3 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).
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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 Sen. 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.
A court can make its public interest
determination based on the competitive
impact statement and response to public
comments alone. U.S. Airways, 38 F.
Supp. 3d at 76; see also 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.’’).
IV. The Investigation and the Proposed
Final Judgment
The proposed Final Judgment is the
culmination of a thorough,
comprehensive investigation conducted
by the Antitrust Division of the United
States Department of Justice. Based on
the evidence gathered during its
investigation, the United States
concluded that Bayer’s proposed
acquisition of Monsanto would likely
substantially lessen competition in 17
product markets in the agricultural
industry, resulting in higher prices, less
innovation, fewer choices, and lowerquality products for American farmers
and consumers. Accordingly, the United
States filed a civil antitrust lawsuit to
block the acquisition as a violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
§ 18.
The proposed Final Judgment
provides an effective and appropriate
remedy for the transaction’s likely
competitive harm by requiring Bayer to
divest its business in each relevant
market, along with various supporting
assets, to BASF, a global chemical
company with an existing crop
protection business. The United States
identified a divestiture package that
remedies all dimensions of harm
threatened by the proposed merger.
First, the proposed Final Judgment
requires Bayer to divest those
businesses that vigorously compete
head-to-head with Monsanto today.
Second, the proposed Final Judgment
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requires Bayer to divest seed treatment
businesses that, when combined with
Monsanto’s seed business, would have
given the combined company the
incentive and ability to harm
competition by raising the prices it
charges rival seed companies. Third,
because Bayer and Monsanto compete to
develop new products and services for
farmers, the proposed Final Judgment
requires the divestiture of associated
intellectual property and research
capabilities, including ‘‘pipeline’’
projects, to enable BASF to replace
Bayer as a leading innovator in the
relevant markets. Fourth, the proposed
Final Judgment requires the divestiture
of additional assets that will give BASF
the scale and scope to compete
effectively today and in the future.
Specifically, Bayer is required to
divest its entire global row crop seeds
and traits business (with insignificant
exceptions not relevant to the United
States), its entire global vegetable seeds
business, and all related research and
development (‘‘R&D’’) assets. Bayer also
must divest significant crop protection
assets, including its global glufosinate
ammonium business and IP and other
assets to allow BASF to continue
Bayer’s efforts in developing new
foundational herbicide systems. Finally,
Bayer is required to divest certain seed
treatments for corn, soy, and cotton.
Because many of the divested assets
will be separated from Bayer’s existing
business units and incorporated into
BASF, the proposed Final Judgment
includes provisions aimed at ensuring
that the assets are handed off in a
seamless and efficient manner. To that
end, Bayer is required to transfer
existing third-party agreements and
customer information to BASF, as well
as to enter transition services
agreements that ensure that BASF can
continue to serve customers
immediately upon completion of the
divestitures. The transition services and
interim supply agreements are timelimited to ensure that BASF will
become fully independent of Bayer as
soon as practicable.
The proposed Final Judgment also
contemplates heightened safeguards
intended to ensure that BASF is
receiving everything it needs to replace
Bayer as a competitor. The proposed
Final Judgment requires Bayer to
warrant that the assets being divested
are sufficient for BASF to maintain the
viability and competitiveness of the
divested businesses following BASF’s
acquisition of the assets. In addition, the
proposed Final Judgment gives BASF a
one-year window after closing to
identify any additional assets that are
reasonably necessary to ensure the
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continued competitiveness of the
divested businesses. The United States
will have sole discretion to determine if
Bayer must divest these additional
assets. Finally, the proposed Final
Judgment gives BASF a one-year
window to hire all of the personnel from
Bayer needed to support these
businesses. These novel provisions
strengthen the remedy by allowing
BASF to identify additional assets or
employees it needs to compete
effectively after it has operated the
divested businesses for a certain period
of time.
The divestitures will ensure that
BASF can step into Bayer’s shoes,
thereby preserving the competition that
the merger would otherwise destroy.
The proposed Final Judgment provides
for the appointment of a monitoring
trustee to have close oversight over the
divestitures and the transitional
agreements between Bayer and BASF to
ensure that they proceed appropriately.
The proposed Final Judgment also
includes robust mechanisms that will
allow the United States and the Court to
monitor the effectiveness of the relief
and to enforce compliance. And because
the United States has determined that
BASF, as the divestiture buyer, is a
necessary party to effectuate complete
relief, BASF has agreed to be joined to
this action for the purposes of the
divestitures.
V. Summary of Public Comments and
the United States’ Response
The United States received public
comments from a group of state
Attorneys General; certain Members of
Congress; the National Federation of
Independent Businesses (‘‘NFIB’’);
Syngenta, a seed and agrochemical
company; Daniel Ducore, former
Assistant Director of the FTC Bureau of
Competition’s Compliance Division;
Daniel Bellemare, an attorney; the Sierra
Club; the Natural Resources Defense
Council (‘‘NRDC’’); the Consumer
Federation of America; ActionAid USA;
the National Family Farm Coalition;
Friends of the Earth; the Sustainable
Food Center; and the Pollinator
Stewardship Council.
Certain commenters acknowledge the
meaningful protections for competition
that the United States achieved, even as
they advocate for modifications to the
proposed Final Judgment. Syngenta, one
of the Defendants’ primary competitors,
states that it ‘‘believes that the
[proposed Final Judgment] remedies
many of the most complex and difficult
anticompetitive aspects of the
transaction.’’ 4 Similarly, Daniel Ducore,
4 Syngenta
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who served for more than 25 years as
Assistant Director of the division that
oversaw all of the FTC’s merger and
non-merger remedies, notes that the
remedy ‘‘appears to be as robust a
divestiture as might be imagined,’’ and
further observes that while ‘‘[e]very
remedy raises risks about the scope of
divested assets, the particular buyer,
and the implementation of the remedy,’’
here the United States ‘‘appears to have
done everything possible to reduce
those risks.’’ 5
The comments can be grouped into
six categories: (1) BASF’s suitability as
a divestiture buyer, including whether it
will have sufficient assets, expertise,
and incentives to preserve competition;
(2) concerns that BASF could fail to
execute the remedy in a way that
effectively preserves competition; (3)
concerns about whether the proposed
Final Judgment properly addresses
issues related to seed treatments; (4)
concerns that the remedy will not
prevent the combined Bayer/Monsanto
from leveraging its strengths in certain
areas—in particular, digital agriculture
and traits—to foreclose competition in
other markets; (5) procedural matters,
including government oversight and
enforcement of proposed Final
Judgment compliance; and (6) other
miscellaneous comments, including
general concerns about consolidation in
the agricultural industry; concerns
relating to the environment, wildlife
and human health; and concerns that
the United States’ review process may
have been influenced by politics. The
comments are summarized in more
detail below:
• A number of commenters express
concern about BASF’s suitability as a
divestiture buyer and its ability to
compete effectively with the divested
assets. NRDC and the Attorneys
General of California, Iowa,
Massachusetts, Mississippi, and
Oregon (‘‘State Attorneys General’’)
express concerns that BASF may not
be able to replace Bayer as a
competitor, asserting that BASF has
no seeds experience, that Monsanto is
dominant in the market for genetically
modified seeds, and that the
divestiture may leave BASF reliant on
the merged firm and discourage BASF
from competing vigorously.6 The
Consumer Federation of America
argues that the United States should
have required the merged firm to
divest the stronger set of assets to
5 Ducore
Comment (Exhibit 6) at 1.
Comment (Exhibit 9) at 3–4; State
Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 5–7.
6 NRDC
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address each competitive overlap.7 In
contrast, Daniel Ducore states that the
divestiture package includes
everything that BASF could need to
operate the divested businesses
successfully.8 Daniel Bellemare raises
a different concern, suggesting that if
BASF is already well-positioned to
enter the relevant markets without the
aid of the divested assets, it may not
be an appropriate divestiture buyer.9
• Daniel Ducore and the State Attorneys
General express concerns that BASF
will fail to execute its business plans
successfully and will therefore fail to
replace the competition lost from the
merger. Mr. Ducore opines that the
divestiture package includes
everything that BASF could need to
operate the divested businesses
successfully but nevertheless
expresses concern that ‘‘BASF, even if
it obtains everything that was
considered necessary and relevant
when the remedy was negotiated, will
fail to step in for Bayer and compete
with the new Bayer-Monsanto as
strongly as Bayer had competed with
Monsanto before the deal.’’ 10 Mr.
Ducore urges the United States to
monitor BASF’s performance over the
next few years to evaluate the
effectiveness of the settlement. The
State Attorneys General recommend
that the Court ‘‘order a retrospective
study of the effects of the merger on
competition two years after transfer of
the divestiture assets has begun.’’ 11
• Syngenta and the Sustainable Food
Center express concerns about various
aspects of the seed treatment
divestiture and seek modifications to
the proposed Final Judgment’s
provisions concerning seed
treatments. Syngenta asserts that
certain provisions of the proposed
Final Judgment should be modified to
avoid the ‘‘risk [of] reducing
competition and inhibiting innovation
in the affected product markets’’ or
otherwise undermining the purpose of
the remedy.12 The Sustainable Food
Center seeks a broader divestiture of
a class of seed treatments.13
• Several commenters, including the
National Family Farm Coalition,
Friends of the Earth, and NRDC, argue
that allowing Bayer to retain
Monsanto’s leading digital agriculture
7 Consumer
Fed’n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at
1.
8 Ducore
Comment (Exhibit 6) at 5.
Comment (Exhibit 5) at 10–12.
10 Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 1–2.
11 State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at
2–3.
12 Syngenta Comment (Exhibit 12) at 1.
13 Sustainable Food Ctr. Comment (Exhibit 11) at
1.
9 Bellemare
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platform will enhance the merged
firm’s ability to influence farmer
choice in other areas, such as seed
and crop protection markets.14
Friends of the Earth, the Sustainable
Food Center, and the Consumer
Federation of America offer various
suggestions regarding digital
agriculture divestitures, including
proposing that Monsanto divest its
digital agriculture platform or revise
its data access policies.15 NRDC, the
Consumer Federation of America, and
the Pollinator Stewardship Council
also raise broad cross-product
leveraging concerns that the merged
firm will be in a position to exploit its
significant position in certain markets
to achieve dominance in other
markets.
• Three commenters take issue with
various procedural aspects of the
settlement. NFIB raises four concerns
regarding aspects of the proposed
Final Judgment pertaining to the
United States’ authority to oversee
and enforce compliance with the
settlement—generally advocating for
greater protections for the
Defendants—and proposes
modifications to address each issue.16
The State Attorneys General suggest
certain measures relating to the
enforcement mechanisms in the
proposed Final Judgment, such as
removing the provision allowing for
possible early termination and
mandating the appointment of a
monitoring trustee.17 And Daniel
Bellemare argues that a public interest
determination in a transaction this
complex merits more than the limited
judicial inquiry that the Tunney Act
contemplates.18
• Certain commenters express concerns
with consolidation in the agricultural
industry in general; some of these
comments also suggest that the United
States should have sued to block this
transaction.19
14 NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 4, 6, 9–10;
Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 2–3;
Nat’l Family Farm Coal. Comment (Exhibit 8).
15 Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 3–
4; Consumer Fed’n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at
2; Sustainable Food Ctr. Comment (Exhibit 11).
16 NFIB Comment (Exhibit 13).
17 State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at
2–3.
18 Bellemare Comment (Exhibit 5) at 12–15.
19 In addition to their own comments, certain
advocacy groups submitted lists of names of
individuals supporting the group’s comments and,
in some cases, separate messages from individual
members of the general public. These individual
messages were not sent directly to the Division by
their authors. ActionAid USA’s submission
included a list of more than 1,200 individual
supporters of its comments. The Sierra Club
enclosed more than 18,000 signatures and roughly
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• A number of commenters, including
Sierra Club, NRDC, ActionAid USA,
and the National Family Farm
Coalition, argue that the merger will
have a negative effect on the
environment, wildlife and human
health.20
• A group of 27 Members of Congress
refer to media reports that raise the
possibility that the White House may
have unduly influenced the review of
this and other transactions. They urge
that antitrust enforcement ‘‘continue
to be treated as a law enforcement
matter properly left to the
independent judgment of DOJ.’’ 21
a. Comments Regarding BASF’s
Suitability as a Divestiture Buyer and
Ability to Compete Effectively
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Comments questioning BASF’s ability
to preserve competition fall into two
general categories: (1) BASF’s ability to
succeed with the divested assets and (2)
BASF’s incentives to compete
aggressively against the merged
company. The United States carefully
considered these issues in crafting the
proposed remedy. The proposed Final
Judgment requires Bayer to divest a
broad range of assets—essentially its
entire global seeds and traits business as
well as its digital agriculture business
and important crop protection
products—and to provide an array of
transitional services. While it is
impossible to predict with certainty
how well BASF will perform with the
divested assets (just as Bayer’s own
performance with those assets absent
the merger is not certain), the proposed
remedy ensures that BASF will be as
well-positioned as possible and have the
necessary incentives to step into Bayer’s
shoes to replace the competition that
otherwise would be lost through the
merger.
2,500 individual messages. NRDC and Friends of
the Earth both submitted, along with their own
comments, tens of thousands of what appear to be
identical or substantially similar messages from
individuals opposed to the merger. In addition, a
number of other individuals sent emails about
concerns relating to the transaction to the United
States using various channels outside of the
designated procedures for submitting Tunney Act
comments. The United States has reviewed these
messages and emails, and none appear to address
the substance of the proposed Final Judgment or
raise any issue not otherwise addressed in this
Response to Comments. Accordingly, the United
States has not addressed these lists of names,
individual messages, or emails as separate
comments and does not intend to file or publish
them.
20 See, e.g., NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 7–10.
21 Members of Cong. Comment (Exhibit 3) at 2–
3.
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i. The Proposed Divestitures Give BASF
Everything Necessary to Preserve
Competition
The State Attorneys General assert
that the proposed Final Judgment
‘‘trusts that BASF can immediately step
into the shoes of Bayer in the market’’
with the divestiture assets and express
concern about the consequences if
BASF is not able to do so.22 They also
observe that BASF ‘‘does not currently
make seeds and has never run a seeds
business.’’ 23 Other commenters
likewise express doubt about BASF’s
ability to replace Bayer as a
competitor.24
The United States crafted the remedy
specifically taking into account BASF’s
existing assets and capabilities.25 The
fact that United States has not identified
viable alternative buyers is not a
weakness in the remedy as some
commenters might suggest,26 but rather
a reflection of the importance of the
buyer to the remedy here and the high
standard that the United States applied
in evaluating potential buyers for the
divested assets. BASF is a large
multinational firm with extensive
experience operating in jurisdictions
around the world. And while it is
correct that BASF has not owned a seed
business, BASF has extensive
agricultural experience in crop
protection and trait research—closely
related businesses that it will integrate
with the seed businesses it is acquiring
from Bayer.
This remedy is the result of a careful
and thorough investigation, during
which the United States scrutinized the
merging parties’ and BASF’s businesses
and operations to identify a
comprehensive package of assets to be
divested. The United States has
structured the proposed remedy to
position BASF to be as strong of a
competitor as Bayer in the affected
markets. To that end, the required
divestitures go beyond what would be
needed to address the current horizontal
overlaps or vertical concerns in order to
ensure that BASF can step into Bayer’s
shoes, thereby preserving the
competition that otherwise would be
lost through the merger. They also
provide BASF with comparable scale
and scope to Bayer and give BASF the
assets it needs going forward to be a
strong innovator.
22 State
Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at
5.
23 Id.
24 See, e.g., Consumer Fed’n of Am. Comment
(Exhibit 4) at 1; NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9).
25 See Competitive Impact Statement at 31–32.
26 See State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit
2) at 5.
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Bayer is required to divest its entire
global row crop seeds and traits
business (with insignificant exceptions
not relevant to the United States), its
entire global vegetable seeds business,
and all related R&D assets. Even though
neither Bayer nor Monsanto sells hybrid
wheat in the United States, Bayer must
divest its entire wheat R&D platform as
well as its research facility in Ghent,
Belgium that is used to support R&D for
wheat and other crops. These broad
divestitures assure that BASF will be
able to take advantage of cross-crop R&D
synergies to the same extent as Bayer
today. Similarly, Bayer is divesting its
entire vegetable seed business, which
encompasses 24 different crops, even
though the transaction raises
competition concerns in only five
vegetable seed markets in the United
States.
On the crop protection side, Bayer is
divesting not only its global glufosinate
ammonium business, which competes
with Monsanto’s Roundup, but also
intellectual property and other assets to
allow BASF to continue Bayer’s efforts
in developing new foundational
herbicide systems.27 Bayer is also
required to divest certain seed
treatments for corn, soy, and cotton to
address horizontal and vertical
concerns.28 BASF is now able to offer
these market-leading seed treatment
products alongside its cotton and soy
seeds, just as Bayer was able to do prior
to the merger.
Without the merger, it is anticipated
that competition would intensify
between Bayer and Monsanto to pursue
what the industry calls ‘‘integrated
solutions’’—combinations of seeds,
traits, and crop protection products
supported by digital farming
technologies and other services.29
Commenters such as NRDC note the
potential importance of digital
agriculture tools (which help farmers
maximize yields and get the most out of
their other agriculture products) to
future competition in the industry. Even
though integrated solutions are still
evolving, the proposed remedy requires
Bayer to divest all assets related to
Bayer’s digital agriculture business,
including pipeline products, and to
transfer employees supporting these
assets and products to BASF. With these
assets and employees, BASF will be able
to step into Bayer’s shoes in pursuing
integrated solutions.
As an additional precaution, the
proposed Final Judgment requires Bayer
27 See Proposed Final Judgment § II(U);
Complaint ¶ 36.
28 See Complaint ¶ ¶ 38–50.
29 See id. ¶ 61.
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to warrant that the divestiture assets are
‘‘sufficient in all material respects for
BASF, taking into account BASF’s assets
and business, to maintain the viability
and competitiveness’’ of the businesses
BASF has acquired.30 And if BASF
determines that Bayer has not divested
all of the assets ‘‘reasonably necessary
for the continued competitiveness’’ of
the divested businesses, BASF may
notify Bayer and the Monitoring Trustee
that it requires those assets, and, in that
situation, the United States will
determine whether the assets should be
divested.31 One commenter notes that
this aspect of the remedy ‘‘perhaps
reflect[ed] the Division’s efforts to
reduce any ‘asset package risk’ to near
zero.’’ 32
BASF will have the benefit of not only
all of Bayer’s seeds and traits assets, but
also of the approximately 4,000 former
Bayer employees slated to move to
BASF with the divestitures. These
employees, who operated the divested
businesses day-in and day-out for Bayer,
have extensive seeds experience. If
BASF determines during the following
year that it lacks employees with
expertise it needs, it may seek to hire,
without any interference from Bayer,
any additional Bayer employees who
supported the divested businesses in
any way since 2015.33
Complementing the divested assets
and transferring personnel, the
proposed remedy requires Bayer to
provide transitional support to BASF to
ensure that BASF will be able to step
into Bayer’s competitive shoes. For
example, because prior to the merger
Bayer was able to sell a suite of its own
seed treatments for use on its
proprietary canola, cotton, and soy
seeds, Bayer is required to provide
BASF a supply of these seed treatments
at Bayer’s cost until BASF is able to
develop alternative sources of supply.34
In addition to the various transition
services specifically discussed in the
proposed Final Judgment, Bayer is
required to provide ‘‘any other
transition services reasonably
necessary’’ to facilitate a seamless
transition of the divested businesses
from Bayer to BASF.35 One of the
responsibilities of the Monitoring
Trustee is to ensure that Bayer lives up
to its obligation to provide such
transition services to BASF. As Daniel
Ducore observes, ‘‘it’s hard to identify
30 Proposed
Final Judgment § IV(F)(1).
31 Id. § IV(F)(2).
32 Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 4.
33 See Proposed Final Judgment § IV(E).
34 See id. § IV(G)(1).
35 See id. § IV(H)(4).
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anything that BASF might need that it
isn’t getting.’’ 36
Voicing a different concern about the
sufficiency of the divestiture assets, the
Consumer Federation of America writes
that ‘‘[t]he chances that BASF will be
able to acquire the weaker agricultural
assets of the two firms and use them to
compete effectively are doubtful.’’ 37 Yet
Bayer has been a strong competitor even
with what the Consumer Federation
calls Bayer’s ‘‘weaker agricultural
assets.’’ And the proposed Final
Judgment ensures that BASF will
receive all of the assets it needs (along
with transitional support) to step into
Bayer’s shoes, thereby replacing any
competition that would otherwise be
lost as a result of the merger. To the
extent commenters believe that
Monsanto, by itself, held too much
market power prior to the merger, that
concern is not specific to the merger and
not within the four corners of the
United States’ Complaint. See U.S.
Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 76
(‘‘ ‘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. . . .’ ’’) (quoting United
States v. Graftech Int’l, No. 10-cv-2039,
2011 WL 1566781, at *13 (D.D.C. Mar.
24, 2011)).
While the proposed Final Judgment
requires the merging parties to divest
Bayer’s assets, and not Monsanto’s, it
also does not permit them to pick and
choose among Bayer’s and Monsanto’s
assets to divest only the weakest links
in each company’s portfolio. Bayer is
not divesting Monsanto’s canola
business, even though Monsanto has a
much smaller market share than Bayer
in canola.38 Bayer is divesting its entire
global vegetable seeds business
(Nunhems) even though Bayer’s share
for certain vegetable seeds is larger than
Monsanto’s.39 Similarly, Bayer is
required to divest its market-leading
nematicidal seed treatment products,
which enjoy over a 95% share for corn
and 85% share for soy, rather than
Monsanto’s NemaStrike product, which
has only recently become available for
commercial sale.40
The required divestitures are also not
wholly limited to Bayer assets. Bayer is
a relatively new entrant to the soybean
business in the United States. It has
emerged as a serious threat to Monsanto
36 Ducore
Comment (Exhibit 6) at 5.
Fed’n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4)
37 Consumer
at 1.
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in the southern United States, but it
lacks germplasm and varieties suitable
to the Midwest, an important soybean
growing region. To help strengthen
BASF as a competitor to the merged
company (and other firms), the merged
company is obligated to divest not only
Bayer’s global soybean business, but
also certain groups of Monsanto
soybeans used for research and
breeding.41 These Monsanto assets will
help make BASF a stronger competitor
in the Midwest than Bayer was before
the merger.
In contrast to some commenters’
concern that BASF may not be able to
compete effectively with the seed assets
it is acquiring from Bayer, Daniel
Bellemare questions whether BASF
would have entered the seeds markets
and become a significant competitor on
its own without the divestitures.42 Even
for a large company with substantial
resources such as BASF, however,
barriers to entry in these markets are
high.43 BASF needs Bayer’s extensive
libraries of seeds and other assets to
compete as an integrated firm on a
global scale in seeds and traits.
ii. BASF Has a Strong Incentive to
Compete Aggressively Against Bayer
Certain commenters also express
concern that BASF will lack sufficient
incentive to compete against the merged
company due to the number of postdivestiture agreements between BASF
and Bayer as well as BASF’s interest in
dicamba production.44 These concerns
do not cast doubt on the strength of the
proposed remedy. The proposed Final
Judgment incentivizes BASF to compete
aggressively against Bayer and other
competitors, and encourages BASF to
become independent from Bayer as soon
as is reasonably possible.
Bayer is obligated under the proposed
Final Judgment to provide various forms
of transitional support to BASF. These
arrangements lead the State Attorneys
General to suggest that, ‘‘[b]ecause
BASF will have to rely on Bayer to make
these assets work, the company will
have a disincentive to anger Bayer.’’ 45
The tolling, supply, and transition
service agreements are designed to
eliminate any potential gaps in BASF’s
ability to fully compete with the
divested assets from the outset. The
intention is not to establish an
‘‘ongoing, close relationship’’ between
BASF and Bayer as the State Attorneys
41 Proposed
Final Judgment §§ IV(N), II(S).
Comment (Exhibit 5) at 10–12.
43 See Complaint ¶ 62.
44 State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at
6–7; NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 2.
45 State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at
6.
42 Bellemare
38 See Complaint ¶ 28 (Bayer’s share is 60%;
Monsanto’s share is 14%).
39 See, e.g., id. ¶ 58 (Bayer’s share of watermelon
seeds is much larger than Monsanto’s).
40 See Complaint ¶¶ 41–42.
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General suggest.46 To the contrary, the
proposed Final Judgment sets relatively
short initial time periods for these
arrangements (generally two years or
less), which may be extended only with
the approval of the United States. The
proposed Final Judgment encourages
BASF to end these arrangements as soon
as practicable, requiring BASF to use
‘‘best efforts to develop or procure
alternative sources of supply by the end
of the initial periods’’ for tolling and
supply agreements, and ‘‘to develop
alternative solutions by the end of the
initial periods’’ for transition service
agreements.47 The Monitoring Trustee
will closely track BASF’s progress
towards operating without reliance on
Bayer.48 In the meantime, BASF will not
have to pull its competitive punches out
of concern that Bayer will stop
providing the tolling, supply, or other
transitional services that it needs.
Bayer’s obligations are clearly stated in
the proposed Final Judgment (and
detailed in separate agreements between
BASF and Bayer), and the Monitoring
Trustee will assess whether Bayer is
fulfilling its responsibilities.
NRDC suggests that BASF may not be
an effective competitor to the merged
company because of BASF’s existing
interest in the herbicide dicamba.49 The
United States carefully considered
BASF’s premerger role as a supplier of
dicamba to Monsanto in evaluating
BASF’s suitability as a buyer of the
divestiture assets. As the owner of
Bayer’s glufosinate ammonium business
and the LibertyLink traits, BASF will
earn returns from selling seed
containing the LibertyLink traits,
licensing those traits to third party seed
companies, and selling the Liberty
herbicides. These interests will greatly
outweigh any benefit BASF would gain,
as a supplier of dicamba, from
Monsanto’s sale of seed containing
Monsanto’s dicamba-tolerance traits.50
Further, the proposed remedy is
structured so that BASF will not only
have an appropriate incentive to
promote its already-commercialized
LibertyLink traits, but also traits that
potentially would compete with
46 Id.
at 7.
47 Proposed
Final Judgment §§ IV(G)(10); (H)(6).
will Bayer want the transitional agreements
to continue longer than necessary, as Bayer is
required during the initial terms to provide the
tolling and other services at variable cost (or better).
Proposed Final Judgment §§ IV(G), (H).
49 NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 2.
50 It is also unclear for how long (or to what
extent) BASF will continue to supply dicamba to
Monsanto. In 2017, Monsanto broke ground on a
$975 million expansion of a facility in Louisiana to
produce dicamba. See, e.g., https://monsanto.com/
news-releases/monsanto-board-of-directorsapproves-expansion-in-luling-louisiana/.
Monsanto’s dicamba-tolerance traits in
the future, such as isoxaflutole
tolerance.51
b. Comments Regarding BASF’s Ability
to Execute the Remedy Successfully and
Requests for Ongoing Study
Three commenters—the State
Attorneys General, Daniel Ducore, and
Consumer Federation of America—raise
concerns that the size and complexity of
the proposed remedy create uncertainty
as to whether BASF will be able to
execute its current plans successfully
and preserve competition at premerger
levels. As Mr. Ducore describes his
concern, there remains a risk that BASF
‘‘will fail to step in for Bayer and
compete with the new Bayer-Monsanto
as strongly as Bayer had competed with
Monsanto before the deal,’’
notwithstanding that the remedy
package ‘‘appears to be as robust a
divestiture as might be imagined.’’ 52
The commenters do not propose any
specific measures that could be
incorporated to reduce these risks. Nor
do they urge the court to block the
merger. Instead, Mr. Ducore and the
State Attorneys General propose that the
United States commit to conduct a
retrospective study on the success of the
settlement in preserving competition,
with the State Attorneys General
requesting that this Court order that the
study be conducted two years after the
divestitures have been completed.53 The
commenters argue that the uncertainty
inherent in the large and complex
transfer of businesses and assets justifies
greater oversight of BASF’s future
operations than the government would
typically undertake in conjunction with
a merger settlement. Mr. Ducore
proposes a particularly extensive
‘‘ongoing assessment,’’ including, for
example, tracking BASF’s ongoing
performance, assessing BASF’s
evaluation of its R&D projects, and
reviewing BASF’s sales and pricing
levels.54
An obligatory retrospective study of
the effects of this merger and settlement
on competition is not necessary to
protect the public interest. As described
more fully in Section V(a), the United
States has incorporated a number of
safeguards in the proposed Final
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51 To ensure that BASF has a similar incentive to
Bayer to commercialize and promote these traits,
Bayer is required to provide BASF with a supply
of isoxaflutole at Bayer’s cost and to use best efforts
to obtain regulatory approvals for the use of
isoxaflutole over soybeans and cotton containing an
isoxaflutole-tolerance trait. Proposed Final
Judgment §§ IV(G)(2); (L)(3).
52 Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 1–2.
53 State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at
2–3.
54 Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 5–7.
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Judgment to ensure that BASF will be
fully capable of stepping into Bayer’s
shoes as an effective competitor. The
United States intends to monitor the
divestitures to ensure that all of the
assets and businesses are transferred to
BASF in accordance with the terms of
the proposed Final Judgment, and it has
even taken the unusual step of
requesting the appointment of a
monitoring trustee to supplement the
government’s oversight of this process.
The Monitoring Trustee has authority to
access the relevant company personnel,
books, records, and other pertinent
information to ensure that Defendants
comply with their obligations, and the
trustee will provide regular updates to
the United States on Defendants’
compliance.55 The Trustee will
continue to monitor compliance with
the proposed Final Judgment for as long
as the transitional agreements required
by the proposed Final Judgment remain
in place (unless this period shortened or
extended by the United States).56 Thus,
the proposed Final Judgment
contemplates several years of oversight
by the Monitoring Trustee with regular
reporting to the United States to address
issues that may arise with respect to the
remedy.
That said, the United States
deliberately crafted the proposed Final
Judgment as a complete and permanent
structural resolution that remedies the
antitrust violations alleged in the
Complaint without the need for future
government involvement in BASF’s (or
Bayer’s) business operations. A
retroactive assessment would not help
shape the remedy in this matter. The
commenters do not explain how they
expect the United States to use the
results of the assessment they would
require, but they may be suggesting that
the United States should require
additional remedies in the future in the
event the post-hoc review reveals
deficiencies in the settlement. As a law
enforcement agency, the United States is
ill-equipped to continually oversee
broader market operations as suggested
by the commenters. The United States
should not be second-guessing, for
example, BASF’s business plans or R&D
investments several years from now,
when many of the relevant
circumstances may have changed from
today. Indeed, as it would be impossible
to predict with certainty how well Bayer
would have performed with the
divested assets absent the merger, it also
would be impossible to assess with
certainty BASF’s performance in
comparison. To the contrary, once the
55 Proposed
56 Id.
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United States has remedied the antitrust
violations—as the proposed Final
Judgment does here—competition, not
the government, should determine how
individual competitors and the market
as a whole perform going forward.
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c. Comments Regarding Seed
Treatments
Two commenters raise questions
relating to seed treatments. Syngenta
generally supports the proposed Final
Judgment, noting that it ‘‘resolves many
of the most complex and difficult
anticompetitive aspects of the
Transaction;’’ 57 however, Syngenta
seeks modifications to provisions that
require Bayer to supply BASF with seed
treatments and proposes restrictions on
BASF’s ability to sell divested seed
treatments to Bayer. In addition, the
Sustainable Food Center proposes that
all of Bayer’s neonicotinoid seed
treatments be divested to BASF. We
respond to each of these comments
below.
i. The Proposed Final Judgment
Appropriately Requires Bayer to
Supply Seed Treatments to BASF at
Variable Cost
The proposed Final Judgment requires
Bayer to supply certain seed treatments
products to BASF at ‘‘variable cost’’ for
a limited period of time to ensure
continuity of seed treatment supply for
the divested businesses.58 Syngenta
expresses concern that the term
‘‘variable cost’’ is susceptible to
different interpretations and could
‘‘permit BASF the opportunity to buy
the products at a fraction of their full
production costs,’’ which would give
BASF ‘‘a cost advantage above any
competitor’’ and ‘‘distort normal
competitive dynamics’’ for these
products.59 In particular, Syngenta
asserts that the agribusiness usage of the
term ‘‘variable cost’’ would include only
‘‘direct input costs’’ (such as the cost of
raw materials), and exclude other costs
that would vary with production levels,
resulting in BASF paying too little for
these products.60 Essentially, Syngenta
appears to be concerned that BASF may
get too good a deal from Bayer on seed
treatment products, which could make
it more challenging for Syngenta, the
second largest seed treatment supplier,
to compete with BASF. Syngenta asks
that the proposed Final Judgment be
‘‘clarified to note that ‘variable cost’ is
defined more broadly than its typical
industry definition to include an
57 Syngenta
Comment (Exhibit 12) at 1.
Final Judgment at § IV(G).
59 Syngenta Comment (Exhibit 12) at 1, 3–4.
60 Id. at 3.
58 Proposed
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appropriate allocation of fixed costs.’’ 61
To accomplish this, Syngenta proposes
amending the proposed Final Judgment
to require Bayer to supply BASF these
seed treatment products at ‘‘fully
absorbed cost,’’ an accounting measure
that includes an allocation of certain
fixed costs.62
Syngenta’s concerns are misplaced,
and the proposed Final Judgment
changes that Syngenta requests are not
necessary. The seed treatment supply
provisions aim to place BASF in the
same cost position as Bayer before the
merger. By doing so, the remedy
preserves competition during the
transition period since BASF’s pricing
decisions will be based on the same
underlying cost structure as Bayer prior
to the merger. To accomplish this, the
proposed Final Judgment uses the
economic concept of ‘‘variable cost,’’
i.e., ‘‘that part of cost which varies with
the level of output.’’ 63 This measure of
costs will capture costs that directly
relate to Bayer’s production of seed
treatments for BASF—including, for
example, a per-unit allocation for
machine use, where appropriate—
regardless of the accounting label that
industry participants might place on
any specific cost item. Thus, there is no
basis for concern that Bayer will be
selling seed treatments to BASF at a
fraction of the production costs. To the
contrary, BASF will fully reimburse
Bayer for the costs directly related to
producing these seed treatment
products.
Syngenta’s proposal to change the
cost standard for seed treatments would
also introduce needless complication.
Bayer is required to provide several
additional products and services at
‘‘variable cost’’ for the purpose of
placing BASF in the same cost position
as Bayer before the merger. Amending
the proposed Final Judgment to
introduce another cost standard specific
to seed treatments would create
confusion in addition to being
unnecessary. It would also create a risk
that Bayer would face conflicting
obligations across jurisdictions, as the
European Commission and other
jurisdictions have imposed the same
variable cost requirements as the United
States in their respective settlement
documents.64
61 Id.
at 4.
62 Id.
63 See, e.g., Variable cost, Oxford Dictionary of
Economics (5th ed. 2017).
64 See, e.g., European Commission, Case
M.8084—Bayer/Monsanto, Modification of
Commitments, Schedule, at ¶ 21, p. 39 (divested
seed treatments to be tolled at variable cost), at
¶ 68(c) (glufosinate formulations supplied at
variable cost), and 9, 13, 28, 65 and 67 (transitional
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ii. BASF Cannot Resell Bayer Seed
Treatments Supplied under Section
IV(G)(1) for Use on Non-BASF Seeds
Section IV(G)(1) of the proposed Final
Judgment requires Bayer to supply
BASF with the seed treatments that
Bayer is not divesting to BASF but that
Bayer has been using in the divested
seed businesses. These provisions allow
BASF to seamlessly continue marketing
the same combinations of seeds and
seed treatments that Bayer offered
before the merger while BASF
transitions to alternative sources of
supply. Syngenta suggests, however,
that this section could be read to permit
BASF to resell these Bayer seed
treatments for use on other companies’
seeds in competition with Syngenta,
Bayer, and other producers of seed
treatments. Syngenta proposes
amending the proposed Final Judgment
to expressly prohibit this.65
Syngenta’s proposed amendment is
unnecessary, as it would merely repeat
what is already clear from the text of the
proposed Final Judgment. The title of
Section IV(G)(1) makes plain that the
provision relates to ‘‘Seed Treatment
Supply Agreements for Broad Acre
Seeds and Traits Business,’’ 66 that is,
the agreements are intended to supply
the Broad Acre Seeds and Traits
business BASF is acquiring from Bayer.
Moreover, the body of the provision
limits its scope to Bayer seed treatments
that have been ‘‘used by Bayer in the
Broad Acre Seeds and Traits
Business.’’ 67 The European Commission
Commitments likewise prohibit resale
because they require Bayer to supply
these seed treatments to BASF for use
on BASF seeds.68 Given that Section
IV(G)(1) is limited to the supply of seed
treatments to BASF for use on its own
supplies or services will be supplied by Bayer at
variable cost), dated April 11, 2018, available at
https://ec.europa.eu/competition/mergers/cases/
decisions/m8084_12985_3.pdf; Competition
Commission of India, Order under Section 31(7) of
the Competition Act, Combination Registration No.
C–2017/08/523, at ¶ 180(c), p. 54 (glufosinate
formulation to be supplied at variable cost) and
¶ 181, p. 54 (transitions supplies or services
provided at variable cost), dated June 14, 2018,
available at https://www.cci.gov.in/sites/default/
files/Notice_order_document/Order_
14.06.2018.pdf.
65 Syngenta Comment (Exhibit 12) at 2.
66 Proposed Final Judgment § IV(G)(1) (emphasis
added).
67 Id. § IV(G)(1).
68 See European Commission, Case M.8084—
Bayer/Monsanto, Modification of Commitments,
Schedule, at ¶ 66(d) and 66(e), p. 52 (in connection
with the divestiture of Broad Acre Seeds and Traits,
requiring Bayer to supply seed treatment ‘‘used on’’
divested canola seeds and seed treatment ‘‘for
divested cotton and soy varieties’’), dated April 11,
2018, available at https://ec.europa.eu/competition/
mergers/cases/decisions/m8084_12985_3.pdf.
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seeds, Syngenta’s proposed amendment
should be rejected.
iii. The Proposed Final Judgment
Allows BASF to Sell Seed Treatments to
Bayer
Syngenta is also concerned that
nothing prevents BASF from entering
into arm’s-length commercial
agreements to supply Bayer with the
seed treatments products it is obtaining
through the divestitures. Syngenta
contends that allowing BASF to enter
into such an agreement with Bayer
would undermine the remedy because it
would ‘‘permit Bayer to recreate the sort
of product bundles that were the source
of significant concern in the
Transaction.’’ 69 Syngenta proposes to
close the purported ‘‘loophole’’ by
amending the proposed Final Judgment
to prohibit BASF from selling divested
seed treatments to Bayer except for use
in Bayer’s branded seed business.70
Syngenta’s concerns are based on a
fundamental misunderstanding of the
United States’ theory of harm relating to
seed treatments and the basis for
requiring divestiture of certain seed
treatment products. The United States
has alleged that the merger would
substantially lessen competition
through the vertical integration of Bayer
and Monsanto in one respect: By
combining Monsanto’s strong position
in corn and soybean seeds with Bayer’s
dominant position in certain seed
treatments, the merger would give the
combined company the incentive and
ability to harm its seed rivals by raising
the price of those seed treatments—a
key input for genetically modified
seeds. For example, before the merger,
Bayer sold the only seed treatment that
effectively controls a destructive pest
called corn rootworm. Because Bayer
did not sell corn seeds itself, it had a
strong incentive to sell that seed
treatment to all corn seed companies,
including Monsanto’s rivals. But the
merger changes this calculus because
Bayer now owns Monsanto, the largest
supplier of corn seeds in the United
States. If Bayer were permitted to retain
its corn seed treatment, it would have a
strong incentive to raise the price of that
treatment to its seed rivals (or stop
selling it altogether), knowing that its
rivals rely on the product and would be
less able to compete effectively without
it.
In other words, the possibility that
Bayer may continue to use the divested
seed treatments on its seeds does not, in
and of itself, give rise to competitive
harm. Rather, the problem is one of
incentives. By vesting control of both
products in one firm, the merger would
create an incentive for the combined
firm to raise its rivals’ costs to make it
harder for them to compete to sell seeds.
To ensure that the merger does not give
rise to this incentive to foreclose other
competitors, the United States has
required Bayer to divest certain seed
treatments to BASF. In doing so, the
United States has preserved the
competitive status quo: The seeds and
seed treatments remain under the
control of different firms, Bayer and
BASF, respectively. Accordingly, the
divestiture of these seed treatments to
BASF fully resolves the vertical
foreclosure allegations in the Complaint.
iv. Concerns Regarding All
Neonicotinoid Seed Treatments Are
Outside the Scope of the Complaint
Sustainable Food Center comments
that the merger should not be permitted
unless Bayer divests, among other
things, all its ‘‘neonicotinoid seed
treatments.’’ 71 ‘‘Neonicotinoids’’ refer
to a particular chemical class of
insecticides. Under the proposed Final
Judgment, Bayer will divest seed
treatments based on the chemical
clothianidin, which is one type of
neonicotinoid. Bayer also sells seed
treatments based on the chemicals
imidacloprid and thiacloprid, two other
types of neonicotinoid. The Complaint
does not include a claim relating to
these types of seed treatments.
Accordingly, there is no basis for
requiring Bayer to divest these products
as a condition of approving the merger.
d. Comments Related to Digital
Agriculture and Cross-Product
Leveraging
Several commenters argue that
allowing Bayer to retain Monsanto’s
leading digital agriculture platform will
enhance the merged firm’s ability to
influence farmer choice in other areas,
such as seed and crop protection
markets.72 Digital agriculture, although
still emerging, refers to tools and
services that allow farmers to collect,
store, process, or interpret data about
their crops. Digital agriculture is
expected to drive an industry trend
toward ‘‘integrated solutions’’—
combinations of seeds, traits, and crop
protection products supported by digital
farming technologies and other services.
Certain commenters argue that the
merged firm will be able to use its
platform to recommend its own
71 Sustainable
Food Ctr. Comment (Exhibit 11).
Comment (Exhibit 9) at 4, 6, 9–10;
Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 2–3;
Nat’l Family Farm Coal. Comment (Exhibit 8).
72 NRDC
69 Syngenta
70 Id.
Comment (Exhibit 12) at 2.
at 2–3.
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products, ‘‘locking in’’ farmers to the
merged firm’s portfolio of products.73
Several commenters urge the United
States to seek to block the merger
altogether based on these concerns.74
Other commenters propose
modifications to the settlement on this
basis. For example, Friends of the Earth
and the Consumer Federation of
America argue that Monsanto’s digital
agriculture platform should be divested
instead of Bayer’s.75 Friends of the Earth
also suggests that the merged firm
should be required to update its privacy
policy to allow farmers to more easily
remove data from its digital agriculture
platform.76 Consumer Federation
similarly urges the Court to impose
‘‘rigorous open access conditions’’ for
its digital agriculture interfaces.77
The United States has not alleged
anticompetitive effects arising from
Bayer’s acquisition of Monsanto’s digital
agriculture platform. Nonetheless, the
United States recognizes that BASF’s
ability to compete in the future in the
individual seed and crop protection
markets that are subject of the
Complaint may depend on the strength
of BASF’s digital agriculture platform.
The leading global agricultural
businesses (including Bayer and
Monsanto) project that digital
agriculture will be a key driver of seed
and crop protection sales in the future.
To ensure BASF has the digital
agriculture capabilities it needs to
replace Bayer as a competitor going
forward, the proposed Final Judgment
requires Bayer to divest all assets related
to its digital agriculture portfolio and
pipeline of products to BASF. Although
Bayer’s digital agriculture products are
not as developed as Monsanto’s, the
divestiture provides BASF with similar
73 NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 4 (asserting that
the bundled products would ‘‘effectively turn
farmers into captured users’’); Friends of the Earth
Comment (Exhibit 7) at 3 (alleging that the merged
firm will be ‘‘well-positioned to continue
leveraging’’ Monsanto’s platform ‘‘to sell more of its
products’’); Nat’l Family Farm Coal. Comment
(Exhibit 8) at 1 (arguing that the merged firm will
be able to ‘‘leverage the sale of one product into
another’’); Pollinator Stewardship Council
Comment (Exhibit 10) at 2 (observing that ‘‘fewer
technology ‘platforms’ will dominate the
marketplace,’’ making it hard for smaller companies
to compete, and ‘‘farmers will be locked into using
these platforms as fewer choices will be available
in the marketplace’’).
74 See, e.g., NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9); Nat’l
Family Farm Coal. Comment (Exhibit 8); Friends of
the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7).
75 Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 3–
4; Consumer Fed’n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at
1.
76 Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 3–
4.
77 Consumer Fed’n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4)
at 2.
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scale, scope, and innovation incentives
as Bayer before the merger.
Comments advocating for open access
to digital agriculture data or for
particular privacy policy provisions
should be rejected as requests for
regulatory relief. The merger does not
directly implicate these issues.
Moreover, behavioral remedies that
require firms to commit to particular
business actions, such as requiring open
access or particular privacy provisions,
are disfavored mechanisms for
addressing the effects of a merger, as
they are inherently more difficult to
craft and administer and they risk
unintended consequences. For example,
imposing a remedy that restricts the
behavior of one competitor (the merged
firm) but not others may interfere with
the competitive marketplace. The
structural divestiture of Bayer’s digital
agriculture assets raises none of these
concerns.
Several commenters also express
broad concerns that the merged firm, by
virtue of its broader portfolio of
products including Monsanto’s digital
agriculture platform, will be able to
leverage its significant position in
certain markets to foreclose competition
in other markets.78 Many of these crossproduct leveraging concerns appear to
be animated by Monsanto’s significant
presence in traits: Commenters fear that
the merger will give the combined
Bayer/Monsanto new opportunities to
leverage its strength in trait markets to
foreclose competition in other,
unspecified, markets. For example,
NRDC argues that Monsanto has
leveraged its ‘‘virtual monopoly power’’
in seeds in anticompetitive ways in the
past, and that a ‘‘larger, more-powerful
Bayer/Monsanto corporation would be
in an equal if not better position to do
so in the future by denying access to key
traits, charging monopoly prices, or
coercing its competitors into anticompetitive collaboration.’’ 79
To the extent the commenters have
concerns about anticompetitive effects
in markets beyond those alleged in the
Complaint and remedied by the
proposed Final Judgment, the
commenters have not identified them.
78 NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 3; Pollinator
Stewardship Council Comment (Exhibit 10) at 3–4;
Consumer Fed’n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at 1–
2.
79 NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 3. See also
Consumer Fed’n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at 1–
2 (asserting that the proposed remedy fails to
prevent the merged firm from ‘‘expanding its
market power and vertical leverage’’); Pollinator
Stewardship Council Comment (Exhibit 10) at 3–4
(asserting that ‘‘Monsanto can already exert
considerable market power through its crosslicensing agreements’’ and ‘‘[the merger] would
likely lessen competition even further’’).
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Nor do the commenters explain why the
merger, as remedied, would result in
such harm. It would be inappropriate to
require a remedy for such broad,
amorphous concerns, unsupported by
the rigorous antitrust analysis the law
requires. Furthermore, any such
concerns go beyond the allegations in
the complaint and are thus beyond the
scope of Tunney Act review. See U.S.
Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 76
(‘‘ ‘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. . . .’ ’’) (quoting Graftech,
2011 WL 1566781, at *13). Going
forward, the antitrust laws will continue
to apply to the merged firm, and the
United States will challenge practices
that run afoul of applicable statutes.
e. Comments Regarding Procedural
Matters, Including Government
Oversight and Enforcement of Proposed
Final Judgment Compliance
Several commenters express concerns
about procedural aspects of the
proposed Final Judgment. One
commenter argues that the judicial
review procedures set forth in the APPA
may be inapt in large transactions
requiring complicated divestitures.
Another commenter argues that the
proposed Final Judgment should
require, rather than permit, the
appointment of a monitoring trustee.
Two commenters are concerned that the
proposed Final Judgment’s
jurisdictional provisions are inadequate.
One commenter fears that the proposed
Final Judgment’s enforcement
provisions improperly favor the United
States. As explained below, these
concerns lack merit and do not require
any amendment of the proposed Final
Judgment.
i. The Standard of Review Established
by Congress Is Appropriate
One commenter, Daniel Bellemare,
argues that a proposed decree
remedying the anticompetitive effects of
a complex transaction such as Bayer’s
acquisition of Monsanto may not be
suited for a public interest review under
the APPA.80 Mr. Bellemare suggests
instead that a trial or preliminary
injunction hearing may be a better
forum for the resolution of complicated
antitrust issues.81
Irrespective of the size or nature of a
transaction, the APPA requires a court
to conduct a limited public interest
determination when reviewing a
proposed decree. Congress vested
authority in the Department of Justice,
rather than the courts, to investigate and
prosecute violations of the Federal
antitrust laws. See 28 C.F.R. §§ 0.40,
0.41; 15 U.S.C. §§ 4, 9, 15a. This
prosecutorial authority includes the
ability to craft remedies, such as the
proposed Final Judgment. In light of the
fact that a proposed decree is the
product of the United States’ exercise of
prosecutorial discretion, courts have
interpreted the APPA to permit only a
limited inquiry into whether a
settlement is ‘‘within the reaches of the
public interest.’’ Microsoft, 56 F.3d at
1458–61 (citation omitted). The court’s
public interest determination focuses on
whether the settlement appropriately
addresses the allegations identified in
the complaint. Id. at 1458–59; see also
SBC Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11
(the court’s ‘‘scope of review remains
sharply proscribed by precedent and the
nature of the Tunney Act proceedings’’).
The APPA does not require a court to
expend judicial time and resources
considering alternative remedies or
probing the adequacy of the complaint
itself. The limited judicial review
required by the APPA is appropriate for
this matter and is not unduly
burdensome for this Court.
ii. Modifications Concerning the
Monitoring Trustee Are Unnecessary
The State Attorneys General propose
that the appointment of a monitoring
trustee should be required, rather than
left to the ‘‘discretion’’ of the United
States.82 This proposal is moot. This
Court granted the United States’ motion
to appoint the Honorable Michael B.
Mukasey as Monitoring Trustee on
August 14, 2018.
iii. The Proposed Final Judgment’s
Jurisdictional Provisions Are Sufficient
The State Attorneys General contend
that the Court should affirmatively
retain jurisdiction throughout the tenyear term of the Final Judgment.83 The
commenters appear to misunderstand
the terms of the proposed Final
Judgment, which provides that the
Court retains jurisdiction, without
limitation, to enable any party to seek
orders or directions necessary or
appropriate to carry out the terms of the
proposed Final Judgment.84
By its terms, the Final Judgment is to
expire ten years from the date of its
entry; however, the United States may
terminate the Final Judgment after six
years if it finds that the divestitures
82 State
Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at
2.
80 Bellemare
81 Id.
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at 15.
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83 Id.
84 Proposed
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have been completed and the
continuation of the Final Judgment is no
longer necessary or in the public
interest.85 The State Attorneys General
ask that the Court require that the
proposed Final Judgment, or at least
certain of its provisions, remain in place
for the full ten-year term, with no option
to terminate after six years.86 This
request is unnecessary. The proposed
Final Judgment is designed to address
the very potential for uncertainty that
troubles the State Attorneys General: it
allows the decree to remain in place for
ten years if competition so requires, but
it also reasonably allows for the decree
to be terminated earlier if it becomes
unnecessary to protect competition.
This flexibility is important because,
while equitable relief under the Clayton
Act ‘‘should unfetter a market from
anticompetitive conduct,’’ Ford Motor
Co. v. United States, 405 U.S. 562, 577
(1972), at the same time relief ‘‘must not
be punitive,’’ United States v. E. I. du
Pont de Nemours & Co., 366 U.S. 316,
326 (1961). District courts have
regularly approved consent decrees
providing for the sort of flexibility
contemplated here. See, e.g., United
States v. Northrup Grumman Corp., No.
1:02 CIV 02432, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
10636, at *26 (D.D.C. June 10, 2003)
(approving decree with seven-year term
and option for government to seek threeyear extension); United States v. Alex
Brown & Sons, Inc., No. 96 CIV 5313
(RWS), 1997 WL 314390, at *8 (S.D.N.Y.
Apr. 24, 1997) (approving decree with a
ten-year term except that certain
portions of the decree would expire in
five years and the Antitrust Division
had the option to terminate those
portions after only two years); United
States v. Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., No.
CIV.A. 95 1839, 1995 WL 803552, at *4
(D.D.C. Oct. 5, 1995) (approving decree
with five-year term and option for
government to extend an additional five
years).
If, after six years (but before the end
of the full ten-year term) the divestitures
have been completed and the United
States determines that effective
competition thereby has been preserved,
then the public interest is not served by
a continuation of the decree and the
associated burdens placed upon the
United States, the Defendants, and the
Court. It should also be noted that the
proposed Final Judgment also includes
a provision allowing the United States
to seek a one-time extension of the
decree in any enforcement proceeding
in which the Court finds that the
85 Id.
§ XV.
Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at
86 State
3, 8.
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Defendants have violated the decree. In
any event, in applying its review
function under the Tunney Act, the
district court’s role is not to make a de
novo determination of what the public
interest requires but rather to determine
whether the settlement reflected in the
proposed final judgment falls ‘‘within
the reaches of the public interest.’’
Massachusetts v. Microsoft Corp., 373
F.3d 1199, 1237 (D.C. Cir. 2004)
(quoting United States v. Microsoft
Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1458 (D.C. Cir.
1995)). This provision falls within those
reaches.
In its comment, NFIB complains that
the proposed Final Judgment’s
jurisdictional provision does not
explicitly say ‘‘[t]he Court has
determined that this matter constitutes
a case or controversy.’’ 87 This argument
has no merit. Although ‘‘a court must
assure itself of the existence of subjectmatter jurisdiction,’’ Kaplan v. Cent.
Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran,
896 F.3d 501, 511 (D.C. Cir. 2018), a
court’s written decision need not
‘‘explicitly discuss it,’’ Trans World
Airlines v. Morales, 949 F.2d 141, 144
(5th Cir. 1991), aff’d in part, rev’d in
part, 504 U.S. 374 (1992). More
importantly, the Supreme Court has
already determined that a proposed
antitrust consent decree filed
simultaneously with the United States’
complaint satisfied Article III’s case or
controversy requirement because,
among other things, ‘‘a suit for an
injunction deals primarily, not with past
violations, but with threatened future
ones.’’ Swift & Co. v. United States, 276
U.S. 311, 326 (1928). It is sufficient,
therefore, for the proposed Final
Judgment to state that the ‘‘Court has
jurisdiction over the subject matter of
and each of the parties hereto with
respect to this action.’’ 88
iv. The Proposed Final Judgment
Appropriately Grants the United States
Discretion over Certain Decisions
The NFIB claims the phrase ‘‘sole
discretion,’’ as it applies to the United
States throughout the proposed Final
Judgment, ‘‘encourages, if not
authorizes, arbitrary action,’’ and
requests that a new paragraph be
inserted in the proposed Final Judgment
imposing an explicit duty on the United
States ‘‘to act reasonably in the
circumstances.’’ 89
Certain aspects of the proposed Final
Judgment contemplate flexibility to
ensure that the assets are handed off
smoothly and effectively. For example,
87 NFIB
Comment (Exhibit 13) at 2.
Final Judgment § I.
89 NFIB Comment (Exhibit 13) at 2–3.
88 Proposed
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Paragraph IV(F)(2) of the proposed Final
Judgment provides that, within one
year, if BASF determines that additional
Bayer assets are reasonably necessary
for the continued competitiveness of the
divested businesses, BASF may request
that the United States require Bayer to
divest additional assets. This provision
allows BASF to fill any gaps that could
not reasonably be foreseen before it
started operating those businesses. At
the same time, an efficient and impartial
arbiter is needed to ensure that any such
requests are valid. With respect to this
and all other provisions allowing the
United States to exercise its discretion,
the United States intends to strike a
balance between ensuring that BASF
has the resources to replace Bayer as an
independent and vigorous competitor
and guarding against BASF seeking
more from Bayer than is necessary or
BASF relying on Bayer for transition
services for longer than necessary.
The term ‘‘sole discretion’’ appears
regularly in consent decrees approved
by this and other courts as in the public
interest. See, e.g., United States v.
Heraeus Electro-Nite Co., LLC, No. 1:14–
CV–00005–JEB, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
62755, at *6 (D.D.C. Apr. 7, 2014)
(approving antitrust consent decree
ordering divestiture ‘‘to an Acquirer
acceptable to the United States, in its
sole discretion’’); United States v.
Anheuser-Busch InBev SA/NV, No. CV
13–127(RWR), 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
167309, at *14 (D.D.C. Oct. 21, 2013)
(approving decree providing that
‘‘United States, in its sole discretion,
may agree to one or more extensions of
[] time period [to complete
divestiture]’’). NFIB’s suggestion ignores
that ‘‘a presumption of regularity
attaches to the actions of Government
agencies’’ such as the Department of
Justice. U.S. Postal Serv. v. Gregory, 534
U.S. 1, 10 (2001) (citing United States v.
Chem. Found., Inc., 272 U.S. 1, 14–15
(1926)). NFIB has offered no reason to
believe the United States would exercise
its discretion other than in ways that it
reasonably determines would best
advance its longstanding mission of
protecting competition and consumers.
The proposed modification should be
rejected.90
v. The Proposed Final Judgment Is Not
the Product of ‘‘Economic Leverage’’
NFIB misconstrues the proposed Final
Judgment when it insists that ‘‘[t]he
90 See Mission, U.S. Dep’t of Justice Antitrust
Div., https://www.justice.gov/atr/mission (last
updated July 20, 2015) (‘‘The mission of the
Antitrust Division is to promote economic
competition,’’ which ‘‘benefits American consumers
through lower prices, better quality and greater
choice’’).
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Court should not permit the Justice
Department to use the economic
leverage it gained over the Defendants
by filing an antitrust lawsuit to pressure
the Defendants to give up the assistance
of corporate counsel.’’ 91 The proposed
Final Judgment merely gives the United
States the right ‘‘to interview, either
informally or on the record, Defendants’
officers, employees, or agents,’’ for
compliance purposes, with ‘‘their
individual counsel present.’’ 92 That
provision does not, however, exclude
corporate counsel. NFIB’s comment also
ignores that ‘‘in the absence of clear
evidence to the contrary, courts
presume that [government officials]
have properly discharged their official
duties.’’ Chem. Found., 272 U.S. at 14–
15.
NFIB similarly complains that the
Defendants’ agreement to a
‘‘preponderance of the evidence’’
standard in decree enforcement
proceedings was a product of the United
States’ purported ‘‘economic
leverage.’’ 93 The terms of the proposed
Final Judgment were determined
through negotiation, and both sides
benefit in certain ways from the
agreement to a preponderance standard.
The United States and the public gain
by making the investigation and
enforcement of antitrust consent decrees
more efficient; the clear and convincing
evidence standard, which would
otherwise apply, would subject the
parties to more onerous and resourceintensive investigations. The
preponderance standard lessens those
burdens, while still ensuring that the
United States carries the burden of
proving a decree violation. The D.C.
Circuit has already recognized that the
standard of proof in decree enforcement
proceedings can be waived. See United
States v. Volvo Powertrain Corp., 758
F.3d 330, 338–39 (D.C. Cir. 2014)
(concluding that the defendant waived
the ‘‘clear and convincing’’ standard by
oral representation in the district court).
NFIB has identified no valid reason why
the Defendants’ waiver of the clear and
convincing standard here should not
similarly be honored.
of a pattern of consolidation and raise
concerns regarding the impact of such
consolidation on prices and innovation.
For example, the comment by certain
Members of Congress notes that this
transaction ‘‘comes in the midst of other
agro-chemical company mergers . . .
and is only the latest example in
decades of consolidation in the
industry.’’ 94 NRDC states that ‘‘today’s
agricultural inputs markets already
resemble the tight, seemingly
impenetrable oligopoly that the Clayton
Act abhors as a result of considerable
and unchecked consolidation over the
past twenty years.’’ 95 The Sustainable
Food Center asserts that ‘‘[f]armers in
our network have expressed growing
concern with consolidation in the
market for agricultural inputs.’’ 96 While
these commenters cite consolidation as
a reason to block the merger, they fail
to acknowledge that the remedy ensures
that the merger will not increase
concentration in the affected markets.97
The United States agrees that the
proposed merger, unremedied, poses a
substantial threat to competition. At the
same time, the United States is
confident that the proposed divestitures
to BASF will fully address those
concerns. As detailed above in Section
V(a), the proposed Final Judgment will
ensure that BASF replaces Bayer as an
independent and vigorous competitor in
each of the markets in which the merger
would otherwise lessen competition.
The United States has gone to
extraordinary lengths to ensure that this
settlement will prevent increased
concentration in the affected markets by
vesting BASF with the full complement
of assets, personnel, and rights needed
to preserve competition in the affected
markets.
It is well established that courts
‘‘must accord deference to the
government’s predictions about the
efficacy of its remedies.’’ SBC
Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17.
According appropriate deference to the
United States here, the proposed
settlement is well within ‘‘the reaches of
94 Members
of Cong. Comment (Exhibit 3) at 1.
Comment (Exhibit 9) at 4.
96 Sustainable Food Ctr. Comment (Exhibit 11) at
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f. Additional Issues Raised By
Commenters
95 NRDC
i. Commenters Concerned About
Industry Consolidation Fail to
Acknowledge the Effect of the Remedy
Several commenters oppose the
merger based on general concerns about
consolidation in the agricultural
industry. They view the merger as part
91 NFIB
Comment (Exhibit 13) at 3.
Final Judgment § X.
93 NFIB Comment (Exhibit 13) at 4.
92 Proposed
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97 To the extent that commenters raised
substantive issues regarding the efficacy of the relief
contained in the proposed Final Judgment to
remedy the competitive harm at issue in this
transaction we discuss and respond to them above.
A number of comments, however, expressed
opposition to the merger without addressing any
specific aspects of the transaction or the settlement.
See, e.g., Pollinator Stewardship Council Comment
(Exhibit 10) at 1 (asking the United States to ‘‘block
this biotechnology mega-merger’’); ActionAid USA
Comment (Exhibit 1) at 2 (‘‘The only answer to this
merger is NO.’’).
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1505
the public interest.’’ Microsoft, 56 F.3d
at 1461.
ii. Comments Regarding the
Environmental Impact of Agricultural
Chemicals Are Beyond the Scope of this
Action
A number of commenters express
concerns relating to the environment.
Some commenters express broad
concerns that the merger would result in
environmental harm.98 Others
commenters express general concerns,
not specific to the merger, about the
effect of agricultural chemicals on
wildlife, human health, and the
environment.99 NRDC expresses
concern about the effect of the merger
on pollinators, specifically that Bayer
may seek to leverage Monsanto’s seed
position to expand the use of
neonicotinoid seed treatments and other
pesticides, resulting in harm to
pollinators.100
These comments are beyond the
purview of the Tunney Act. The United
States did not allege that the merger
would result in harm to the
environment and, thus, environmental
concerns are beyond the scope of this
proceeding and do not provide a basis
for rejecting the proposed Final
Judgment. See U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp.
3d at 76 (‘‘ ‘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. . . .’ ’’)
(quoting Graftech, 2011 WL 1566781, at
*13).
Moreover, commenters generally
concerned about the environmental
impact of agricultural chemicals offer no
reason why the merger would have an
effect on such issues. Similarly,
commenters who broadly allege that the
merger will result in environmental
harm offer no specific basis for their
concerns. Regarding NRDC’s concern
that the merger will increase the use of
neonicotinoid seed treatments, as
described in Section V(d), the United
States carefully considered whether the
merger would allow the merged firm to
leverage Monsanto’s seed position to
advance its position in certain seed
treatments. Ultimately, the United
States did not find a basis to compel the
divestiture of all of the neonicotinoid
seed treatments that are the subject of
NRDC’s complaint.
98 ActionAid USA Comment (Exhibit 1) at 1;
Members of Cong. Comment (Exhibit 3) at 2.
99 Sierra Club Comment (Exhibit 14) at 1; Nat’l
Family Farm Coal. Comment (Exhibit 8) at 1.
100 NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 7–10.
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 23 / Monday, February 4, 2019 / Notices
iii. The United States Conducted an
Impartial and Independent Merger
Analysis
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Members of Congress refer to news
reports that raise the possibility that the
White House may have ‘‘exercised
outsized influence’’ in the review of this
transaction and other deals.101 The
commenters do not make any specific
claims regarding the investigation of
this merger, but rather urge that
antitrust enforcement ‘‘continue to be
treated as a law enforcement matter
properly left to the independent
judgment of DOJ.’’ 102
Any suggestion that the settlement at
issue here is or could be the result of
improper lobbying or political pressure
is both unsubstantiated and meritless.
The settlement followed a thorough and
comprehensive investigation, and it is
the result of extensive, good faith
negotiations between the United States
and Defendants. The proposed Final
Judgment requires substantial relief that
addresses the competitive harm alleged
in the Complaint. In short, there is no
basis to allege that the settlement results
from anything other than the United
States’ independent investigation and
analysis.
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Proposed eCollection
eComments Requested; Revision of a
Currently Approved Collection: 2018–
2020 Survey of State Criminal History
Information Systems (SSCHIS)
[OMB Number 1121–0312]
VI. Conclusion
After careful consideration of the
public comments, 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 comments and
this response are published pursuant to
15 U.S.C. § 16(d).
Dated: January 29, 2019
Respectfully submitted,
J. Richard Doidge, Trial Attorney, U.S.
Department of Justice, Antitrust Division,
450 5th Street NW, Suite 8000,
Washington, DC 20530, Tel: (202) 514–
8944.
[FR Doc. 2019–00810 Filed 2–1–19; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 4410–11–P
101 Members
of Cong. Comment (Exhibit 3) at 2–
3.
102 Id.
at 2.
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Bureau of Justice Statistics,
Department of Justice.
ACTION: 30-Day Notice.
AGENCY:
The Department of Justice
(DOJ), Office of Justice Programs,
Bureau of Justice Statistics, will be
submitting the following information
collection request to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval in accordance with
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Comments are encouraged and
will be accepted for 30 days until March
6, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have additional comments
especially on the estimated public
burden or associated response time,
suggestions, or need a copy of the
proposed information collection
instrument with instructions or
additional information, please contact
Devon Adams, Supervisory Program
Manager, Bureau of Justice Statistics,
810 Seventh Street NW, Washington, DC
20531 (email: devon.adams@
ojp.usdoj.gov; telephone: (202–305–
0765).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Written
comments and suggestions from the
public and affected agencies concerning
the proposed collection of information
are encouraged. Your comments should
address one or more of the following
four points:
—Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is
necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Bureau of Justice Statistics,
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;
—Evaluate whether and if so how the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected can be
enhanced; 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
SUMMARY:
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technological collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
Overview of this information
collection:
(1) Type of Information Collection:
Revision of a currently collection
approved collection.
(2) The Title of the Form/Collection:
2018–2020 Survey of State Criminal
History Information Systems (SSCHIS).
(3) The agency form number, if any,
and the applicable component of the
Department sponsoring the collection:
The form number is N/A. The
applicable component within the
Department of Justice is the Bureau of
Justice Statistics, in the Office of Justice
Programs.
(4) Affected public who will be asked
or required to respond, as well as a brief
abstract: Respondents are state
government agencies, primarily state
criminal history record repositories. The
SSCHIS report, the most comprehensive
data available on the collection and
maintenance of information by state
criminal history record systems,
describes the status of such systems and
record repositories on a biennial basis.
Data collected from state record
repositories serves as the basis for
estimating the percentage of total state
records that are immediately available
through the FBI’s Interstate
Identification Index (III), and the
percentage of arrest records that include
dispositions. Other data presented
include the number of records
maintained by each state, the percentage
of automated records in the system, and
the number of states participating in the
National Fingerprint File and the
National Crime Prevention and Privacy
Compact which authorizes the interstate
exchange of criminal history records for
noncriminal justice purposes. The
SSCHIS also contains information
regarding the timeliness and
completeness of data in state record
systems and procedures employed to
improve data quality.
(5) An estimate of the total number of
respondents and the amount of time
estimated for an average respondent to
respond: The total number of
respondents is 56. The average length of
time per respondent is 6.75 hours. This
estimate is based on the average amount
of time reported by five states that
reviewed the survey.
(6) An estimate of the total public
burden (in hours) associated with the
collection: The total burden associated
with this collection is estimated to be
378 hours.
If additional information is required
contact: Melody Braswell, Department
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 23 (Monday, February 4, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 1493-1506]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-00810]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States v. Bayer AG et al.; Response to Public Comments
Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 16(b)-(h), the United States hereby publishes below the Response
to Public Comments on the Proposed Final Judgment in United States v.
Bayer AG et al., Civil Action No. 1:18-cv-01241 (JEB), which was filed
in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia on
January 29, 2019, together with copies of the 14 comments received by
the United States.
Pursuant to the Court's January 2, 2019 order, comments were
published electronically and are available to be viewed and downloaded
at the Antitrust Division's Web site, at: https://www.justice.gov/atr/case/us-v-bayer-ag-and-monsanto-company. A copy of the United States'
response to the comments is also available at the same location. Copies
of the comments and the United States' response are available for
inspection at the Office of the Clerk of the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia. Copies of these materials may also
be obtained from the Antitrust Division upon request and payment of the
copying fee set by Department of Justice regulations.
Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement.
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v. Bayer AG, Monsanto Company, and
BASF SE, Defendants.
Civil Action No. 1:18-cv-01241 (JEB)
RESPONSE OF PLAINTIFF UNITED STATES TO PUBLIC COMMENTS ON THE PROPOSED
FINAL JUDGMENT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. Introduction................................................ 1
II. Procedural History......................................... 2
III. Standard of Judicial Review............................... 3
IV. The Investigation and the Proposed Final Judgment.......... 7
V. Summary of Public Comments and the United States' Response.. 10
a. Comments Regarding BASF's Suitability as a Divestiture 14
Buyer and Ability to Compete Effectively..................
[[Page 1494]]
i. The Proposed Divestitures Give BASF Everything 14
Necessary to Preserve Competition.....................
ii. BASF Has a Strong Incentive to Compete Aggressively 20
Against Bayer.........................................
b. Comments Regarding BASF's Ability to Execute the Remedy 22
Successfully and Requests for Ongoing Study...............
c. Comments Regarding Seed Treatments...................... 24
i. The Proposed Final Judgment Appropriately Requires 25
Bayer to Supply Seed Treatments to BASF at Variable
Cost..................................................
ii. BASF Cannot Resell Bayer Seed Treatments Supplied 27
under Section IV(G)(1) for Use on Non-BASF Seeds......
iii. The Proposed Final Judgment Allows BASF to Sell 28
Seed Treatments to Bayer..............................
iv. Concerns Regarding All Neonicotinoid Seed 29
Treatments Are Outside the Scope of the Complaint.....
d. Comments Related to Digital Agriculture and Cross- 30
Product Leveraging........................................
e. Comments Regarding Procedural Matters, Including 33
Government Oversight and Enforcement of Proposed Final
Judgment Compliance.......................................
i. The Standard of Review Established by Congress Is 33
Appropriate...........................................
ii. Modifications Concerning the Monitoring Trustee Are 34
Unnecessary...........................................
iii. The Proposed Final Judgment's Jurisdictional 35
Provisions Are Sufficient.............................
iv. The Proposed Final Judgment Appropriately Grants 37
the United States Discretion over Certain Decisions...
v. The Proposed Final Judgment Is Not the Product of 39
``Economic Leverage''.................................
f. Additional Issues Raised By Commenters.................. 40
i. Commenters Concerned about Industry Consolidation 40
Fail to Acknowledge the Effect of the Remedy..........
ii. Comments Regarding the Environmental Impact of 41
Agricultural Chemicals Are Beyond the Scope of this
Action................................................
iii. The United States Conducted an Impartial and 42
Independent Merger Analysis...........................
VI. Conclusion................................................. 43
I. Introduction
Pursuant to the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act (the ``APPA'' or ``Tunney Act''), 15 U.S.C. Sec. Sec.
16(b)-(h), the United States hereby responds to the public comments
received regarding the proposed Final Judgment in this case. For the
reasons set forth below, the remedy the United States obtained from
Defendants addresses the competitive harm alleged in this action and is
in the public interest. Accordingly, the United States recommends no
modifications to the proposed Final Judgment.
This remedy is a victory for American farmers and consumers. It
fully addresses the competitive threat posed by the merger by vesting
the divestiture buyer, BASF, with the full complement of assets,
personnel, and rights needed to preserve competition in each of the 17
affected markets. It requires divestitures that go beyond what would be
needed to address the current horizontal overlaps or vertical concerns
in order to ensure that BASF can step into Bayer's shoes, thereby
preserving the competition that otherwise would be lost through the
merger. It provides for the transfer of over 4,000 Bayer employees so
that BASF will have the necessary expertise to run these divested
businesses, and it provides for time-limited interim support agreements
to avoid business disruptions during the transition period. It also
incorporates further safeguards that allow BASF to obtain additional
assets and personnel, if necessary, during the first year of operating
these businesses. In short, the United States has gone to extraordinary
lengths to ensure that BASF will seamlessly and successfully replace
Bayer as an independent and vigorous competitor in each of the affected
markets.
The competitive significance of the remedy is underscored by the $9
billion divestiture purchase price, which exceeds the value of most
mergers reviewed by the United States and far exceeds the value of most
merger remedies. Indeed, it is among the largest and most comprehensive
remedies obtained by the United States in a merger challenge. As one
commenter observes, ``the $9 billion divestiture, by which BASF would
acquire Bayer's position in genetically modified seeds and seed traits,
foundational herbicides, other crop seeds, and related research and
development efforts appears to be as robust a divestiture as might be
imagined.'' \1\
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\1\ Ducore Comment (attached as Exhibit 6) at 1.
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The United States received fourteen comments reflecting a wide
array of views. After careful consideration of these comments, the
United States has determined that nothing in them casts doubt on its
conclusion that the public interest is well-served by the proposed
remedy. The United States is publishing the comments and this response
on the Antitrust Division website and is submitting to the Federal
Register this response and the website address at which the comments
may be viewed and downloaded, as set forth in the Court's order dated
January 2, 2019 (Docket No. 21). Following Federal Register
publication, the United States will move the Court to enter the
proposed Final Judgment pursuant to 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(d).
II. Procedural History
On September 14, 2016, Bayer AG entered into an agreement to
acquire Monsanto Company in a merger valued at approximately $66
billion. On May 29, 2018, the United States filed a civil antitrust
Complaint seeking to enjoin Bayer from acquiring Monsanto. The
Complaint alleges that the proposed acquisition would substantially
lessen competition for the sale of a range of agricultural products to
farmers in the United States in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 18.
Simultaneously with the filing of the Complaint, the United States
filed a proposed Final Judgment, a stipulation signed by the parties
that consents to entry of the proposed Final Judgment after compliance
with the requirements of the Tunney Act, and a Competitive Impact
Statement describing the transaction and the proposed Final Judgment.
The United States caused the Complaint, the proposed Final Judgment,
and Competitive Impact Statement to be published in the Federal
Register on June 13, 2018, see 83 Fed. Reg. 27652 (June 13, 2018), and
caused notice regarding the same, together with directions for the
submission of written comments relating to the proposed Final Judgment,
to be published in The Washington Post on June 5-11, 2018 and in the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch on June 3, 4, 6, and 8-11, 2018. The 60-day
period for public comment ended on August 13, 2018. The United States
received 14 comments (Exhibits 1 through 14).
III. Standard of Judicial Review
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 60-day comment period, after which the court shall
determine whether entry of the proposed Final Judgment ``is in the
[[Page 1495]]
public interest.'' 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e)(1). 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.
15 U.S.C. Sec. 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 1 (D.D.C. 2007)
(assessing public interest standard under the Tunney Act); United
States v. U.S. Airways Group, Inc., 38 F. Supp. 3d 69, 75 (D.D.C. 2014)
(explaining that the ``court's inquiry is limited'' in Tunney Act
settlements); United States v. InBev N.V./S.A., No. 08-1965 (JR), 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 mechanisms to enforce the final
judgment are clear and manageable'').
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 in the government's complaint, whether the decree is
sufficiently clear, whether its 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. Instead:
[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).\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See also 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'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 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 U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d
at 74-75 (noting that a court should not reject the proposed remedies
because it believes others are preferable and that room must be made
for the government to grant concessions in the negotiation process for
settlements); 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-Daniels-Midland Co.,
272 F. Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2003) (noting that the court should grant
``due respect to the government's prediction as to the effect of
proposed remedies, its perception of the market structure, and its
views of the nature of the case''). 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 (quoting United States v.
Western Elec. Co., 900 F.2d 283, 309 (D.C. Cir. 1990)). 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; see also U.S. Airways,
38 F. Supp. 3d at 75 (noting that the court must simply determine
whether there is a factual foundation for the government's decisions
such that its conclusions regarding the proposed settlements are
reasonable); InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *20 (``the `public
interest' is not to be measured by comparing the violations alleged in
the complaint against those the court believes could have, or even
should have, been alleged''). 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. Microsoft, 56
F.3d at 1459-60.
In its 2004 amendments to the APPA,\3\ 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. Sec. 16(e)(2); see also U.S. Airways, 38 F.
Supp. 3d at 76 (indicating that a court is not required to hold an
evidentiary hearing or to permit intervenors as part of its review
under the Tunney Act). This language explicitly wrote into the statute
what Congress intended when it first enacted the Tunney Act in 1974. As
Senator Tunney explained: ``[t]he court is nowhere compelled to go to
trial or to
[[Page 1496]]
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 Sen.
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. A court can make its public interest determination based on the
competitive impact statement and response to public comments alone.
U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 76; see also 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.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 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.
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).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. The Investigation and the Proposed Final Judgment
The proposed Final Judgment is the culmination of a thorough,
comprehensive investigation conducted by the Antitrust Division of the
United States Department of Justice. Based on the evidence gathered
during its investigation, the United States concluded that Bayer's
proposed acquisition of Monsanto would likely substantially lessen
competition in 17 product markets in the agricultural industry,
resulting in higher prices, less innovation, fewer choices, and lower-
quality products for American farmers and consumers. Accordingly, the
United States filed a civil antitrust lawsuit to block the acquisition
as a violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 18.
The proposed Final Judgment provides an effective and appropriate
remedy for the transaction's likely competitive harm by requiring Bayer
to divest its business in each relevant market, along with various
supporting assets, to BASF, a global chemical company with an existing
crop protection business. The United States identified a divestiture
package that remedies all dimensions of harm threatened by the proposed
merger. First, the proposed Final Judgment requires Bayer to divest
those businesses that vigorously compete head-to-head with Monsanto
today. Second, the proposed Final Judgment requires Bayer to divest
seed treatment businesses that, when combined with Monsanto's seed
business, would have given the combined company the incentive and
ability to harm competition by raising the prices it charges rival seed
companies. Third, because Bayer and Monsanto compete to develop new
products and services for farmers, the proposed Final Judgment requires
the divestiture of associated intellectual property and research
capabilities, including ``pipeline'' projects, to enable BASF to
replace Bayer as a leading innovator in the relevant markets. Fourth,
the proposed Final Judgment requires the divestiture of additional
assets that will give BASF the scale and scope to compete effectively
today and in the future.
Specifically, Bayer is required to divest its entire global row
crop seeds and traits business (with insignificant exceptions not
relevant to the United States), its entire global vegetable seeds
business, and all related research and development (``R&D'') assets.
Bayer also must divest significant crop protection assets, including
its global glufosinate ammonium business and IP and other assets to
allow BASF to continue Bayer's efforts in developing new foundational
herbicide systems. Finally, Bayer is required to divest certain seed
treatments for corn, soy, and cotton.
Because many of the divested assets will be separated from Bayer's
existing business units and incorporated into BASF, the proposed Final
Judgment includes provisions aimed at ensuring that the assets are
handed off in a seamless and efficient manner. To that end, Bayer is
required to transfer existing third-party agreements and customer
information to BASF, as well as to enter transition services agreements
that ensure that BASF can continue to serve customers immediately upon
completion of the divestitures. The transition services and interim
supply agreements are time-limited to ensure that BASF will become
fully independent of Bayer as soon as practicable.
The proposed Final Judgment also contemplates heightened safeguards
intended to ensure that BASF is receiving everything it needs to
replace Bayer as a competitor. The proposed Final Judgment requires
Bayer to warrant that the assets being divested are sufficient for BASF
to maintain the viability and competitiveness of the divested
businesses following BASF's acquisition of the assets. In addition, the
proposed Final Judgment gives BASF a one-year window after closing to
identify any additional assets that are reasonably necessary to ensure
the continued competitiveness of the divested businesses. The United
States will have sole discretion to determine if Bayer must divest
these additional assets. Finally, the proposed Final Judgment gives
BASF a one-year window to hire all of the personnel from Bayer needed
to support these businesses. These novel provisions strengthen the
remedy by allowing BASF to identify additional assets or employees it
needs to compete effectively after it has operated the divested
businesses for a certain period of time.
The divestitures will ensure that BASF can step into Bayer's shoes,
thereby preserving the competition that the merger would otherwise
destroy. The proposed Final Judgment provides for the appointment of a
monitoring trustee to have close oversight over the divestitures and
the transitional agreements between Bayer and BASF to ensure that they
proceed appropriately. The proposed Final Judgment also includes robust
mechanisms that will allow the United States and the Court to monitor
the effectiveness of the relief and to enforce compliance. And because
the United States has determined that BASF, as the divestiture buyer,
is a necessary party to effectuate complete relief, BASF has agreed to
be joined to this action for the purposes of the divestitures.
V. Summary of Public Comments and the United States' Response
The United States received public comments from a group of state
Attorneys General; certain Members of Congress; the National Federation
of Independent Businesses (``NFIB''); Syngenta, a seed and agrochemical
company; Daniel Ducore, former Assistant Director of the FTC Bureau of
Competition's Compliance Division; Daniel Bellemare, an attorney; the
Sierra Club; the Natural Resources Defense Council (``NRDC''); the
Consumer Federation of America; ActionAid USA; the National Family Farm
Coalition; Friends of the Earth; the Sustainable Food Center; and the
Pollinator Stewardship Council.
Certain commenters acknowledge the meaningful protections for
competition that the United States achieved, even as they advocate for
modifications to the proposed Final Judgment. Syngenta, one of the
Defendants' primary competitors, states that it ``believes that the
[proposed Final Judgment] remedies many of the most complex and
difficult anticompetitive aspects of the transaction.'' \4\ Similarly,
Daniel Ducore,
[[Page 1497]]
who served for more than 25 years as Assistant Director of the division
that oversaw all of the FTC's merger and non-merger remedies, notes
that the remedy ``appears to be as robust a divestiture as might be
imagined,'' and further observes that while ``[e]very remedy raises
risks about the scope of divested assets, the particular buyer, and the
implementation of the remedy,'' here the United States ``appears to
have done everything possible to reduce those risks.'' \5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Syngenta Comment (Exhibit 12) at 1.
\5\ Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 1.
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The comments can be grouped into six categories: (1) BASF's
suitability as a divestiture buyer, including whether it will have
sufficient assets, expertise, and incentives to preserve competition;
(2) concerns that BASF could fail to execute the remedy in a way that
effectively preserves competition; (3) concerns about whether the
proposed Final Judgment properly addresses issues related to seed
treatments; (4) concerns that the remedy will not prevent the combined
Bayer/Monsanto from leveraging its strengths in certain areas--in
particular, digital agriculture and traits--to foreclose competition in
other markets; (5) procedural matters, including government oversight
and enforcement of proposed Final Judgment compliance; and (6) other
miscellaneous comments, including general concerns about consolidation
in the agricultural industry; concerns relating to the environment,
wildlife and human health; and concerns that the United States' review
process may have been influenced by politics. The comments are
summarized in more detail below:
A number of commenters express concern about BASF's
suitability as a divestiture buyer and its ability to compete
effectively with the divested assets. NRDC and the Attorneys General of
California, Iowa, Massachusetts, Mississippi, and Oregon (``State
Attorneys General'') express concerns that BASF may not be able to
replace Bayer as a competitor, asserting that BASF has no seeds
experience, that Monsanto is dominant in the market for genetically
modified seeds, and that the divestiture may leave BASF reliant on the
merged firm and discourage BASF from competing vigorously.\6\ The
Consumer Federation of America argues that the United States should
have required the merged firm to divest the stronger set of assets to
address each competitive overlap.\7\ In contrast, Daniel Ducore states
that the divestiture package includes everything that BASF could need
to operate the divested businesses successfully.\8\ Daniel Bellemare
raises a different concern, suggesting that if BASF is already well-
positioned to enter the relevant markets without the aid of the
divested assets, it may not be an appropriate divestiture buyer.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 3-4; State Attorneys General
Comment (Exhibit 2) at 5-7.
\7\ Consumer Fed'n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at 1.
\8\ Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 5.
\9\ Bellemare Comment (Exhibit 5) at 10-12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daniel Ducore and the State Attorneys General express concerns
that BASF will fail to execute its business plans successfully and will
therefore fail to replace the competition lost from the merger. Mr.
Ducore opines that the divestiture package includes everything that
BASF could need to operate the divested businesses successfully but
nevertheless expresses concern that ``BASF, even if it obtains
everything that was considered necessary and relevant when the remedy
was negotiated, will fail to step in for Bayer and compete with the new
Bayer-Monsanto as strongly as Bayer had competed with Monsanto before
the deal.'' \10\ Mr. Ducore urges the United States to monitor BASF's
performance over the next few years to evaluate the effectiveness of
the settlement. The State Attorneys General recommend that the Court
``order a retrospective study of the effects of the merger on
competition two years after transfer of the divestiture assets has
begun.'' \11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 1-2.
\11\ State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 2-3.
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Syngenta and the Sustainable Food Center express concerns
about various aspects of the seed treatment divestiture and seek
modifications to the proposed Final Judgment's provisions concerning
seed treatments. Syngenta asserts that certain provisions of the
proposed Final Judgment should be modified to avoid the ``risk [of]
reducing competition and inhibiting innovation in the affected product
markets'' or otherwise undermining the purpose of the remedy.\12\ The
Sustainable Food Center seeks a broader divestiture of a class of seed
treatments.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Syngenta Comment (Exhibit 12) at 1.
\13\ Sustainable Food Ctr. Comment (Exhibit 11) at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several commenters, including the National Family Farm
Coalition, Friends of the Earth, and NRDC, argue that allowing Bayer to
retain Monsanto's leading digital agriculture platform will enhance the
merged firm's ability to influence farmer choice in other areas, such
as seed and crop protection markets.\14\ Friends of the Earth, the
Sustainable Food Center, and the Consumer Federation of America offer
various suggestions regarding digital agriculture divestitures,
including proposing that Monsanto divest its digital agriculture
platform or revise its data access policies.\15\ NRDC, the Consumer
Federation of America, and the Pollinator Stewardship Council also
raise broad cross-product leveraging concerns that the merged firm will
be in a position to exploit its significant position in certain markets
to achieve dominance in other markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 4, 6, 9-10; Friends of the
Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 2-3; Nat'l Family Farm Coal. Comment
(Exhibit 8).
\15\ Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 3-4; Consumer
Fed'n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at 2; Sustainable Food Ctr. Comment
(Exhibit 11).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Three commenters take issue with various procedural aspects of
the settlement. NFIB raises four concerns regarding aspects of the
proposed Final Judgment pertaining to the United States' authority to
oversee and enforce compliance with the settlement--generally
advocating for greater protections for the Defendants--and proposes
modifications to address each issue.\16\ The State Attorneys General
suggest certain measures relating to the enforcement mechanisms in the
proposed Final Judgment, such as removing the provision allowing for
possible early termination and mandating the appointment of a
monitoring trustee.\17\ And Daniel Bellemare argues that a public
interest determination in a transaction this complex merits more than
the limited judicial inquiry that the Tunney Act contemplates.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ NFIB Comment (Exhibit 13).
\17\ State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 2-3.
\18\ Bellemare Comment (Exhibit 5) at 12-15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certain commenters express concerns with consolidation in the
agricultural industry in general; some of these comments also suggest
that the United States should have sued to block this transaction.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ In addition to their own comments, certain advocacy groups
submitted lists of names of individuals supporting the group's
comments and, in some cases, separate messages from individual
members of the general public. These individual messages were not
sent directly to the Division by their authors. ActionAid USA's
submission included a list of more than 1,200 individual supporters
of its comments. The Sierra Club enclosed more than 18,000
signatures and roughly 2,500 individual messages. NRDC and Friends
of the Earth both submitted, along with their own comments, tens of
thousands of what appear to be identical or substantially similar
messages from individuals opposed to the merger. In addition, a
number of other individuals sent emails about concerns relating to
the transaction to the United States using various channels outside
of the designated procedures for submitting Tunney Act comments. The
United States has reviewed these messages and emails, and none
appear to address the substance of the proposed Final Judgment or
raise any issue not otherwise addressed in this Response to
Comments. Accordingly, the United States has not addressed these
lists of names, individual messages, or emails as separate comments
and does not intend to file or publish them.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 1498]]
A number of commenters, including Sierra Club, NRDC, ActionAid
USA, and the National Family Farm Coalition, argue that the merger will
have a negative effect on the environment, wildlife and human
health.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See, e.g., NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 7-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A group of 27 Members of Congress refer to media reports that
raise the possibility that the White House may have unduly influenced
the review of this and other transactions. They urge that antitrust
enforcement ``continue to be treated as a law enforcement matter
properly left to the independent judgment of DOJ.'' \21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Members of Cong. Comment (Exhibit 3) at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Comments Regarding BASF's Suitability as a Divestiture Buyer and
Ability to Compete Effectively
Comments questioning BASF's ability to preserve competition fall
into two general categories: (1) BASF's ability to succeed with the
divested assets and (2) BASF's incentives to compete aggressively
against the merged company. The United States carefully considered
these issues in crafting the proposed remedy. The proposed Final
Judgment requires Bayer to divest a broad range of assets--essentially
its entire global seeds and traits business as well as its digital
agriculture business and important crop protection products--and to
provide an array of transitional services. While it is impossible to
predict with certainty how well BASF will perform with the divested
assets (just as Bayer's own performance with those assets absent the
merger is not certain), the proposed remedy ensures that BASF will be
as well-positioned as possible and have the necessary incentives to
step into Bayer's shoes to replace the competition that otherwise would
be lost through the merger.
i. The Proposed Divestitures Give BASF Everything Necessary to Preserve
Competition
The State Attorneys General assert that the proposed Final Judgment
``trusts that BASF can immediately step into the shoes of Bayer in the
market'' with the divestiture assets and express concern about the
consequences if BASF is not able to do so.\22\ They also observe that
BASF ``does not currently make seeds and has never run a seeds
business.'' \23\ Other commenters likewise express doubt about BASF's
ability to replace Bayer as a competitor.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 5.
\23\ Id.
\24\ See, e.g., Consumer Fed'n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at 1;
NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The United States crafted the remedy specifically taking into
account BASF's existing assets and capabilities.\25\ The fact that
United States has not identified viable alternative buyers is not a
weakness in the remedy as some commenters might suggest,\26\ but rather
a reflection of the importance of the buyer to the remedy here and the
high standard that the United States applied in evaluating potential
buyers for the divested assets. BASF is a large multinational firm with
extensive experience operating in jurisdictions around the world. And
while it is correct that BASF has not owned a seed business, BASF has
extensive agricultural experience in crop protection and trait
research--closely related businesses that it will integrate with the
seed businesses it is acquiring from Bayer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See Competitive Impact Statement at 31-32.
\26\ See State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This remedy is the result of a careful and thorough investigation,
during which the United States scrutinized the merging parties' and
BASF's businesses and operations to identify a comprehensive package of
assets to be divested. The United States has structured the proposed
remedy to position BASF to be as strong of a competitor as Bayer in the
affected markets. To that end, the required divestitures go beyond what
would be needed to address the current horizontal overlaps or vertical
concerns in order to ensure that BASF can step into Bayer's shoes,
thereby preserving the competition that otherwise would be lost through
the merger. They also provide BASF with comparable scale and scope to
Bayer and give BASF the assets it needs going forward to be a strong
innovator.
Bayer is required to divest its entire global row crop seeds and
traits business (with insignificant exceptions not relevant to the
United States), its entire global vegetable seeds business, and all
related R&D assets. Even though neither Bayer nor Monsanto sells hybrid
wheat in the United States, Bayer must divest its entire wheat R&D
platform as well as its research facility in Ghent, Belgium that is
used to support R&D for wheat and other crops. These broad divestitures
assure that BASF will be able to take advantage of cross-crop R&D
synergies to the same extent as Bayer today. Similarly, Bayer is
divesting its entire vegetable seed business, which encompasses 24
different crops, even though the transaction raises competition
concerns in only five vegetable seed markets in the United States.
On the crop protection side, Bayer is divesting not only its global
glufosinate ammonium business, which competes with Monsanto's Roundup,
but also intellectual property and other assets to allow BASF to
continue Bayer's efforts in developing new foundational herbicide
systems.\27\ Bayer is also required to divest certain seed treatments
for corn, soy, and cotton to address horizontal and vertical
concerns.\28\ BASF is now able to offer these market-leading seed
treatment products alongside its cotton and soy seeds, just as Bayer
was able to do prior to the merger.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ See Proposed Final Judgment Sec. II(U); Complaint ] 36.
\28\ See Complaint ] ] 38-50.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Without the merger, it is anticipated that competition would
intensify between Bayer and Monsanto to pursue what the industry calls
``integrated solutions''--combinations of seeds, traits, and crop
protection products supported by digital farming technologies and other
services.\29\ Commenters such as NRDC note the potential importance of
digital agriculture tools (which help farmers maximize yields and get
the most out of their other agriculture products) to future competition
in the industry. Even though integrated solutions are still evolving,
the proposed remedy requires Bayer to divest all assets related to
Bayer's digital agriculture business, including pipeline products, and
to transfer employees supporting these assets and products to BASF.
With these assets and employees, BASF will be able to step into Bayer's
shoes in pursuing integrated solutions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ See id. ] 61.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As an additional precaution, the proposed Final Judgment requires
Bayer
[[Page 1499]]
to warrant that the divestiture assets are ``sufficient in all material
respects for BASF, taking into account BASF's assets and business, to
maintain the viability and competitiveness'' of the businesses BASF has
acquired.\30\ And if BASF determines that Bayer has not divested all of
the assets ``reasonably necessary for the continued competitiveness''
of the divested businesses, BASF may notify Bayer and the Monitoring
Trustee that it requires those assets, and, in that situation, the
United States will determine whether the assets should be divested.\31\
One commenter notes that this aspect of the remedy ``perhaps
reflect[ed] the Division's efforts to reduce any `asset package risk'
to near zero.'' \32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Proposed Final Judgment Sec. IV(F)(1).
\31\ Id. Sec. IV(F)(2).
\32\ Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
BASF will have the benefit of not only all of Bayer's seeds and
traits assets, but also of the approximately 4,000 former Bayer
employees slated to move to BASF with the divestitures. These
employees, who operated the divested businesses day-in and day-out for
Bayer, have extensive seeds experience. If BASF determines during the
following year that it lacks employees with expertise it needs, it may
seek to hire, without any interference from Bayer, any additional Bayer
employees who supported the divested businesses in any way since
2015.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ See Proposed Final Judgment Sec. IV(E).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Complementing the divested assets and transferring personnel, the
proposed remedy requires Bayer to provide transitional support to BASF
to ensure that BASF will be able to step into Bayer's competitive
shoes. For example, because prior to the merger Bayer was able to sell
a suite of its own seed treatments for use on its proprietary canola,
cotton, and soy seeds, Bayer is required to provide BASF a supply of
these seed treatments at Bayer's cost until BASF is able to develop
alternative sources of supply.\34\ In addition to the various
transition services specifically discussed in the proposed Final
Judgment, Bayer is required to provide ``any other transition services
reasonably necessary'' to facilitate a seamless transition of the
divested businesses from Bayer to BASF.\35\ One of the responsibilities
of the Monitoring Trustee is to ensure that Bayer lives up to its
obligation to provide such transition services to BASF. As Daniel
Ducore observes, ``it's hard to identify anything that BASF might need
that it isn't getting.'' \36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See id. Sec. IV(G)(1).
\35\ See id. Sec. IV(H)(4).
\36\ Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Voicing a different concern about the sufficiency of the
divestiture assets, the Consumer Federation of America writes that
``[t]he chances that BASF will be able to acquire the weaker
agricultural assets of the two firms and use them to compete
effectively are doubtful.'' \37\ Yet Bayer has been a strong competitor
even with what the Consumer Federation calls Bayer's ``weaker
agricultural assets.'' And the proposed Final Judgment ensures that
BASF will receive all of the assets it needs (along with transitional
support) to step into Bayer's shoes, thereby replacing any competition
that would otherwise be lost as a result of the merger. To the extent
commenters believe that Monsanto, by itself, held too much market power
prior to the merger, that concern is not specific to the merger and not
within the four corners of the United States' Complaint. See U.S.
Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 76 (`` `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. . . .'
'') (quoting United States v. Graftech Int'l, No. 10-cv-2039, 2011 WL
1566781, at *13 (D.D.C. Mar. 24, 2011)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ Consumer Fed'n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the proposed Final Judgment requires the merging parties to
divest Bayer's assets, and not Monsanto's, it also does not permit them
to pick and choose among Bayer's and Monsanto's assets to divest only
the weakest links in each company's portfolio. Bayer is not divesting
Monsanto's canola business, even though Monsanto has a much smaller
market share than Bayer in canola.\38\ Bayer is divesting its entire
global vegetable seeds business (Nunhems) even though Bayer's share for
certain vegetable seeds is larger than Monsanto's.\39\ Similarly, Bayer
is required to divest its market-leading nematicidal seed treatment
products, which enjoy over a 95% share for corn and 85% share for soy,
rather than Monsanto's NemaStrike product, which has only recently
become available for commercial sale.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ See Complaint ] 28 (Bayer's share is 60%; Monsanto's share
is 14%).
\39\ See, e.g., id. ] 58 (Bayer's share of watermelon seeds is
much larger than Monsanto's).
\40\ See Complaint ]] 41-42.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The required divestitures are also not wholly limited to Bayer
assets. Bayer is a relatively new entrant to the soybean business in
the United States. It has emerged as a serious threat to Monsanto in
the southern United States, but it lacks germplasm and varieties
suitable to the Midwest, an important soybean growing region. To help
strengthen BASF as a competitor to the merged company (and other
firms), the merged company is obligated to divest not only Bayer's
global soybean business, but also certain groups of Monsanto soybeans
used for research and breeding.\41\ These Monsanto assets will help
make BASF a stronger competitor in the Midwest than Bayer was before
the merger.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Proposed Final Judgment Sec. Sec. IV(N), II(S).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In contrast to some commenters' concern that BASF may not be able
to compete effectively with the seed assets it is acquiring from Bayer,
Daniel Bellemare questions whether BASF would have entered the seeds
markets and become a significant competitor on its own without the
divestitures.\42\ Even for a large company with substantial resources
such as BASF, however, barriers to entry in these markets are high.\43\
BASF needs Bayer's extensive libraries of seeds and other assets to
compete as an integrated firm on a global scale in seeds and traits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Bellemare Comment (Exhibit 5) at 10-12.
\43\ See Complaint ] 62.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. BASF Has a Strong Incentive to Compete Aggressively Against Bayer
Certain commenters also express concern that BASF will lack
sufficient incentive to compete against the merged company due to the
number of post-divestiture agreements between BASF and Bayer as well as
BASF's interest in dicamba production.\44\ These concerns do not cast
doubt on the strength of the proposed remedy. The proposed Final
Judgment incentivizes BASF to compete aggressively against Bayer and
other competitors, and encourages BASF to become independent from Bayer
as soon as is reasonably possible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 6-7; NRDC
Comment (Exhibit 9) at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bayer is obligated under the proposed Final Judgment to provide
various forms of transitional support to BASF. These arrangements lead
the State Attorneys General to suggest that, ``[b]ecause BASF will have
to rely on Bayer to make these assets work, the company will have a
disincentive to anger Bayer.'' \45\ The tolling, supply, and transition
service agreements are designed to eliminate any potential gaps in
BASF's ability to fully compete with the divested assets from the
outset. The intention is not to establish an ``ongoing, close
relationship'' between BASF and Bayer as the State Attorneys
[[Page 1500]]
General suggest.\46\ To the contrary, the proposed Final Judgment sets
relatively short initial time periods for these arrangements (generally
two years or less), which may be extended only with the approval of the
United States. The proposed Final Judgment encourages BASF to end these
arrangements as soon as practicable, requiring BASF to use ``best
efforts to develop or procure alternative sources of supply by the end
of the initial periods'' for tolling and supply agreements, and ``to
develop alternative solutions by the end of the initial periods'' for
transition service agreements.\47\ The Monitoring Trustee will closely
track BASF's progress towards operating without reliance on Bayer.\48\
In the meantime, BASF will not have to pull its competitive punches out
of concern that Bayer will stop providing the tolling, supply, or other
transitional services that it needs. Bayer's obligations are clearly
stated in the proposed Final Judgment (and detailed in separate
agreements between BASF and Bayer), and the Monitoring Trustee will
assess whether Bayer is fulfilling its responsibilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 6.
\46\ Id. at 7.
\47\ Proposed Final Judgment Sec. Sec. IV(G)(10); (H)(6).
\48\ Nor will Bayer want the transitional agreements to continue
longer than necessary, as Bayer is required during the initial terms
to provide the tolling and other services at variable cost (or
better). Proposed Final Judgment Sec. Sec. IV(G), (H).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NRDC suggests that BASF may not be an effective competitor to the
merged company because of BASF's existing interest in the herbicide
dicamba.\49\ The United States carefully considered BASF's premerger
role as a supplier of dicamba to Monsanto in evaluating BASF's
suitability as a buyer of the divestiture assets. As the owner of
Bayer's glufosinate ammonium business and the LibertyLink traits, BASF
will earn returns from selling seed containing the LibertyLink traits,
licensing those traits to third party seed companies, and selling the
Liberty herbicides. These interests will greatly outweigh any benefit
BASF would gain, as a supplier of dicamba, from Monsanto's sale of seed
containing Monsanto's dicamba-tolerance traits.\50\ Further, the
proposed remedy is structured so that BASF will not only have an
appropriate incentive to promote its already-commercialized LibertyLink
traits, but also traits that potentially would compete with Monsanto's
dicamba-tolerance traits in the future, such as isoxaflutole
tolerance.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 2.
\50\ It is also unclear for how long (or to what extent) BASF
will continue to supply dicamba to Monsanto. In 2017, Monsanto broke
ground on a $975 million expansion of a facility in Louisiana to
produce dicamba. See, e.g., https://monsanto.com/news-releases/monsanto-board-of-directors-approves-expansion-in-luling-louisiana/.
\51\ To ensure that BASF has a similar incentive to Bayer to
commercialize and promote these traits, Bayer is required to provide
BASF with a supply of isoxaflutole at Bayer's cost and to use best
efforts to obtain regulatory approvals for the use of isoxaflutole
over soybeans and cotton containing an isoxaflutole-tolerance trait.
Proposed Final Judgment Sec. Sec. IV(G)(2); (L)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Comments Regarding BASF's Ability to Execute the Remedy Successfully
and Requests for Ongoing Study
Three commenters--the State Attorneys General, Daniel Ducore, and
Consumer Federation of America--raise concerns that the size and
complexity of the proposed remedy create uncertainty as to whether BASF
will be able to execute its current plans successfully and preserve
competition at premerger levels. As Mr. Ducore describes his concern,
there remains a risk that BASF ``will fail to step in for Bayer and
compete with the new Bayer-Monsanto as strongly as Bayer had competed
with Monsanto before the deal,'' notwithstanding that the remedy
package ``appears to be as robust a divestiture as might be imagined.''
\52\ The commenters do not propose any specific measures that could be
incorporated to reduce these risks. Nor do they urge the court to block
the merger. Instead, Mr. Ducore and the State Attorneys General propose
that the United States commit to conduct a retrospective study on the
success of the settlement in preserving competition, with the State
Attorneys General requesting that this Court order that the study be
conducted two years after the divestitures have been completed.\53\ The
commenters argue that the uncertainty inherent in the large and complex
transfer of businesses and assets justifies greater oversight of BASF's
future operations than the government would typically undertake in
conjunction with a merger settlement. Mr. Ducore proposes a
particularly extensive ``ongoing assessment,'' including, for example,
tracking BASF's ongoing performance, assessing BASF's evaluation of its
R&D projects, and reviewing BASF's sales and pricing levels.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 1-2.
\53\ State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 2-3.
\54\ Ducore Comment (Exhibit 6) at 5-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An obligatory retrospective study of the effects of this merger and
settlement on competition is not necessary to protect the public
interest. As described more fully in Section V(a), the United States
has incorporated a number of safeguards in the proposed Final Judgment
to ensure that BASF will be fully capable of stepping into Bayer's
shoes as an effective competitor. The United States intends to monitor
the divestitures to ensure that all of the assets and businesses are
transferred to BASF in accordance with the terms of the proposed Final
Judgment, and it has even taken the unusual step of requesting the
appointment of a monitoring trustee to supplement the government's
oversight of this process. The Monitoring Trustee has authority to
access the relevant company personnel, books, records, and other
pertinent information to ensure that Defendants comply with their
obligations, and the trustee will provide regular updates to the United
States on Defendants' compliance.\55\ The Trustee will continue to
monitor compliance with the proposed Final Judgment for as long as the
transitional agreements required by the proposed Final Judgment remain
in place (unless this period shortened or extended by the United
States).\56\ Thus, the proposed Final Judgment contemplates several
years of oversight by the Monitoring Trustee with regular reporting to
the United States to address issues that may arise with respect to the
remedy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ Proposed Final Judgment Sec. Sec. VIII(G), (H).
\56\ Id. Sec. VIII(J).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
That said, the United States deliberately crafted the proposed
Final Judgment as a complete and permanent structural resolution that
remedies the antitrust violations alleged in the Complaint without the
need for future government involvement in BASF's (or Bayer's) business
operations. A retroactive assessment would not help shape the remedy in
this matter. The commenters do not explain how they expect the United
States to use the results of the assessment they would require, but
they may be suggesting that the United States should require additional
remedies in the future in the event the post-hoc review reveals
deficiencies in the settlement. As a law enforcement agency, the United
States is ill-equipped to continually oversee broader market operations
as suggested by the commenters. The United States should not be second-
guessing, for example, BASF's business plans or R&D investments several
years from now, when many of the relevant circumstances may have
changed from today. Indeed, as it would be impossible to predict with
certainty how well Bayer would have performed with the divested assets
absent the merger, it also would be impossible to assess with certainty
BASF's performance in comparison. To the contrary, once the
[[Page 1501]]
United States has remedied the antitrust violations--as the proposed
Final Judgment does here--competition, not the government, should
determine how individual competitors and the market as a whole perform
going forward.
c. Comments Regarding Seed Treatments
Two commenters raise questions relating to seed treatments.
Syngenta generally supports the proposed Final Judgment, noting that it
``resolves many of the most complex and difficult anticompetitive
aspects of the Transaction;'' \57\ however, Syngenta seeks
modifications to provisions that require Bayer to supply BASF with seed
treatments and proposes restrictions on BASF's ability to sell divested
seed treatments to Bayer. In addition, the Sustainable Food Center
proposes that all of Bayer's neonicotinoid seed treatments be divested
to BASF. We respond to each of these comments below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ Syngenta Comment (Exhibit 12) at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
i. The Proposed Final Judgment Appropriately Requires Bayer to Supply
Seed Treatments to BASF at Variable Cost
The proposed Final Judgment requires Bayer to supply certain seed
treatments products to BASF at ``variable cost'' for a limited period
of time to ensure continuity of seed treatment supply for the divested
businesses.\58\ Syngenta expresses concern that the term ``variable
cost'' is susceptible to different interpretations and could ``permit
BASF the opportunity to buy the products at a fraction of their full
production costs,'' which would give BASF ``a cost advantage above any
competitor'' and ``distort normal competitive dynamics'' for these
products.\59\ In particular, Syngenta asserts that the agribusiness
usage of the term ``variable cost'' would include only ``direct input
costs'' (such as the cost of raw materials), and exclude other costs
that would vary with production levels, resulting in BASF paying too
little for these products.\60\ Essentially, Syngenta appears to be
concerned that BASF may get too good a deal from Bayer on seed
treatment products, which could make it more challenging for Syngenta,
the second largest seed treatment supplier, to compete with BASF.
Syngenta asks that the proposed Final Judgment be ``clarified to note
that `variable cost' is defined more broadly than its typical industry
definition to include an appropriate allocation of fixed costs.'' \61\
To accomplish this, Syngenta proposes amending the proposed Final
Judgment to require Bayer to supply BASF these seed treatment products
at ``fully absorbed cost,'' an accounting measure that includes an
allocation of certain fixed costs.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Proposed Final Judgment at Sec. IV(G).
\59\ Syngenta Comment (Exhibit 12) at 1, 3-4.
\60\ Id. at 3.
\61\ Id. at 4.
\62\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Syngenta's concerns are misplaced, and the proposed Final Judgment
changes that Syngenta requests are not necessary. The seed treatment
supply provisions aim to place BASF in the same cost position as Bayer
before the merger. By doing so, the remedy preserves competition during
the transition period since BASF's pricing decisions will be based on
the same underlying cost structure as Bayer prior to the merger. To
accomplish this, the proposed Final Judgment uses the economic concept
of ``variable cost,'' i.e., ``that part of cost which varies with the
level of output.'' \63\ This measure of costs will capture costs that
directly relate to Bayer's production of seed treatments for BASF--
including, for example, a per-unit allocation for machine use, where
appropriate--regardless of the accounting label that industry
participants might place on any specific cost item. Thus, there is no
basis for concern that Bayer will be selling seed treatments to BASF at
a fraction of the production costs. To the contrary, BASF will fully
reimburse Bayer for the costs directly related to producing these seed
treatment products.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ See, e.g., Variable cost, Oxford Dictionary of Economics
(5th ed. 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Syngenta's proposal to change the cost standard for seed treatments
would also introduce needless complication. Bayer is required to
provide several additional products and services at ``variable cost''
for the purpose of placing BASF in the same cost position as Bayer
before the merger. Amending the proposed Final Judgment to introduce
another cost standard specific to seed treatments would create
confusion in addition to being unnecessary. It would also create a risk
that Bayer would face conflicting obligations across jurisdictions, as
the European Commission and other jurisdictions have imposed the same
variable cost requirements as the United States in their respective
settlement documents.\64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ See, e.g., European Commission, Case M.8084--Bayer/
Monsanto, Modification of Commitments, Schedule, at ] 21, p. 39
(divested seed treatments to be tolled at variable cost), at ] 68(c)
(glufosinate formulations supplied at variable cost), and 9, 13, 28,
65 and 67 (transitional supplies or services will be supplied by
Bayer at variable cost), dated April 11, 2018, available at https://ec.europa.eu/competition/mergers/cases/decisions/m8084_12985_3.pdf;
Competition Commission of India, Order under Section 31(7) of the
Competition Act, Combination Registration No. C-2017/08/523, at ]
180(c), p. 54 (glufosinate formulation to be supplied at variable
cost) and ] 181, p. 54 (transitions supplies or services provided at
variable cost), dated June 14, 2018, available at https://www.cci.gov.in/sites/default/files/Notice_order_document/Order_14.06.2018.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. BASF Cannot Resell Bayer Seed Treatments Supplied under Section
IV(G)(1) for Use on Non-BASF Seeds
Section IV(G)(1) of the proposed Final Judgment requires Bayer to
supply BASF with the seed treatments that Bayer is not divesting to
BASF but that Bayer has been using in the divested seed businesses.
These provisions allow BASF to seamlessly continue marketing the same
combinations of seeds and seed treatments that Bayer offered before the
merger while BASF transitions to alternative sources of supply.
Syngenta suggests, however, that this section could be read to permit
BASF to resell these Bayer seed treatments for use on other companies'
seeds in competition with Syngenta, Bayer, and other producers of seed
treatments. Syngenta proposes amending the proposed Final Judgment to
expressly prohibit this.\65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ Syngenta Comment (Exhibit 12) at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Syngenta's proposed amendment is unnecessary, as it would merely
repeat what is already clear from the text of the proposed Final
Judgment. The title of Section IV(G)(1) makes plain that the provision
relates to ``Seed Treatment Supply Agreements for Broad Acre Seeds and
Traits Business,'' \66\ that is, the agreements are intended to supply
the Broad Acre Seeds and Traits business BASF is acquiring from Bayer.
Moreover, the body of the provision limits its scope to Bayer seed
treatments that have been ``used by Bayer in the Broad Acre Seeds and
Traits Business.'' \67\ The European Commission Commitments likewise
prohibit resale because they require Bayer to supply these seed
treatments to BASF for use on BASF seeds.\68\ Given that Section
IV(G)(1) is limited to the supply of seed treatments to BASF for use on
its own
[[Page 1502]]
seeds, Syngenta's proposed amendment should be rejected.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ Proposed Final Judgment Sec. IV(G)(1) (emphasis added).
\67\ Id. Sec. IV(G)(1).
\68\ See European Commission, Case M.8084--Bayer/Monsanto,
Modification of Commitments, Schedule, at ] 66(d) and 66(e), p. 52
(in connection with the divestiture of Broad Acre Seeds and Traits,
requiring Bayer to supply seed treatment ``used on'' divested canola
seeds and seed treatment ``for divested cotton and soy varieties''),
dated April 11, 2018, available at https://ec.europa.eu/competition/mergers/cases/decisions/m8084_12985_3.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. The Proposed Final Judgment Allows BASF to Sell Seed Treatments to
Bayer
Syngenta is also concerned that nothing prevents BASF from entering
into arm's-length commercial agreements to supply Bayer with the seed
treatments products it is obtaining through the divestitures. Syngenta
contends that allowing BASF to enter into such an agreement with Bayer
would undermine the remedy because it would ``permit Bayer to recreate
the sort of product bundles that were the source of significant concern
in the Transaction.'' \69\ Syngenta proposes to close the purported
``loophole'' by amending the proposed Final Judgment to prohibit BASF
from selling divested seed treatments to Bayer except for use in
Bayer's branded seed business.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ Syngenta Comment (Exhibit 12) at 2.
\70\ Id. at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Syngenta's concerns are based on a fundamental misunderstanding of
the United States' theory of harm relating to seed treatments and the
basis for requiring divestiture of certain seed treatment products. The
United States has alleged that the merger would substantially lessen
competition through the vertical integration of Bayer and Monsanto in
one respect: By combining Monsanto's strong position in corn and
soybean seeds with Bayer's dominant position in certain seed
treatments, the merger would give the combined company the incentive
and ability to harm its seed rivals by raising the price of those seed
treatments--a key input for genetically modified seeds. For example,
before the merger, Bayer sold the only seed treatment that effectively
controls a destructive pest called corn rootworm. Because Bayer did not
sell corn seeds itself, it had a strong incentive to sell that seed
treatment to all corn seed companies, including Monsanto's rivals. But
the merger changes this calculus because Bayer now owns Monsanto, the
largest supplier of corn seeds in the United States. If Bayer were
permitted to retain its corn seed treatment, it would have a strong
incentive to raise the price of that treatment to its seed rivals (or
stop selling it altogether), knowing that its rivals rely on the
product and would be less able to compete effectively without it.
In other words, the possibility that Bayer may continue to use the
divested seed treatments on its seeds does not, in and of itself, give
rise to competitive harm. Rather, the problem is one of incentives. By
vesting control of both products in one firm, the merger would create
an incentive for the combined firm to raise its rivals' costs to make
it harder for them to compete to sell seeds. To ensure that the merger
does not give rise to this incentive to foreclose other competitors,
the United States has required Bayer to divest certain seed treatments
to BASF. In doing so, the United States has preserved the competitive
status quo: The seeds and seed treatments remain under the control of
different firms, Bayer and BASF, respectively. Accordingly, the
divestiture of these seed treatments to BASF fully resolves the
vertical foreclosure allegations in the Complaint.
iv. Concerns Regarding All Neonicotinoid Seed Treatments Are Outside
the Scope of the Complaint
Sustainable Food Center comments that the merger should not be
permitted unless Bayer divests, among other things, all its
``neonicotinoid seed treatments.'' \71\ ``Neonicotinoids'' refer to a
particular chemical class of insecticides. Under the proposed Final
Judgment, Bayer will divest seed treatments based on the chemical
clothianidin, which is one type of neonicotinoid. Bayer also sells seed
treatments based on the chemicals imidacloprid and thiacloprid, two
other types of neonicotinoid. The Complaint does not include a claim
relating to these types of seed treatments. Accordingly, there is no
basis for requiring Bayer to divest these products as a condition of
approving the merger.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ Sustainable Food Ctr. Comment (Exhibit 11).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Comments Related to Digital Agriculture and Cross-Product Leveraging
Several commenters argue that allowing Bayer to retain Monsanto's
leading digital agriculture platform will enhance the merged firm's
ability to influence farmer choice in other areas, such as seed and
crop protection markets.\72\ Digital agriculture, although still
emerging, refers to tools and services that allow farmers to collect,
store, process, or interpret data about their crops. Digital
agriculture is expected to drive an industry trend toward ``integrated
solutions''-- combinations of seeds, traits, and crop protection
products supported by digital farming technologies and other services.
Certain commenters argue that the merged firm will be able to use its
platform to recommend its own products, ``locking in'' farmers to the
merged firm's portfolio of products.\73\ Several commenters urge the
United States to seek to block the merger altogether based on these
concerns.\74\ Other commenters propose modifications to the settlement
on this basis. For example, Friends of the Earth and the Consumer
Federation of America argue that Monsanto's digital agriculture
platform should be divested instead of Bayer's.\75\ Friends of the
Earth also suggests that the merged firm should be required to update
its privacy policy to allow farmers to more easily remove data from its
digital agriculture platform.\76\ Consumer Federation similarly urges
the Court to impose ``rigorous open access conditions'' for its digital
agriculture interfaces.\77\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 4, 6, 9-10; Friends of the
Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 2-3; Nat'l Family Farm Coal. Comment
(Exhibit 8).
\73\ NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 4 (asserting that the bundled
products would ``effectively turn farmers into captured users'');
Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 3 (alleging that the
merged firm will be ``well-positioned to continue leveraging''
Monsanto's platform ``to sell more of its products''); Nat'l Family
Farm Coal. Comment (Exhibit 8) at 1 (arguing that the merged firm
will be able to ``leverage the sale of one product into another'');
Pollinator Stewardship Council Comment (Exhibit 10) at 2 (observing
that ``fewer technology `platforms' will dominate the marketplace,''
making it hard for smaller companies to compete, and ``farmers will
be locked into using these platforms as fewer choices will be
available in the marketplace'').
\74\ See, e.g., NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9); Nat'l Family Farm
Coal. Comment (Exhibit 8); Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7).
\75\ Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 3-4; Consumer
Fed'n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at 1.
\76\ Friends of the Earth Comment (Exhibit 7) at 3-4.
\77\ Consumer Fed'n of Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The United States has not alleged anticompetitive effects arising
from Bayer's acquisition of Monsanto's digital agriculture platform.
Nonetheless, the United States recognizes that BASF's ability to
compete in the future in the individual seed and crop protection
markets that are subject of the Complaint may depend on the strength of
BASF's digital agriculture platform. The leading global agricultural
businesses (including Bayer and Monsanto) project that digital
agriculture will be a key driver of seed and crop protection sales in
the future. To ensure BASF has the digital agriculture capabilities it
needs to replace Bayer as a competitor going forward, the proposed
Final Judgment requires Bayer to divest all assets related to its
digital agriculture portfolio and pipeline of products to BASF.
Although Bayer's digital agriculture products are not as developed as
Monsanto's, the divestiture provides BASF with similar
[[Page 1503]]
scale, scope, and innovation incentives as Bayer before the merger.
Comments advocating for open access to digital agriculture data or
for particular privacy policy provisions should be rejected as requests
for regulatory relief. The merger does not directly implicate these
issues. Moreover, behavioral remedies that require firms to commit to
particular business actions, such as requiring open access or
particular privacy provisions, are disfavored mechanisms for addressing
the effects of a merger, as they are inherently more difficult to craft
and administer and they risk unintended consequences. For example,
imposing a remedy that restricts the behavior of one competitor (the
merged firm) but not others may interfere with the competitive
marketplace. The structural divestiture of Bayer's digital agriculture
assets raises none of these concerns.
Several commenters also express broad concerns that the merged
firm, by virtue of its broader portfolio of products including
Monsanto's digital agriculture platform, will be able to leverage its
significant position in certain markets to foreclose competition in
other markets.\78\ Many of these cross-product leveraging concerns
appear to be animated by Monsanto's significant presence in traits:
Commenters fear that the merger will give the combined Bayer/Monsanto
new opportunities to leverage its strength in trait markets to
foreclose competition in other, unspecified, markets. For example, NRDC
argues that Monsanto has leveraged its ``virtual monopoly power'' in
seeds in anticompetitive ways in the past, and that a ``larger, more-
powerful Bayer/Monsanto corporation would be in an equal if not better
position to do so in the future by denying access to key traits,
charging monopoly prices, or coercing its competitors into anti-
competitive collaboration.'' \79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 3; Pollinator Stewardship
Council Comment (Exhibit 10) at 3-4; Consumer Fed'n of Am. Comment
(Exhibit 4) at 1-2.
\79\ NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 3. See also Consumer Fed'n of
Am. Comment (Exhibit 4) at 1-2 (asserting that the proposed remedy
fails to prevent the merged firm from ``expanding its market power
and vertical leverage''); Pollinator Stewardship Council Comment
(Exhibit 10) at 3-4 (asserting that ``Monsanto can already exert
considerable market power through its cross-licensing agreements''
and ``[the merger] would likely lessen competition even further'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To the extent the commenters have concerns about anticompetitive
effects in markets beyond those alleged in the Complaint and remedied
by the proposed Final Judgment, the commenters have not identified
them. Nor do the commenters explain why the merger, as remedied, would
result in such harm. It would be inappropriate to require a remedy for
such broad, amorphous concerns, unsupported by the rigorous antitrust
analysis the law requires. Furthermore, any such concerns go beyond the
allegations in the complaint and are thus beyond the scope of Tunney
Act review. See U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 76 (`` `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. . . .' '') (quoting Graftech, 2011 WL 1566781, at *13).
Going forward, the antitrust laws will continue to apply to the merged
firm, and the United States will challenge practices that run afoul of
applicable statutes.
e. Comments Regarding Procedural Matters, Including Government
Oversight and Enforcement of Proposed Final Judgment Compliance
Several commenters express concerns about procedural aspects of the
proposed Final Judgment. One commenter argues that the judicial review
procedures set forth in the APPA may be inapt in large transactions
requiring complicated divestitures. Another commenter argues that the
proposed Final Judgment should require, rather than permit, the
appointment of a monitoring trustee. Two commenters are concerned that
the proposed Final Judgment's jurisdictional provisions are inadequate.
One commenter fears that the proposed Final Judgment's enforcement
provisions improperly favor the United States. As explained below,
these concerns lack merit and do not require any amendment of the
proposed Final Judgment.
i. The Standard of Review Established by Congress Is Appropriate
One commenter, Daniel Bellemare, argues that a proposed decree
remedying the anticompetitive effects of a complex transaction such as
Bayer's acquisition of Monsanto may not be suited for a public interest
review under the APPA.\80\ Mr. Bellemare suggests instead that a trial
or preliminary injunction hearing may be a better forum for the
resolution of complicated antitrust issues.\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ Bellemare Comment (Exhibit 5) at 14-15.
\81\ Id. at 15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Irrespective of the size or nature of a transaction, the APPA
requires a court to conduct a limited public interest determination
when reviewing a proposed decree. Congress vested authority in the
Department of Justice, rather than the courts, to investigate and
prosecute violations of the Federal antitrust laws. See 28 C.F.R.
Sec. Sec. 0.40, 0.41; 15 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 4, 9, 15a. This
prosecutorial authority includes the ability to craft remedies, such as
the proposed Final Judgment. In light of the fact that a proposed
decree is the product of the United States' exercise of prosecutorial
discretion, courts have interpreted the APPA to permit only a limited
inquiry into whether a settlement is ``within the reaches of the public
interest.'' Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1458-61 (citation omitted). The
court's public interest determination focuses on whether the settlement
appropriately addresses the allegations identified in the complaint.
Id. at 1458-59; see also SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11 (the
court's ``scope of review remains sharply proscribed by precedent and
the nature of the Tunney Act proceedings''). The APPA does not require
a court to expend judicial time and resources considering alternative
remedies or probing the adequacy of the complaint itself. The limited
judicial review required by the APPA is appropriate for this matter and
is not unduly burdensome for this Court.
ii. Modifications Concerning the Monitoring Trustee Are Unnecessary
The State Attorneys General propose that the appointment of a
monitoring trustee should be required, rather than left to the
``discretion'' of the United States.\82\ This proposal is moot. This
Court granted the United States' motion to appoint the Honorable
Michael B. Mukasey as Monitoring Trustee on August 14, 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 2.
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iii. The Proposed Final Judgment's Jurisdictional Provisions Are
Sufficient
The State Attorneys General contend that the Court should
affirmatively retain jurisdiction throughout the ten-year term of the
Final Judgment.\83\ The commenters appear to misunderstand the terms of
the proposed Final Judgment, which provides that the Court retains
jurisdiction, without limitation, to enable any party to seek orders or
directions necessary or appropriate to carry out the terms of the
proposed Final Judgment.\84\
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\83\ Id.
\84\ Proposed Final Judgment Sec. XIII.
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By its terms, the Final Judgment is to expire ten years from the
date of its entry; however, the United States may terminate the Final
Judgment after six years if it finds that the divestitures
[[Page 1504]]
have been completed and the continuation of the Final Judgment is no
longer necessary or in the public interest.\85\ The State Attorneys
General ask that the Court require that the proposed Final Judgment, or
at least certain of its provisions, remain in place for the full ten-
year term, with no option to terminate after six years.\86\ This
request is unnecessary. The proposed Final Judgment is designed to
address the very potential for uncertainty that troubles the State
Attorneys General: it allows the decree to remain in place for ten
years if competition so requires, but it also reasonably allows for the
decree to be terminated earlier if it becomes unnecessary to protect
competition.
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\85\ Id. Sec. XV.
\86\ State Attorneys General Comment (Exhibit 2) at 3, 8.
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This flexibility is important because, while equitable relief under
the Clayton Act ``should unfetter a market from anticompetitive
conduct,'' Ford Motor Co. v. United States, 405 U.S. 562, 577 (1972),
at the same time relief ``must not be punitive,'' United States v. E.
I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 366 U.S. 316, 326 (1961). District courts
have regularly approved consent decrees providing for the sort of
flexibility contemplated here. See, e.g., United States v. Northrup
Grumman Corp., No. 1:02 CIV 02432, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10636, at *26
(D.D.C. June 10, 2003) (approving decree with seven-year term and
option for government to seek three-year extension); United States v.
Alex Brown & Sons, Inc., No. 96 CIV 5313 (RWS), 1997 WL 314390, at *8
(S.D.N.Y. Apr. 24, 1997) (approving decree with a ten-year term except
that certain portions of the decree would expire in five years and the
Antitrust Division had the option to terminate those portions after
only two years); United States v. Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., No. CIV.A.
95 1839, 1995 WL 803552, at *4 (D.D.C. Oct. 5, 1995) (approving decree
with five-year term and option for government to extend an additional
five years).
If, after six years (but before the end of the full ten-year term)
the divestitures have been completed and the United States determines
that effective competition thereby has been preserved, then the public
interest is not served by a continuation of the decree and the
associated burdens placed upon the United States, the Defendants, and
the Court. It should also be noted that the proposed Final Judgment
also includes a provision allowing the United States to seek a one-time
extension of the decree in any enforcement proceeding in which the
Court finds that the Defendants have violated the decree. In any event,
in applying its review function under the Tunney Act, the district
court's role is not to make a de novo determination of what the public
interest requires but rather to determine whether the settlement
reflected in the proposed final judgment falls ``within the reaches of
the public interest.'' Massachusetts v. Microsoft Corp., 373 F.3d 1199,
1237 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (quoting United States v. Microsoft Corp., 56
F.3d 1448, 1458 (D.C. Cir. 1995)). This provision falls within those
reaches.
In its comment, NFIB complains that the proposed Final Judgment's
jurisdictional provision does not explicitly say ``[t]he Court has
determined that this matter constitutes a case or controversy.'' \87\
This argument has no merit. Although ``a court must assure itself of
the existence of subject-matter jurisdiction,'' Kaplan v. Cent. Bank of
the Islamic Republic of Iran, 896 F.3d 501, 511 (D.C. Cir. 2018), a
court's written decision need not ``explicitly discuss it,'' Trans
World Airlines v. Morales, 949 F.2d 141, 144 (5th Cir. 1991), aff'd in
part, rev'd in part, 504 U.S. 374 (1992). More importantly, the Supreme
Court has already determined that a proposed antitrust consent decree
filed simultaneously with the United States' complaint satisfied
Article III's case or controversy requirement because, among other
things, ``a suit for an injunction deals primarily, not with past
violations, but with threatened future ones.'' Swift & Co. v. United
States, 276 U.S. 311, 326 (1928). It is sufficient, therefore, for the
proposed Final Judgment to state that the ``Court has jurisdiction over
the subject matter of and each of the parties hereto with respect to
this action.'' \88\
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\87\ NFIB Comment (Exhibit 13) at 2.
\88\ Proposed Final Judgment Sec. I.
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iv. The Proposed Final Judgment Appropriately Grants the United States
Discretion over Certain Decisions
The NFIB claims the phrase ``sole discretion,'' as it applies to
the United States throughout the proposed Final Judgment, ``encourages,
if not authorizes, arbitrary action,'' and requests that a new
paragraph be inserted in the proposed Final Judgment imposing an
explicit duty on the United States ``to act reasonably in the
circumstances.'' \89\
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\89\ NFIB Comment (Exhibit 13) at 2-3.
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Certain aspects of the proposed Final Judgment contemplate
flexibility to ensure that the assets are handed off smoothly and
effectively. For example, Paragraph IV(F)(2) of the proposed Final
Judgment provides that, within one year, if BASF determines that
additional Bayer assets are reasonably necessary for the continued
competitiveness of the divested businesses, BASF may request that the
United States require Bayer to divest additional assets. This provision
allows BASF to fill any gaps that could not reasonably be foreseen
before it started operating those businesses. At the same time, an
efficient and impartial arbiter is needed to ensure that any such
requests are valid. With respect to this and all other provisions
allowing the United States to exercise its discretion, the United
States intends to strike a balance between ensuring that BASF has the
resources to replace Bayer as an independent and vigorous competitor
and guarding against BASF seeking more from Bayer than is necessary or
BASF relying on Bayer for transition services for longer than
necessary.
The term ``sole discretion'' appears regularly in consent decrees
approved by this and other courts as in the public interest. See, e.g.,
United States v. Heraeus Electro-Nite Co., LLC, No. 1:14-CV-00005-JEB,
2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 62755, at *6 (D.D.C. Apr. 7, 2014) (approving
antitrust consent decree ordering divestiture ``to an Acquirer
acceptable to the United States, in its sole discretion''); United
States v. Anheuser-Busch InBev SA/NV, No. CV 13-127(RWR), 2013 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 167309, at *14 (D.D.C. Oct. 21, 2013) (approving decree
providing that ``United States, in its sole discretion, may agree to
one or more extensions of [] time period [to complete divestiture]'').
NFIB's suggestion ignores that ``a presumption of regularity attaches
to the actions of Government agencies'' such as the Department of
Justice. U.S. Postal Serv. v. Gregory, 534 U.S. 1, 10 (2001) (citing
United States v. Chem. Found., Inc., 272 U.S. 1, 14-15 (1926)). NFIB
has offered no reason to believe the United States would exercise its
discretion other than in ways that it reasonably determines would best
advance its longstanding mission of protecting competition and
consumers. The proposed modification should be rejected.\90\
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\90\ See Mission, U.S. Dep't of Justice Antitrust Div., https://www.justice.gov/atr/mission (last updated July 20, 2015) (``The
mission of the Antitrust Division is to promote economic
competition,'' which ``benefits American consumers through lower
prices, better quality and greater choice'').
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v. The Proposed Final Judgment Is Not the Product of ``Economic
Leverage''
NFIB misconstrues the proposed Final Judgment when it insists that
``[t]he
[[Page 1505]]
Court should not permit the Justice Department to use the economic
leverage it gained over the Defendants by filing an antitrust lawsuit
to pressure the Defendants to give up the assistance of corporate
counsel.'' \91\ The proposed Final Judgment merely gives the United
States the right ``to interview, either informally or on the record,
Defendants' officers, employees, or agents,'' for compliance purposes,
with ``their individual counsel present.'' \92\ That provision does
not, however, exclude corporate counsel. NFIB's comment also ignores
that ``in the absence of clear evidence to the contrary, courts presume
that [government officials] have properly discharged their official
duties.'' Chem. Found., 272 U.S. at 14-15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ NFIB Comment (Exhibit 13) at 3.
\92\ Proposed Final Judgment Sec. X.
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NFIB similarly complains that the Defendants' agreement to a
``preponderance of the evidence'' standard in decree enforcement
proceedings was a product of the United States' purported ``economic
leverage.'' \93\ The terms of the proposed Final Judgment were
determined through negotiation, and both sides benefit in certain ways
from the agreement to a preponderance standard. The United States and
the public gain by making the investigation and enforcement of
antitrust consent decrees more efficient; the clear and convincing
evidence standard, which would otherwise apply, would subject the
parties to more onerous and resource-intensive investigations. The
preponderance standard lessens those burdens, while still ensuring that
the United States carries the burden of proving a decree violation. The
D.C. Circuit has already recognized that the standard of proof in
decree enforcement proceedings can be waived. See United States v.
Volvo Powertrain Corp., 758 F.3d 330, 338-39 (D.C. Cir. 2014)
(concluding that the defendant waived the ``clear and convincing''
standard by oral representation in the district court). NFIB has
identified no valid reason why the Defendants' waiver of the clear and
convincing standard here should not similarly be honored.
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\93\ NFIB Comment (Exhibit 13) at 4.
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f. Additional Issues Raised By Commenters
i. Commenters Concerned About Industry Consolidation Fail to
Acknowledge the Effect of the Remedy
Several commenters oppose the merger based on general concerns
about consolidation in the agricultural industry. They view the merger
as part of a pattern of consolidation and raise concerns regarding the
impact of such consolidation on prices and innovation. For example, the
comment by certain Members of Congress notes that this transaction
``comes in the midst of other agro-chemical company mergers . . . and
is only the latest example in decades of consolidation in the
industry.'' \94\ NRDC states that ``today's agricultural inputs markets
already resemble the tight, seemingly impenetrable oligopoly that the
Clayton Act abhors as a result of considerable and unchecked
consolidation over the past twenty years.'' \95\ The Sustainable Food
Center asserts that ``[f]armers in our network have expressed growing
concern with consolidation in the market for agricultural inputs.''
\96\ While these commenters cite consolidation as a reason to block the
merger, they fail to acknowledge that the remedy ensures that the
merger will not increase concentration in the affected markets.\97\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\94\ Members of Cong. Comment (Exhibit 3) at 1.
\95\ NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 4.
\96\ Sustainable Food Ctr. Comment (Exhibit 11) at 1.
\97\ To the extent that commenters raised substantive issues
regarding the efficacy of the relief contained in the proposed Final
Judgment to remedy the competitive harm at issue in this transaction
we discuss and respond to them above. A number of comments, however,
expressed opposition to the merger without addressing any specific
aspects of the transaction or the settlement. See, e.g., Pollinator
Stewardship Council Comment (Exhibit 10) at 1 (asking the United
States to ``block this biotechnology mega-merger''); ActionAid USA
Comment (Exhibit 1) at 2 (``The only answer to this merger is
NO.'').
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The United States agrees that the proposed merger, unremedied,
poses a substantial threat to competition. At the same time, the United
States is confident that the proposed divestitures to BASF will fully
address those concerns. As detailed above in Section V(a), the proposed
Final Judgment will ensure that BASF replaces Bayer as an independent
and vigorous competitor in each of the markets in which the merger
would otherwise lessen competition. The United States has gone to
extraordinary lengths to ensure that this settlement will prevent
increased concentration in the affected markets by vesting BASF with
the full complement of assets, personnel, and rights needed to preserve
competition in the affected markets.
It is well established that courts ``must accord deference to the
government's predictions about the efficacy of its remedies.'' SBC
Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17. According appropriate deference to the
United States here, the proposed settlement is well within ``the
reaches of the public interest.'' Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461.
ii. Comments Regarding the Environmental Impact of Agricultural
Chemicals Are Beyond the Scope of this Action
A number of commenters express concerns relating to the
environment. Some commenters express broad concerns that the merger
would result in environmental harm.\98\ Others commenters express
general concerns, not specific to the merger, about the effect of
agricultural chemicals on wildlife, human health, and the
environment.\99\ NRDC expresses concern about the effect of the merger
on pollinators, specifically that Bayer may seek to leverage Monsanto's
seed position to expand the use of neonicotinoid seed treatments and
other pesticides, resulting in harm to pollinators.\100\
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\98\ ActionAid USA Comment (Exhibit 1) at 1; Members of Cong.
Comment (Exhibit 3) at 2.
\99\ Sierra Club Comment (Exhibit 14) at 1; Nat'l Family Farm
Coal. Comment (Exhibit 8) at 1.
\100\ NRDC Comment (Exhibit 9) at 7-10.
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These comments are beyond the purview of the Tunney Act. The United
States did not allege that the merger would result in harm to the
environment and, thus, environmental concerns are beyond the scope of
this proceeding and do not provide a basis for rejecting the proposed
Final Judgment. See U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 76 (`` `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. . . .' '') (quoting Graftech, 2011 WL 1566781, at *13).
Moreover, commenters generally concerned about the environmental
impact of agricultural chemicals offer no reason why the merger would
have an effect on such issues. Similarly, commenters who broadly allege
that the merger will result in environmental harm offer no specific
basis for their concerns. Regarding NRDC's concern that the merger will
increase the use of neonicotinoid seed treatments, as described in
Section V(d), the United States carefully considered whether the merger
would allow the merged firm to leverage Monsanto's seed position to
advance its position in certain seed treatments. Ultimately, the United
States did not find a basis to compel the divestiture of all of the
neonicotinoid seed treatments that are the subject of NRDC's complaint.
[[Page 1506]]
iii. The United States Conducted an Impartial and Independent Merger
Analysis
Members of Congress refer to news reports that raise the
possibility that the White House may have ``exercised outsized
influence'' in the review of this transaction and other deals.\101\ The
commenters do not make any specific claims regarding the investigation
of this merger, but rather urge that antitrust enforcement ``continue
to be treated as a law enforcement matter properly left to the
independent judgment of DOJ.'' \102\
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\101\ Members of Cong. Comment (Exhibit 3) at 2-3.
\102\ Id. at 2.
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Any suggestion that the settlement at issue here is or could be the
result of improper lobbying or political pressure is both
unsubstantiated and meritless. The settlement followed a thorough and
comprehensive investigation, and it is the result of extensive, good
faith negotiations between the United States and Defendants. The
proposed Final Judgment requires substantial relief that addresses the
competitive harm alleged in the Complaint. In short, there is no basis
to allege that the settlement results from anything other than the
United States' independent investigation and analysis.
VI. Conclusion
After careful consideration of the public comments, 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 comments and this response are published
pursuant to 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(d).
Dated: January 29, 2019
Respectfully submitted,
J. Richard Doidge, Trial Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice,
Antitrust Division, 450 5th Street NW, Suite 8000, Washington, DC
20530, Tel: (202) 514-8944.
[FR Doc. 2019-00810 Filed 2-1-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-11-P