Premerger Notification; Reporting and Waiting Period Requirements, 7609-7612 [2024-02228]
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7609
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 89, No. 24
Monday, February 5, 2024
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents.
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
16 CFR Parts 801 and 803
RIN 3084–AB46
Premerger Notification; Reporting and
Waiting Period Requirements
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Federal Trade Commission.
Final rule.
The Federal Trade
Commission (‘‘Commission’’ or ‘‘FTC’’)
is amending the Hart-Scott-Rodino
(‘‘HSR’’) Premerger Notification Rules
(‘‘Rules’’) that require the parties to
certain mergers and acquisitions to file
reports with the FTC and the Assistant
Attorney General in charge of the
Antitrust Division of the Department of
Justice (‘‘the Assistant Attorney
General’’) (together the ‘‘Antitrust
Agencies’’ or ‘‘Agencies’’) and to wait a
specified period of time before
consummating such transactions. In a
separate document published elsewhere
in this issue of the Federal Register, the
Commission is announcing the annual
adjustment of the filing fee thresholds
and amounts required by the Merger
Filing Fee Modernization Act of 2022
(‘‘2022 Amendments’’), contained
within the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2023. In this document, the
Commission amends Parts 801 and 803
of the Rules to make the ministerial
changes required to reflect the annual
adjustment of the filing fee thresholds
and amounts required by the 2022
Amendments.
SUMMARY:
DATES:
Effective March 6, 2024.
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robert Jones, Assistant Director,
Premerger Notification Office, Bureau of
Competition, Federal Trade
Commission, 400 7th Street SW, Room
CC–5301, Washington, DC 20024, or by
telephone at (202) 326–3100, Email:
rjones@ftc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Introduction
Section 7A of the Clayton Act (the
‘‘Act’’) requires the parties to certain
mergers or acquisitions to file with the
Commission and the Assistant Attorney
General and wait a specified period
before consummating the proposed
transaction to allow the Antitrust
Agencies to conduct their initial review
of a proposed transaction’s competitive
impact. The reporting requirement and
the waiting period that it triggers are
intended to enable the Agencies to
determine whether a proposed merger
or acquisition may violate the antitrust
laws if consummated and, when
appropriate, to seek a preliminary
injunction in federal court to prevent
consummation.
Section 7A(d)(1) of the Act, 15 U.S.C.
18a(d)(1), directs the Commission, with
the concurrence of the Assistant
Attorney General, in accordance with
the Administrative Procedure Act, 5
U.S.C. 553, to require that premerger
notification be in such form and contain
such information and documentary
material as may be necessary and
appropriate to determine whether the
proposed transaction may, if
consummated, violate the antitrust laws.
Section 7A(d)(2) of the Act, 15 U.S.C.
18a(d)(2), grants the Commission, with
the concurrence of the Assistant
Attorney General, in accordance with 5
U.S.C. 553, the authority to define the
terms used in the Act and prescribe
such other rules as may be necessary
and appropriate to carry out the
purposes of section 7A of the Act.
Pursuant to that authority, the
Commission, with the concurrence of
the Assistant Attorney General,
developed the Rules, codified in 16 CFR
parts 801, 802 and 803, and the
appendices to Part 803, the Notification
and Report Form for Certain Mergers
and Acquisitions (‘‘HSR Form’’) and
Instructions to the Notification and
Report Form for Certain Mergers and
Acquisitions (‘‘Instructions’’), to govern
the form of premerger notification to be
provided by merging parties.
In this rulemaking, the Commission is
amending Parts 801 and 803 of the
Rules to make the ministerial changes
required to reflect the annual
adjustment of the filing fee thresholds
and amounts required by the 2022
Amendments.
Affected in Part 801, Coverage Rules:
§ 801.1 Definitions.
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Affected in Part 803, Transmittal Rules
• § 803.9 Filing fee.
• Appendix A to Part 803—
Notification and Report Form for
Certain Mergers and Acquisitions
Background
In 1989, section 605 of Public Law
101–162, 103 Stat. 1031 (15 U.S.C. 18a
note), first required the Federal Trade
Commission to assess and collect filing
fees from persons acquiring voting
securities or assets under the Act. The
fee was originally $20,000 and was
raised twice so that by 1994 it was
$45,000. In 2000, fee tiers, rather than
a single fee, were established by section
630(b) of Public Law 106–553, 114 Stat.
2762, 2762A–109 so that filers were
required to pay $45,000, $125,000, or
$280,000 per transaction, depending on
the total value of the transaction. While
these fees did not change after their
adoption in 2000, the relevant
jurisdictional thresholds began to adjust
annually in 2005 to reflect changes in
the gross national product (‘‘GNP’’).1
This meant that the value of reportable
transactions started to increase but the
associated filing fees did not.
On December 29, 2022, the President
signed into law the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023, which
included the 2022 Amendments. The
2022 Amendments, among other things,
aimed to address the disparity between
the value of a transaction and its
associated filing fee by amending the
fees and fee tiers in the Act. See Public
Law 117–328, Div. GG, 136 Stat. 4459.
The fee structure enacted by the 2022
Amendments codifies six, rather than
three, filing fee tiers. In addition, the
2022 Amendments require that the
filing fee tiers be adjusted annually to
reflect changes in the GNP for the
previous year 2 and that the filing fee
amounts be increased annually, if the
percentage increase in the consumer
price index (‘‘CPI’’) for the prior year as
compared to the CPI for the fiscal year
ended on September 30, 2022, is greater
than one percent.3 The 2022
Amendments specify that such
adjustments to the fees will be rounded
to the nearest $5,000.
1 See Public Law 106–553, 114 Stat. at 2762A–109
to –110, amending Section 605 of title VI of Public
Law 101–162 (15 U.S.C. 18a note).
2 Public Law 117–328, 136 Stat. 4459, Div. GG,
Title I.
3 Id.
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The Commission is making a
ministerial change to the definition of
‘‘(as adjusted)’’ to clarify that the fee
thresholds and amounts are subject to
annual adjustment under the 2022
Amendments. The Commission is not
making any material changes to this
section.
avoid confusion and improve the utility
of the example.
• Revising Example 5 to provide real
(and not adjusted) asset values to avoid
confusion and improve the utility of the
example, and to add ‘‘(as adjusted)’’ to
reflect the annual adjustment of the fee
amounts as codified in the 2024
Amendments.
• Revising Example 6 to clarify that
the tiers and amounts referenced are
those in effect as of April 2024 and
adjust example dollar values to align
with values in effect as of April 2024 to
avoid confusion, improve the utility of
the example, and eliminate a
typographical error.
• Revising Example 7 to clarify that
the tiers and amounts referenced are
those in effect as of April 2024 and
adjust example dollar values to align
with values in effect as of April 2024 to
avoid confusion, improve the utility of
the example, and eliminate a
typographical error.
• Revising Example 8 to clarify that
the tiers and amounts referenced are
those in effect as of April 2024 and add
‘‘(as adjusted)’’ to reflect the annual
adjustment of the fee amounts as
codified in the 2022 Amendments.
II. Section 803.9
III. Administrative Procedure Act
In a separate document published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, the Commission is announcing
(1) the revised jurisdictional thresholds
for the Hart Scott Rodino Antitrust
Improvements Act of 1976 required by
the 2000 amendment of Section 7A of
the Clayton Act; and (2) the revised
filing fee schedule for the same Act
required by Division GG of the 2023
Consolidated Appropriations Act. In the
instant document, the Commission,
with the concurrence of the Assistant
Attorney General, amends Parts 801 and
803 of the Rules to make the ministerial
changes required to reflect the annual
adjustment of the filing fee thresholds
and amounts required by the 2022
Amendments.
I. Section 801.1
Definitions
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Section 801.1(n), Definition of (as
Adjusted)
Filing Fee
Section 803.9 describes how fees are
determined and paid. The Commission
is amending the eight examples in
§ 803.9 to conform with the changes to
the fees and fee tiers required by the
2022 Amendments, to update dates and
dollar values to reflect more recent
adjusted jurisdictional thresholds, and
to add clarity to the examples.
Specifically, the Commission will
amend the examples in § 803.9 as
follows:
• Revising Example 1 to add ‘‘(as
adjusted)’’ to reflect the annual
adjustment of the fee amounts as
codified in the 2022 Amendments.
• Revising Example 2 to clarify that
the tiers and amounts referenced are
those in effect as of April 2024 and
adjust example dollar values to align
with values in effect as of April 2024 to
avoid confusion and improve the utility
of the example.
• Revising Example 3 to clarify that
the tiers and amounts referenced are
those in effect as of April 2024 and
adjust example dollar values to align
with values in effect as of April 2024 to
avoid confusion and improve the utility
of the example.
• Revising Example 4 to clarify that
the tiers and amounts referenced are
those in effect as of April 2024 and
adjust example dollar values to align
with values in effect as of April 2024 to
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The Commission finds good cause to
adopt these changes without prior
public comment. Under the
Administrative Procedure Act (‘‘APA’’),
notice and comment are not required
‘‘when the agency for good cause finds
(and incorporates the finding and a brief
statement of reasons therefore in the
rules issued) that notice and public
procedure thereon are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest.’’ 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B).
In this case, the Commission finds
that public comment on these changes
is unnecessary. The Commission is
amending the HSR Rules to conform
with the new fee tiers and fees enacted
by Congress. These updates do not
involve any substantive changes in the
HSR Rules’ requirements for entities
subject to the Rules. Rather, they are
conforming updates to the definition of
the HSR Act and examples of how to
calculate the appropriate fee. In
addition, these amendments fall within
the category of rules covering agency
procedure and practice that are exempt
from the notice-and-comment
requirements of the APA. See 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(3)(A).
For these reasons, the Commission
finds there is good cause for adopting
this final rule as effective on March 6,
2024 without prior public comment.
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IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 601–612, requires that the agency
conduct an initial and final regulatory
analysis of the anticipated economic
impact of the proposed amendments on
small businesses, except where the
agency head certifies that the regulatory
action will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. 5 U.S.C. 605.
Because of the size of the transactions
necessary to invoke an HSR filing, the
premerger notification rules rarely, if
ever, affect small businesses. Indeed,
amendments to the Act in 2001 were
intended to reduce the burden of the
premerger notification program further
by exempting all transactions valued at
less than $50 million (as adjusted
annually).4 Likewise, none of the rule
amendments expand the coverage of the
premerger notification rules in a way
that would affect small business. In
addition, the Regulatory Flexibility Act
requirements apply only to rules or
amendments that are subject to the
notice-and-comment requirements of
the APA. See 5 U.S.C. 603, 604. Because
these amendments are exempt from
those APA requirements, as noted
earlier, they are also exempt from the
Regulatory Flexibility Act requirements.
In any event, to the extent, if any, that
the Regulatory Flexibility Act applies,
the Commission certifies that these rules
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. This document serves as notice
of this certification to the Small
Business Administration.
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Commission has existing
Paperwork Reduction Act clearance for
the HSR Rules (OMB Control Number
3084–0005). The Commission has
concluded that these technical
amendments do not change the
substance or frequency of the preexisting information collection
requirements and, therefore, do not
require further OMB clearance.
VI. Other Matters
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
designated this rule as not a ‘‘major
rule,’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 16 CFR Parts 801 and
803
Antitrust.
4 By comparison, the dollar thresholds
established for total annual receipts of a small
business under the applicable small business size
standards fall well under $50 million. See 13 CFR
121.201.
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For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Federal Trade
Commission is amending 16 CFR parts
801 and 803 as set forth below:
PART 801—COVERAGE RULES
1. The authority citation for part 801
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 18a(d).
2. Amend § 801.1 by revising
paragraph (n) to read as follows:
■
§ 801.1
Definitions
*
*
*
*
*
(n) (as adjusted). The parenthetical
‘‘(as adjusted)’’ refers to the adjusted
values published in the Federal Register
document titled ‘‘Revised Jurisdictional
Thresholds and Fee Amounts under
Section 7A of the Clayton Act.’’ This
Federal Register document will be
published in January of each year and
the values contained therein will be
effective as of the effective date
published in the Federal Register
document and will remain effective
until superseded in the next calendar
year. The document will also be
available at https://www.ftc.gov. Such
adjusted values will be calculated in
accordance with Section 7A(a)(2)(A)
and the statutory note to Section 7A.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 803—TRANSMITTAL RULES
3. The authority citation for part 803
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 18a(d).
4. Revise § 803.9 (a)(1) through (8) as
follows:
■
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§ 803.9
Filing fee.
(a) * * * * *
(1) ‘‘A’’ wishes to acquire voting
securities issued by B, where the greater
of the acquisition price and the market
price is in excess of $50 million (as
adjusted) but less than $100 million (as
adjusted) pursuant to § 801.10 of this
chapter. When ‘‘A’’ files notification for
the transaction, it must indicate the $50
million (as adjusted) threshold. If the
value of the voting securities is less than
$161.5 million (as adjusted), ‘‘A’’ must
pay a filing fee of $30,000 (as adjusted)
because the aggregate total amount of
the acquisition is greater than $50
million (as adjusted) but less than
$161.5 million (as adjusted). If the
aggregate total value of the voting
securities is at least $161.5 million (as
adjusted), but less than $500 million (as
adjusted), ‘‘A’’ must pay a filing fee of
$100,000 (as adjusted).
(2) In April 2024, ‘‘A’’ acquires $75
million of assets from ‘‘B.’’ The parties
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meet the size of person criteria of
section 7A(a)(2)(B) of the act, but the
transaction is not reportable because it
does not exceed the $50 million (as
adjusted) size of transaction threshold of
that provision. Two months later ‘‘A’’
acquires additional assets from ‘‘B’’
valued at $175 million. Pursuant to the
aggregation requirements of
§ 801.13(b)(2)(ii) of this chapter, the
aggregate total amount of ‘‘B’s’’ assets
that ‘‘A’’ will hold as a result of the
second acquisition is $250 million.
Accordingly, when ‘‘A’’ files
notification for the second transaction,
‘‘A’’ must pay a filing fee of $100,000 (as
adjusted) because the aggregate total
amount of the acquisition is less than
$500 million (as adjusted), but not less
than $161.5 million (as adjusted).
(3) In April 2024, ‘‘A’’ acquires $120
million of voting securities issued by B
after submitting its notification and
$30,000 (as adjusted) filing fee and
indicates the $50 million (as adjusted)
threshold. Later in 2024, ‘‘A’’ files to
acquire additional voting securities
issued by B valued at $120 million
because it will exceed the next higher
reporting threshold (see § 801.1(h) of
this chapter). Assuming the second
transaction is reportable, and the value
of its initial holdings is unchanged (see
§§ 801.13(a)(2) and 801.10(c) of this
chapter), the provisions of § 801.13(a)(1)
of this chapter require that ‘‘A’’ report
that the total value of the second
transaction is $240 million, which is in
excess of $100 million (as adjusted)
notification threshold. This is because
‘‘A’’ must aggregate previously acquired
securities in calculating the value of B’s
voting securities that it will hold as a
result of the second acquisition. ‘‘A’’
should pay a filing fee of $100,000 (as
adjusted) because the total value is
greater than $161.5 million (as adjusted)
but less than $500 million (as adjusted).
(4) In April 2024, ‘‘A’’ signs a contract
with a stated purchase price of $174
million, subject to adjustments, to
acquire all of the assets of ‘‘B.’’ If the
amount of adjustments can be
reasonably estimated, the acquisition
price—as adjusted to reflect that
estimate—is determined. If the amount
of adjustments cannot be reasonably
estimated, the acquisition price is
undetermined. In either case the board
or its delegee must also determine in
good faith the fair market value.
(§ 801.10(b) of this chapter states that
the value of an asset acquisition is to be
the fair market value or the acquisition
price, if determined and greater than fair
market value.) ‘‘A’’ files notification and
submits a $30,000 (as adjusted) filing
fee. ‘‘A’s’’ decision to pay that fee may
be justified on either of two bases. First,
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‘‘A’’ may have concluded that the
acquisition price can be reasonably
estimated to be less than $173.3 million,
because of anticipated adjustments—
e.g., based on due diligence by ‘‘A’s’’
accounting firm indicating that one
third of the inventory is not saleable. If
fair market value is also determined in
good faith to be less than $173.3
million, the $30,000 (as adjusted) fee is
appropriate. Alternatively, ‘‘A’’ may
conclude that because the adjustments
cannot reasonably be estimated, the
acquisition price is undetermined. If so,
‘‘A’’ would base the valuation on the
good faith determination of fair market
value. The acquiring party’s execution
of the Certification also attests to the
good faith valuation of the value of the
transaction.
(5) In April 2024, ‘‘A’’ contracts to
acquire all of the assets of ‘‘B’’ for $550
million. The assets include hotels, office
buildings, and rental retail property, all
of which are exempted by § 802.2 of this
chapter. Section 802.2 directs that these
assets—which are valued at $300
million—are exempt from the
requirements of the act and that
reporting requirements for the
transaction should be determined by
analyzing the remainder of the
acquisition as if it were a separate
transaction. Furthermore, § 801.15(a)(2)
of this chapter states that those exempt
assets are never held as a result of the
acquisition. Accordingly, the aggregate
amount of the transaction is in excess of
$161.5 million (as adjusted), but less
than $500 million (as adjusted). ‘‘A’’
will be liable for a filing fee of $100,000
(as adjusted), rather than $250,000 (as
adjusted), because the value of the
transaction is not less than $161.5
million (adjusted) but is less than $500
million (as adjusted).
(6) In April 2024, ‘‘A’’ acquires coal
reserves from ‘‘B’’ valued at $150
million. No notification or filing fee is
required because the acquisition is
exempted by § 802.3(b) of this chapter.
Three months later, A proposes to
acquire additional coal reserves from
‘‘B’’ valued at $500 million. This
transaction is subject to the notification
requirements of the act because the
value of the acquisition exceeds the
$200 million limitation on the
exemption in § 802.3(b). As a result of
§ 801.13(b)(2)(ii) of this chapter, the
prior $150 million acquisition must be
added because the additional $500
million of coal reserves were acquired
from the same person within 180 days
of the initial acquisition. Because
aggregating the two acquisitions exceeds
the $200 million exemption limitation,
§ 801.15(b) of this chapter directs that
‘‘A’’ will also hold the previously
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exempt $150 million acquisition; thus,
the aggregate amount held as a result of
the $500 million acquisition is $650
million. Accordingly, ‘‘A’’ must file
notification to acquire the coal reserves
valued in excess of $500 million (as
adjusted) but less than $1 billion (as
adjusted) and pay a filing fee of
$250,000 (as adjusted).
(7) In April 2024, ‘‘A’’ intends to
acquire 20 percent of the voting
securities of B, a non-publicly traded
issuer. The agreed upon acquisition
price is $172.3 million subject to postclosing adjustments of up to plus or
minus $2 million. ‘‘A’’ estimates that
the adjustments will be minus $1
million. In this example, since ‘‘A’’ is
able in good faith to reasonably estimate
the adjustments to the agreed-on price,
the acquisition price is deemed to be
determined and the appropriate filing
fee threshold is $50 million (as
adjusted). Even if the post-closing
adjustments cause the final price
actually paid to exceed $172.3 million,
‘‘A’’ would be deemed to hold $171.3
million in B voting securities as a result
of this acquisition. Note, that any
additional acquisition by ‘‘A’’ of B
voting may trigger another filing and
require the appropriate fee.
(8) In April 2024, ‘‘A’’ intends to
make a cash tender offer for a minimum
of 50 percent plus one share of the
voting securities of B, a non-publicly
traded issuer, but will accept up to 100
percent of the shares if they are
tendered. There are 12 million shares of
B voting stock outstanding and the
tender offer price is $100 per share. In
this instance, since there is no cap on
the number of shares that can be
tendered, the value of the transaction
will be the value of 100 percent of B’s
voting securities, and ‘‘A’’ must pay the
$400,000 (as adjusted) fee for the $1
billion (as adjusted) filing fee threshold.
Note that if the tender offer had been for
a maximum of 50 percent plus one share
the value of the transaction would be
$600 million, and the appropriate fee
would be $250,000 (as adjusted), based
on the $500 million (as adjusted) filing
fee threshold. This would be true even
if the tender offer were to be followed
by a merger which would be exempt
under section 7A(c)(3) of the act.
*
*
*
*
*
By direction of the Commission.
Joel Christie,
Acting Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2024–02228 Filed 2–2–24; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 5 and Chapter IX
[Docket No. FR–6438–N–01]
Regulatory Waivers and Administrative
Flexibilities During a Presidentially
Declared Disaster, for Public Housing
Agencies During CY 2024 and CY 2025
Office of Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing, U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD).
ACTION: Notification of waivers.
AGENCY:
This document advises Public
Housing Agencies (PHAs) and the
public that HUD is establishing an
expedited waiver process for requests to
waive HUD regulatory and/or
administrative requirements (‘‘HUD
requirements’’) for PHAs during
Presidentially Declared Disasters
(PDDs). PHAs located in areas that are
included in PDD areas (PDD PHAs) may
request waivers of certain HUD Public
Housing and section 8 requirements and
receive expedited review of such
requests to utilize the administrative
flexibilities and expedited waiver
process set forth in this document.
DATES: Waivers and administrative
flexibilities set forth in this document
are effective from January 1, 2024, until
December 31, 2025.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tesia Anyanaso, Office of Field
Operations, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW,
Room 3180, Washington, DC 20410–
5000, or email PIH_Disaster_Relief@
hud.gov or call (202) 402–7026 during
business hours. HUD welcomes and is
prepared to receive calls from
individuals who are deaf or hard of
hearing, as well as individuals with
speech and communication disabilities.
To learn more about how to make an
accessible telephone call, please visit
https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/
telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: HUD is
exercising its discretionary authority
from 24 CFR 5.110 (Waivers) and is
providing regulatory flexibility to PDD
PHAs described in this document. Upon
receipt of a PDD PHA waiver or
flexibility request, HUD will review and
may approve the submission. The
request must include documentation of
good cause for each waiver or flexibility
request. HUD may consider extensions
subject to statutory limitations and
pursuant to 24 CFR 5.110, to facilitate
a PDD PHA’s ability to participate in
disaster relief and recovery efforts.
SUMMARY:
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Waivers of essential program
requirements, such as property
inspection or income verification, will
not be granted in their entirety, although
modifications may be considered.
HUD’s ability to grant waivers or
approve alternative requirements is
limited, as HUD does not have the
authority to waive statutory
requirements.
I. Instructions for PDD PHAs—How To
Request an Expedited Waiver or
Administrative Flexibility
A PDD PHA seeking a waiver or
flexibility of a HUD requirement listed
within this document, or any other HUD
requirement needed to assist in disaster
relief and recovery efforts, must submit
a written request. HUD will not approve
a PDD PHA’s request to waive or be
granted a flexibility for fair housing,
civil rights, labor standards, or HUD’s
environmental review requirements.
Waiver requests approved by HUD
pursuant to this document will be
published in the Federal Register and
will identify the PDD PHAs receiving
such approvals, pursuant to section 106
of the Department of Housing and Urban
Development Reform Act of 1989. The
process that HUD will use in assessing
applications for waivers and
administrative flexibilities is explained
below.
HUD developed a checklist
(Attachment A at the end of this
document) that a PDD PHA must
complete and submit to request
expedited review of waivers identified
in this document. Each request must
include a good-cause justification
explaining the need for the waiver
related to the PHA’s disaster relief and
recovery efforts. The PDD PHA must
await HUD’s response affirming waiver
approval before implementing any
requested waiver. Waivers will be
granted for a period of up to 12 months
following approval, unless otherwise
specified.
Waivers are divided into two tiers:
tier 1, waivers that are estimated to be
approved within 30 days; and tier 2,
waivers that are estimated to be
approved within 60 days. The Office of
Public and Indian Housing (PIH) will
prioritize waiver request(s) based upon
the designated tier.
II. List of Waivers and Administrative
Flexibilities
Tier 1: Immediate Need. This tier
includes waivers and administrative
flexibilities needed for crisis
management operations during the
immediate aftermath of a PDD. These
requests will be prioritized by HUD and
E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM
05FER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 24 (Monday, February 5, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 7609-7612]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-02228]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 24 / Monday, February 5, 2024 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 7609]]
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
16 CFR Parts 801 and 803
RIN 3084-AB46
Premerger Notification; Reporting and Waiting Period Requirements
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Trade Commission (``Commission'' or ``FTC'') is
amending the Hart-Scott-Rodino (``HSR'') Premerger Notification Rules
(``Rules'') that require the parties to certain mergers and
acquisitions to file reports with the FTC and the Assistant Attorney
General in charge of the Antitrust Division of the Department of
Justice (``the Assistant Attorney General'') (together the ``Antitrust
Agencies'' or ``Agencies'') and to wait a specified period of time
before consummating such transactions. In a separate document published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, the Commission is
announcing the annual adjustment of the filing fee thresholds and
amounts required by the Merger Filing Fee Modernization Act of 2022
(``2022 Amendments''), contained within the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2023. In this document, the Commission amends Parts 801 and 803 of
the Rules to make the ministerial changes required to reflect the
annual adjustment of the filing fee thresholds and amounts required by
the 2022 Amendments.
DATES: Effective March 6, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert Jones, Assistant Director,
Premerger Notification Office, Bureau of Competition, Federal Trade
Commission, 400 7th Street SW, Room CC-5301, Washington, DC 20024, or
by telephone at (202) 326-3100, Email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Introduction
Section 7A of the Clayton Act (the ``Act'') requires the parties to
certain mergers or acquisitions to file with the Commission and the
Assistant Attorney General and wait a specified period before
consummating the proposed transaction to allow the Antitrust Agencies
to conduct their initial review of a proposed transaction's competitive
impact. The reporting requirement and the waiting period that it
triggers are intended to enable the Agencies to determine whether a
proposed merger or acquisition may violate the antitrust laws if
consummated and, when appropriate, to seek a preliminary injunction in
federal court to prevent consummation.
Section 7A(d)(1) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 18a(d)(1), directs the
Commission, with the concurrence of the Assistant Attorney General, in
accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553, to
require that premerger notification be in such form and contain such
information and documentary material as may be necessary and
appropriate to determine whether the proposed transaction may, if
consummated, violate the antitrust laws. Section 7A(d)(2) of the Act,
15 U.S.C. 18a(d)(2), grants the Commission, with the concurrence of the
Assistant Attorney General, in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553, the
authority to define the terms used in the Act and prescribe such other
rules as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the purposes of
section 7A of the Act. Pursuant to that authority, the Commission, with
the concurrence of the Assistant Attorney General, developed the Rules,
codified in 16 CFR parts 801, 802 and 803, and the appendices to Part
803, the Notification and Report Form for Certain Mergers and
Acquisitions (``HSR Form'') and Instructions to the Notification and
Report Form for Certain Mergers and Acquisitions (``Instructions''), to
govern the form of premerger notification to be provided by merging
parties.
In this rulemaking, the Commission is amending Parts 801 and 803 of
the Rules to make the ministerial changes required to reflect the
annual adjustment of the filing fee thresholds and amounts required by
the 2022 Amendments.
Affected in Part 801, Coverage Rules:
Sec. 801.1 Definitions.
Affected in Part 803, Transmittal Rules
Sec. 803.9 Filing fee.
Appendix A to Part 803--Notification and Report Form for
Certain Mergers and Acquisitions
Background
In 1989, section 605 of Public Law 101-162, 103 Stat. 1031 (15
U.S.C. 18a note), first required the Federal Trade Commission to assess
and collect filing fees from persons acquiring voting securities or
assets under the Act. The fee was originally $20,000 and was raised
twice so that by 1994 it was $45,000. In 2000, fee tiers, rather than a
single fee, were established by section 630(b) of Public Law 106-553,
114 Stat. 2762, 2762A-109 so that filers were required to pay $45,000,
$125,000, or $280,000 per transaction, depending on the total value of
the transaction. While these fees did not change after their adoption
in 2000, the relevant jurisdictional thresholds began to adjust
annually in 2005 to reflect changes in the gross national product
(``GNP'').\1\ This meant that the value of reportable transactions
started to increase but the associated filing fees did not.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See Public Law 106-553, 114 Stat. at 2762A-109 to -110,
amending Section 605 of title VI of Public Law 101-162 (15 U.S.C.
18a note).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On December 29, 2022, the President signed into law the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, which included the 2022
Amendments. The 2022 Amendments, among other things, aimed to address
the disparity between the value of a transaction and its associated
filing fee by amending the fees and fee tiers in the Act. See Public
Law 117-328, Div. GG, 136 Stat. 4459. The fee structure enacted by the
2022 Amendments codifies six, rather than three, filing fee tiers. In
addition, the 2022 Amendments require that the filing fee tiers be
adjusted annually to reflect changes in the GNP for the previous year
\2\ and that the filing fee amounts be increased annually, if the
percentage increase in the consumer price index (``CPI'') for the prior
year as compared to the CPI for the fiscal year ended on September 30,
2022, is greater than one percent.\3\ The 2022 Amendments specify that
such adjustments to the fees will be rounded to the nearest $5,000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Public Law 117-328, 136 Stat. 4459, Div. GG, Title I.
\3\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 7610]]
In a separate document published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register, the Commission is announcing (1) the revised
jurisdictional thresholds for the Hart Scott Rodino Antitrust
Improvements Act of 1976 required by the 2000 amendment of Section 7A
of the Clayton Act; and (2) the revised filing fee schedule for the
same Act required by Division GG of the 2023 Consolidated
Appropriations Act. In the instant document, the Commission, with the
concurrence of the Assistant Attorney General, amends Parts 801 and 803
of the Rules to make the ministerial changes required to reflect the
annual adjustment of the filing fee thresholds and amounts required by
the 2022 Amendments.
I. Section 801.1 Definitions
Section 801.1(n), Definition of (as Adjusted)
The Commission is making a ministerial change to the definition of
``(as adjusted)'' to clarify that the fee thresholds and amounts are
subject to annual adjustment under the 2022 Amendments. The Commission
is not making any material changes to this section.
II. Section 803.9 Filing Fee
Section 803.9 describes how fees are determined and paid. The
Commission is amending the eight examples in Sec. 803.9 to conform
with the changes to the fees and fee tiers required by the 2022
Amendments, to update dates and dollar values to reflect more recent
adjusted jurisdictional thresholds, and to add clarity to the examples.
Specifically, the Commission will amend the examples in Sec. 803.9 as
follows:
Revising Example 1 to add ``(as adjusted)'' to reflect the
annual adjustment of the fee amounts as codified in the 2022
Amendments.
Revising Example 2 to clarify that the tiers and amounts
referenced are those in effect as of April 2024 and adjust example
dollar values to align with values in effect as of April 2024 to avoid
confusion and improve the utility of the example.
Revising Example 3 to clarify that the tiers and amounts
referenced are those in effect as of April 2024 and adjust example
dollar values to align with values in effect as of April 2024 to avoid
confusion and improve the utility of the example.
Revising Example 4 to clarify that the tiers and amounts
referenced are those in effect as of April 2024 and adjust example
dollar values to align with values in effect as of April 2024 to avoid
confusion and improve the utility of the example.
Revising Example 5 to provide real (and not adjusted)
asset values to avoid confusion and improve the utility of the example,
and to add ``(as adjusted)'' to reflect the annual adjustment of the
fee amounts as codified in the 2024 Amendments.
Revising Example 6 to clarify that the tiers and amounts
referenced are those in effect as of April 2024 and adjust example
dollar values to align with values in effect as of April 2024 to avoid
confusion, improve the utility of the example, and eliminate a
typographical error.
Revising Example 7 to clarify that the tiers and amounts
referenced are those in effect as of April 2024 and adjust example
dollar values to align with values in effect as of April 2024 to avoid
confusion, improve the utility of the example, and eliminate a
typographical error.
Revising Example 8 to clarify that the tiers and amounts
referenced are those in effect as of April 2024 and add ``(as
adjusted)'' to reflect the annual adjustment of the fee amounts as
codified in the 2022 Amendments.
III. Administrative Procedure Act
The Commission finds good cause to adopt these changes without
prior public comment. Under the Administrative Procedure Act (``APA''),
notice and comment are not required ``when the agency for good cause
finds (and incorporates the finding and a brief statement of reasons
therefore in the rules issued) that notice and public procedure thereon
are impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.'' 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B).
In this case, the Commission finds that public comment on these
changes is unnecessary. The Commission is amending the HSR Rules to
conform with the new fee tiers and fees enacted by Congress. These
updates do not involve any substantive changes in the HSR Rules'
requirements for entities subject to the Rules. Rather, they are
conforming updates to the definition of the HSR Act and examples of how
to calculate the appropriate fee. In addition, these amendments fall
within the category of rules covering agency procedure and practice
that are exempt from the notice-and-comment requirements of the APA.
See 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(A).
For these reasons, the Commission finds there is good cause for
adopting this final rule as effective on March 6, 2024 without prior
public comment.
IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612, requires that the
agency conduct an initial and final regulatory analysis of the
anticipated economic impact of the proposed amendments on small
businesses, except where the agency head certifies that the regulatory
action will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. 5 U.S.C. 605. Because of the size of the
transactions necessary to invoke an HSR filing, the premerger
notification rules rarely, if ever, affect small businesses. Indeed,
amendments to the Act in 2001 were intended to reduce the burden of the
premerger notification program further by exempting all transactions
valued at less than $50 million (as adjusted annually).\4\ Likewise,
none of the rule amendments expand the coverage of the premerger
notification rules in a way that would affect small business. In
addition, the Regulatory Flexibility Act requirements apply only to
rules or amendments that are subject to the notice-and-comment
requirements of the APA. See 5 U.S.C. 603, 604. Because these
amendments are exempt from those APA requirements, as noted earlier,
they are also exempt from the Regulatory Flexibility Act requirements.
In any event, to the extent, if any, that the Regulatory Flexibility
Act applies, the Commission certifies that these rules will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
This document serves as notice of this certification to the Small
Business Administration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ By comparison, the dollar thresholds established for total
annual receipts of a small business under the applicable small
business size standards fall well under $50 million. See 13 CFR
121.201.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Commission has existing Paperwork Reduction Act clearance for
the HSR Rules (OMB Control Number 3084-0005). The Commission has
concluded that these technical amendments do not change the substance
or frequency of the pre-existing information collection requirements
and, therefore, do not require further OMB clearance.
VI. Other Matters
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.),
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs designated this rule
as not a ``major rule,'' as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 16 CFR Parts 801 and 803
Antitrust.
[[Page 7611]]
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Federal Trade
Commission is amending 16 CFR parts 801 and 803 as set forth below:
PART 801--COVERAGE RULES
0
1. The authority citation for part 801 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 18a(d).
0
2. Amend Sec. 801.1 by revising paragraph (n) to read as follows:
Sec. 801.1 Definitions
* * * * *
(n) (as adjusted). The parenthetical ``(as adjusted)'' refers to
the adjusted values published in the Federal Register document titled
``Revised Jurisdictional Thresholds and Fee Amounts under Section 7A of
the Clayton Act.'' This Federal Register document will be published in
January of each year and the values contained therein will be effective
as of the effective date published in the Federal Register document and
will remain effective until superseded in the next calendar year. The
document will also be available at https://www.ftc.gov. Such adjusted
values will be calculated in accordance with Section 7A(a)(2)(A) and
the statutory note to Section 7A.
* * * * *
PART 803--TRANSMITTAL RULES
0
3. The authority citation for part 803 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 18a(d).
0
4. Revise Sec. 803.9 (a)(1) through (8) as follows:
Sec. 803.9 Filing fee.
(a) * * * * *
(1) ``A'' wishes to acquire voting securities issued by B, where
the greater of the acquisition price and the market price is in excess
of $50 million (as adjusted) but less than $100 million (as adjusted)
pursuant to Sec. 801.10 of this chapter. When ``A'' files notification
for the transaction, it must indicate the $50 million (as adjusted)
threshold. If the value of the voting securities is less than $161.5
million (as adjusted), ``A'' must pay a filing fee of $30,000 (as
adjusted) because the aggregate total amount of the acquisition is
greater than $50 million (as adjusted) but less than $161.5 million (as
adjusted). If the aggregate total value of the voting securities is at
least $161.5 million (as adjusted), but less than $500 million (as
adjusted), ``A'' must pay a filing fee of $100,000 (as adjusted).
(2) In April 2024, ``A'' acquires $75 million of assets from ``B.''
The parties meet the size of person criteria of section 7A(a)(2)(B) of
the act, but the transaction is not reportable because it does not
exceed the $50 million (as adjusted) size of transaction threshold of
that provision. Two months later ``A'' acquires additional assets from
``B'' valued at $175 million. Pursuant to the aggregation requirements
of Sec. 801.13(b)(2)(ii) of this chapter, the aggregate total amount
of ``B's'' assets that ``A'' will hold as a result of the second
acquisition is $250 million. Accordingly, when ``A'' files notification
for the second transaction, ``A'' must pay a filing fee of $100,000 (as
adjusted) because the aggregate total amount of the acquisition is less
than $500 million (as adjusted), but not less than $161.5 million (as
adjusted).
(3) In April 2024, ``A'' acquires $120 million of voting securities
issued by B after submitting its notification and $30,000 (as adjusted)
filing fee and indicates the $50 million (as adjusted) threshold. Later
in 2024, ``A'' files to acquire additional voting securities issued by
B valued at $120 million because it will exceed the next higher
reporting threshold (see Sec. 801.1(h) of this chapter). Assuming the
second transaction is reportable, and the value of its initial holdings
is unchanged (see Sec. Sec. 801.13(a)(2) and 801.10(c) of this
chapter), the provisions of Sec. 801.13(a)(1) of this chapter require
that ``A'' report that the total value of the second transaction is
$240 million, which is in excess of $100 million (as adjusted)
notification threshold. This is because ``A'' must aggregate previously
acquired securities in calculating the value of B's voting securities
that it will hold as a result of the second acquisition. ``A'' should
pay a filing fee of $100,000 (as adjusted) because the total value is
greater than $161.5 million (as adjusted) but less than $500 million
(as adjusted).
(4) In April 2024, ``A'' signs a contract with a stated purchase
price of $174 million, subject to adjustments, to acquire all of the
assets of ``B.'' If the amount of adjustments can be reasonably
estimated, the acquisition price--as adjusted to reflect that
estimate--is determined. If the amount of adjustments cannot be
reasonably estimated, the acquisition price is undetermined. In either
case the board or its delegee must also determine in good faith the
fair market value. (Sec. 801.10(b) of this chapter states that the
value of an asset acquisition is to be the fair market value or the
acquisition price, if determined and greater than fair market value.)
``A'' files notification and submits a $30,000 (as adjusted) filing
fee. ``A's'' decision to pay that fee may be justified on either of two
bases. First, ``A'' may have concluded that the acquisition price can
be reasonably estimated to be less than $173.3 million, because of
anticipated adjustments--e.g., based on due diligence by ``A's''
accounting firm indicating that one third of the inventory is not
saleable. If fair market value is also determined in good faith to be
less than $173.3 million, the $30,000 (as adjusted) fee is appropriate.
Alternatively, ``A'' may conclude that because the adjustments cannot
reasonably be estimated, the acquisition price is undetermined. If so,
``A'' would base the valuation on the good faith determination of fair
market value. The acquiring party's execution of the Certification also
attests to the good faith valuation of the value of the transaction.
(5) In April 2024, ``A'' contracts to acquire all of the assets of
``B'' for $550 million. The assets include hotels, office buildings,
and rental retail property, all of which are exempted by Sec. 802.2 of
this chapter. Section 802.2 directs that these assets--which are valued
at $300 million--are exempt from the requirements of the act and that
reporting requirements for the transaction should be determined by
analyzing the remainder of the acquisition as if it were a separate
transaction. Furthermore, Sec. 801.15(a)(2) of this chapter states
that those exempt assets are never held as a result of the acquisition.
Accordingly, the aggregate amount of the transaction is in excess of
$161.5 million (as adjusted), but less than $500 million (as adjusted).
``A'' will be liable for a filing fee of $100,000 (as adjusted), rather
than $250,000 (as adjusted), because the value of the transaction is
not less than $161.5 million (adjusted) but is less than $500 million
(as adjusted).
(6) In April 2024, ``A'' acquires coal reserves from ``B'' valued
at $150 million. No notification or filing fee is required because the
acquisition is exempted by Sec. 802.3(b) of this chapter. Three months
later, A proposes to acquire additional coal reserves from ``B'' valued
at $500 million. This transaction is subject to the notification
requirements of the act because the value of the acquisition exceeds
the $200 million limitation on the exemption in Sec. 802.3(b). As a
result of Sec. 801.13(b)(2)(ii) of this chapter, the prior $150
million acquisition must be added because the additional $500 million
of coal reserves were acquired from the same person within 180 days of
the initial acquisition. Because aggregating the two acquisitions
exceeds the $200 million exemption limitation, Sec. 801.15(b) of this
chapter directs that ``A'' will also hold the previously
[[Page 7612]]
exempt $150 million acquisition; thus, the aggregate amount held as a
result of the $500 million acquisition is $650 million. Accordingly,
``A'' must file notification to acquire the coal reserves valued in
excess of $500 million (as adjusted) but less than $1 billion (as
adjusted) and pay a filing fee of $250,000 (as adjusted).
(7) In April 2024, ``A'' intends to acquire 20 percent of the
voting securities of B, a non-publicly traded issuer. The agreed upon
acquisition price is $172.3 million subject to post-closing adjustments
of up to plus or minus $2 million. ``A'' estimates that the adjustments
will be minus $1 million. In this example, since ``A'' is able in good
faith to reasonably estimate the adjustments to the agreed-on price,
the acquisition price is deemed to be determined and the appropriate
filing fee threshold is $50 million (as adjusted). Even if the post-
closing adjustments cause the final price actually paid to exceed
$172.3 million, ``A'' would be deemed to hold $171.3 million in B
voting securities as a result of this acquisition. Note, that any
additional acquisition by ``A'' of B voting may trigger another filing
and require the appropriate fee.
(8) In April 2024, ``A'' intends to make a cash tender offer for a
minimum of 50 percent plus one share of the voting securities of B, a
non-publicly traded issuer, but will accept up to 100 percent of the
shares if they are tendered. There are 12 million shares of B voting
stock outstanding and the tender offer price is $100 per share. In this
instance, since there is no cap on the number of shares that can be
tendered, the value of the transaction will be the value of 100 percent
of B's voting securities, and ``A'' must pay the $400,000 (as adjusted)
fee for the $1 billion (as adjusted) filing fee threshold. Note that if
the tender offer had been for a maximum of 50 percent plus one share
the value of the transaction would be $600 million, and the appropriate
fee would be $250,000 (as adjusted), based on the $500 million (as
adjusted) filing fee threshold. This would be true even if the tender
offer were to be followed by a merger which would be exempt under
section 7A(c)(3) of the act.
* * * * *
By direction of the Commission.
Joel Christie,
Acting Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2024-02228 Filed 2-2-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750-01-P