Article
September 15, 2024
Acquirers Beware: Indian Merger Control Regime Revamped!
1. BACKGROUND
The Competition Act, 2002 (“Competition
Act”) was amended on April
11, 2023 vide the Competition (Amendment)
Act, 2023 (the “Competition Amendment
Act”). The Competition Amendment
Act had introduced certain changes to the merger
control regime, provisions on behavioural issues
as well as the enforcement framework under the Competition
Act.
Amongst other amendments, the Competition Amendment
Act had introduced / codified (i) an additional
notification criterion for combinations i.e., deal
value threshold; (ii) enabling provision allowing
open market transactions subject to certain conditions;
(iii) amendment to the procedural timelines of combinations;
and (iv) green channel approvals. The detailed analysis
of the Competition Amendment Act can be accessed
here. Certain key changes relating to merger
control were pending implementation.
To supplement and clarify the framework set out
in the Competition Amendment Act, CCI had released
the draft Competition Commission of India (Combinations)
Regulations, 2023 (“Draft Combination
Regulations”) for the purpose of
seeking stakeholder input through a consultation
process on September 5, 20231. The Draft
Combinations Regulations were aimed at repealing
and replacing the existing Competition Commission
of India (Procedure in regard to the transaction
of business relating to combinations) Regulations,
2011 (“Existing Combination
Regulations”).2 The detailed
analysis of the Draft Combination Regulations can
be accessed
here.
Based on the careful examination of the stakeholders
inputs to the Draft Combination Regulations its
past experience as well as international best practices,
CCI, through a notification in the Gazette of India
dated September 9, 2024 published the revised Competition
Commission of India (Combination) Regulations, 20243
(“Revised Combination
Regulations”).
On the same day, the Ministry of Corporate Affairs
(“MCA”) also published
(i) the Competition (Criteria for Exemptions of
Combinations) Rules, 20244 (“Revised
Exemption Rules”), (ii) Competition
(Criteria of Combinations) Rules, 20245
(“CoC Rules”), (iii)
Competition (Minimum Value of Assets and Turnover)
Rules, 20246 (“Deminimis
Rules”). Lastly, the MCA has,
vide another notification notified the provisions
of certain sections from the Competition Amendment
Act to be effective from September 10, 2024 including
in respect of regulation of combinations.
2. KEY CHANGES
The aforesaid regulations and rules came into
force from September 10, 2024. A brief summary of
the key changes is outlined below.
Deal Value Threshold
Under Section 5 on ‘Combinations’
under the Competition Act, the Competition Amendment
Act had proposed a new deal value threshold (“DVT”)
which has been made effective from September 10,
2024.
The DVT envisages bringing within the ambit of
combinations, any transactions, in connection with
acquisition of control, shares, voting rights or
assets of an enterprise, merger or amalgamation,
whose value exceeds INR 2,000 crores
(Indian Rupees Two Thousand Crores)
(approx. USD 238.4 million)
and
where the target company (i.e. the one being
acquired / taken control of / merged / amalgamated)
has substantial business operations in India.7
It is also pertinent to note that, as per the
Competition Amendment Act, even if the de minimis
exemption is available but the transaction meets
the requirements of DVT, the transaction shall be
notifiable to the CCI (unless an exemption under
the Revised Exemption Rules is available).
In order to understand the implications and applicability
of DVT, it is essential to understand how the ‘value
of the transaction’ and ‘substantial
business operations’ is determined.
Value of Transactions8
As per the Revised Combination Regulations, the
value of a transaction shall includeevery valuable
consideration, whether it is direct or indirect,
immediate or deferred, cash or otherwise,
including
but not limited to, consideration –
(i)
for any covenant, undertaking, obligations or restrictions
imposed on the seller or any other person, if such
consideration is agreed separately;
(ii)
inter-connected steps and transactions as read in
Regulation 9(4) and Regulation 9(5) of the Revised
Combination Regulations;
(iii)
payable during two years from the date on which
the transaction would come into effect for arrangement(s)
entered into as a part of the transaction or incidental
arrangement(s) entered, including but not limited
to technology assistance, licensing of intellectual
property rights, usage rights to any product, service
or facility, supply of raw materials or finished
goods, branding and marketing;
(iv)
for call options and shares (assuming full exercise
of such options); and
(v)
payable, as per best estimates, based on the future
outcome specified under the transaction documents.
The value of transaction shall also include (a)
any consideration payable by any one of the parties
or its group entity, in the enterprise being acquired
or merged or amalgamated in the transaction,
anytime
during the period of two years before the relevant
date, and (b) in case of implementation
of an open offer, a full subscription to the offer.
The Revised Combination Regulations also clarify
that in circumstances where true and complete value
of the transaction is not recorded in any agreement
executed between parties, the
value
considered by the board of directors,
or a similar approving authority of the acquirer
should be considered as the transaction value.
Lastly, in case the transaction value of a deal
cannot be determined with reasonable certainty,
the notifying party will be required to presume
that the threshold of INR 2,000 crore (Indian Rupees
Two Thousand Crores) (approx. USD 234.8 million)
has been deemed to be met.
Substantial
Business Operations in India9
An enterprise shall be considered to have substantial
business operations in India if10-
(a) In respect of digital
service providers, if 10% or more
of its global business or end users (average number
for three hundred and sixty-five days preceding
the relevant date) are based in India 11;
or
(b) If Gross Merchandise
Value12(“GMV”)
in India during the twelve months prior to the relevant
date13 is (i) 10% or more of its global
GMV
and
(ii) exceeds INR 500 crores (Indian Rupees Five
Hundred Crores) (approx. USD 59 million). GMV has
been defined to mean cash, receivables, or other
consideration either for or facilitating, sale of
goods and/ or provision of services, by an enterprise,
on its own or as an agent or otherwise;
or
(c) if the turnover in
the preceding financial year in India constitutes
(i) 10% or more of its global turnover,
and
(ii) exceeds INR 500 crores (Indian Rupees Five
Hundred Crores) (approx. USD 59 million)14.
It is also relevant to note that the conditions
laid out with regard to the INR 500 crore (Indian
Rupees Five Hundred Crore) (approx. USD 59 million)
requirement above, shall not apply to digital services.
With the introduction of DVT, an additional layer
of scrutiny for combination transactions is now
added and combination transactions which otherwise
could have been exempt as per thresholds laid out
under erstwhile Section 5 of the Competition Act
or the de minimis exemption, may now fall under
the purview of CCI and require CCI’s nod before
consummation.
Exemptions to Notification15
In the erstwhile regime, Schedule I of the Combinations
Regulations provided for specific exemptions to
certain transactions from the onus of notifying
the CCI. Now, the Revised Exemption Rules provides
the categories of combinations that shall be exempt
from requirement of a notification.
The key exemption and changes as per the Revised
Exemption Rules are:
S. No.
|
Exemption under
Schedule I of Existing Combination Regulations
|
Exemption under
Revised Exemption Rules
|
1
|
Acquisitions of shares or voting rights
up to 25%, either ‘solely as an investment’
or in the ‘ordinary course of business’.
As per the explanation, an acquisition
was to be considered as ‘solely as
an investment’ if:
(a) The acquisition
was of less than 10% of the total shareholding
/ voting rights;
(b) The acquirer
only has rights available as an ordinary
shareholder; and
(c) The acquirer
did not have a right to appoint a director
and did not intend to participate in management
of the target.
|
Acquisitions of shares / voting rights
of less than 25% where there is:
(a) no acquisition of control;
(b) no right to nominate on the board
or observer seat;
(c) no access to commercially16
sensitive information of the target; and
(d) there exists no horizontal,
vertical or complementary overlap between
the acquirer group (including affiliates)
and the target (or its downstream group
and affiliates).
In case the first three criterias are
met but the criteria (d) is not, the acquisition
threshold shall be 10% of shares / voting
rights and not 25%.
|
2
|
No corresponding provision
|
Any incremental acquisitions by an existing
shareholder in the target shall be exempt,
where the total shareholding / voting remains
under 25% and
(a)
there is no acquisition of control,
(b)
board or observer seats, for the first time,
or
(c)
no access to commercially sensitive information,
for the first time.
In case there is an overlap between the
acquirer (or its group entities and their
affiliates and the target (or its downstream
group entities and their affiliates), any
incremental shareholding or voting rights
acquired by a single acquisition or a series
of smaller inter-connected acquisitions
shall be exempt if it does not exceed five
per cent and such acquisition does not result
in the shareholding / voting rights of acquirer
group increasing from less than 10% to more
than 10%.
|
3
|
Incremental acquisitions leading to (a)
more than 25% but less than 50% shareholding/voting,
rights by an acquirer and its group entities
or (b) more than 50% shareholding by an
acquirer so long as there was no acquisition
of sole or joint control, or transfer from
sole to joint control, respectively.
|
Any incremental acquisition where the
acquirer (and its group entities) already
has (a) 25% shareholding / voting in an
enterprise and up to 50% or (b) 50% shareholding/
voting in an enterprise, shall be exempt
so long as there is no change in control
of such enterprise.
The exemption under (b) that was available
only to acquirer owning more than 50% shall
now be available to acquirer and group entities
owning more than 50%.
|
4
|
Stockbrokers and/or underwriters for
acquisitions in the ordinary course of business
|
Any acquisitions by registered stockbroker
(upto 25%), underwriters (25%) and/or mutual
funds (10%) in the ordinary course of business
shall be exempt.
|
5
|
Bonus issues, stock splits, buy-backs,
rights issues, and consolidation of share
capital so long as there was no acquisition
of control
|
Such corporate actions are exempt so
long as it does not lead to a change
in control.
|
6 |
An acquisition of shares or voting rights
or assets, by one person or enterprise,
of
another person or enterprise within the
same group, except where the acquired entity
is jointly controlled by enterprises not
part of the group.
|
Intra-group asset acquisitions, so long
as there is no change in control
on such assets.
|
7 |
Intra-group mergers and amalgamations
where, either (a) one entity holds more
than 50% shares / voting of the other entity,
or (b) the entities in the same group hold
owns more than 50% of the shares / voting
rights in each entities being merged, so
long as there is no change from joint control
to sole control.
|
A blanket exemption has been provided
for intra-group mergers and amalgamations
provided that the transaction does not result
in change in control.
|
8 |
No corresponding provision
|
In case of a demerger and issuance of
shares by the resulting entity as consideration
to such demergers in proportion to the shareholding
in the demerged entity.
|
Green Channel (Deemed Approvals)
The green channel was codified by inserting a
new Regulation 5A to the Existing Combination Regulations
vide an amendment dated August 13, 2019.
Green channel route is a fast track system of deemed
CCI approval for certain combinations where there
are no business overlaps of any kind, be it horizontal,
vertical or complementary in nature, between the
parties to combination. The Competition Amendment
Act has codified the green channel route into the
Act.
As per the CoC Rules, parties to the combination,
their respective groups entities and their
affiliates
should fulfil the criteria of the overlap prescribed
therein to avail the green channel route. The assessment
criteria for overlaps remains largely the same as
the Combination Regulations. However, a key change
is the to the definition of “affiliates”.17
For the purpose of the CoC Rules, an enterprise
is considered to be an affiliate of another, if
such enterprise (i) owns 10% or more of the shares
or voting rights, or (ii) right or ability to have
representation on the board of directors or an observer
seat, or (iii)
right
or ability to access commercially sensitive information,
of such enterprise.18 Under the Existing
Combination Regulations, the third criteria was
if an enterprise had a right or ability to exercise
any special rights not available to an ordinary
shareholder.
The Parties to a combination to be considered
while assessing overlaps are (a) in case of acquirer,
the ultimate controlling person and other entities
of the group, (b) in case of the target, the downstream
entities forming part of the group, and (c) for
enterprises being merged / amalgamated, their controlling
persons, and entities forming part of their group.
De Minimis Exemption Codification
The de minimis exemption, envisaged
in the Deminimis Rules, exempts certain combinations
from mandatory notification to the CCI if the target
enterprise's assets or turnover fall below specific
thresholds (“Target Exemption”).
While Target Exemption has been in practice since
2011 vide MCA Circular dated March 4, 201119,
the Competition Amendment Act has codified the target
exemption provisions into the statute and the Deminimis
Rules have codified the thresholds.
The Deminimis Rules replicate the thresholds
set out in the MCA notification dated 7 March 202420.
The Target Exemption is available in case the assets
or turnover of the target enterprise are less than
either of the following revised thresholds: (i)
assets of less than INR 450 crore (Indian Rupees
Four Hundred and Fifty Crores) (approx. USD 54 million)
in India; or (ii)
turnover of less than 1,250 crore (Indian Rupees
One Thousand Two Hundred and Fifty Crores) (approx.
USD 149 million) in India.21
Open Offer Relaxations
The Competition Amendment Act permits implementation
of (a) an open offer; or (b) and the acquisition
of convertible securities through a series of transactions
on a regulated stock exchange forming part of a
combination prior to the approval by CCI, if (i)
the notice of the acquisition is filed with the
CCI in the manner set out in the Competition Act,
and (ii) the acquirer, in the aforesaid case, shall
not exercise any ownership or beneficial rights
or voting rights or receive dividends / any other
distributions, unless otherwise specified in the
regulations till the CCI approves such acquisition22.
This section has now been made effective from September
10, 2024.
Further, as per the Revised Combination Regulations,
prior to obtaining the CCI's approval, the acquirer
can undertake the following actions: (i) avail economic
benefits such as dividend or any other distribution,
subscription to rights issue, bonus shares, stock-splits
and buy-back of securities; and (ii) exercise voting
rights in matters related to liquidation or insolvency
proceedings. However, the acquirer or any of its
group entities or affiliates shall not, directly
or indirectly,
influence the enterprise whose shares
or securities are being acquired, in any manner
whatsoever.
Further, the acquirer must give a notice along
with a declaration as specified in the Revised Combination
Regulations within 30 (thirty) days from the date
of acquiring the first lot of shares/securities.23
3. OTHER MISCELLANEOUS CHANGES
The new regime has also introduced a number of
other relevant changes regarding the operational
aspects of the merger control regime. The following
is a list of some of the key changes:
(i) The erstwhile act provided for a period of
210 (two hundred and ten) days from the date of
notification to the CCI for a combination to come
into effect, which has now been reduced to a period
of 150 (one hundred and fifty) days or the date
on which the CCI has passed an order under Section
31 of the Competition Act, whichever is earlier.
(ii) The CCI is now required to form a prima
facie opinion24 on a combination within
30 (thirty) calendar days and in the event that
the CCI does not form a prima facie opinion within
the above timelines, the combination shall be deemed
to have been approved.
(iii) The definition for “control”
has now included within its ambit the aspect of “material
influence”. This is in line with the decisional
practice of the CCI. Material influence implies
the presence of factors that give an enterprise/person
the ability to influence the affairs and management
of the other enterprise, including factors such
as shareholding, special rights, status and expertise
of an enterprise or person, board representation,
structural/financial arrangements, etc.25
(iv) The filing fees for Form I and Form II which
was INR 20 lakhs (Indian Rupees Twenty Lakhs) (approx.
USD 24,000) and INR 65 lakhs (Indian Rupees Sixty-Five
Lakhs) (approx. USD 78,000) earlier, respectively,
has been increased to INR 30 lakhs26
(Indian Rupees Thirty Lakhs) (approx. USD 36,000)
and INR 90 lakhs (Indian Rupees Ninety Lakhs) (approx.
USD 108,000),27 respectively.
4. TRANSITION AND CONCLUSION
The Revised Combination Regulations has been
long awaited throughout the merger control ecosystem,
since the publication of the Draft Combination Regulations
and Competition Amendment Act as it would significantly
change the merger control regime. Although, the
DVT is certainly the most pertinent amendment to
the competition law regime, the entire ecosystem
has seen an overhaul through introduction of novel
concepts such as codification of the de minimis
threshold, relaxations offered towards implementation
of open offers and the changes in the exemptions
available under the Revised Exemption Rules.
It is important to note that all those transactions
that have been executed but which have not been
closed as on date (whether in whole or in part),
will have to be re-looked at, in light of the new
regulations. All combinations will have to assessed
in greater detail to ensure that there’s no
gun jumping. Going forward, for large value deals,
an extensive evaluation exercise shall have to be
undertaken to determine the value of the transaction
(both objective and subjective) so as to not fall
foul of gun jumping provisions of the CCI.
Authors:
-
Gurkeerat Singh,
Sapna Kataria,
Khyati Dalal,
Nishchal Joshipura and
Viral Mehta
You can direct your queries or comments to the relevant member.
1Available at
https://cci.gov.in/images/stakeholderstopicsconsultations/en/draft-combinations-regulations1693891636.pdf.
2Regulation 30 of Draft Combination
Regulations.
3F.No.CCI/CD/Comb. Regl./2024, Revised
Combination Regulations.
4Notification G.S.R. 549 (E), Revised
Exemption Rules.
5Notification G.S.R. 548 (E), CoC
Rules.
6Notification G.S.R. 547 (E), Deminimis
Rules.
7Section 5(d) as amended through the
Competition Amendment Act; Regulation 4(2) of Revised
Combination Regulations.
8Regulation 4(1) of Revised Combination
Regulations
9Regulation 4(2) of Revised Combination
Regulations
10Regulation 4(2) of Revised Combination
Regulations
11Explanation 2(f), Regulation 4(2)
of Revised Combination Regulations; “end
user means any natural or legal person using digital
services other than as a business user, for informational
or transactional purpose.”
12Explanation 2(a), Regulation 4(1)
of Revised Combination Regulations
13Regulation 2(1)(c) of Revised Combination
Regulations; “Relevant date” means
the date on which the approval of the proposal relating
to merger or amalgamation is accorded by board
of directors or the date of execution of agreement
or the date of such other document for acquisition
or acquiring of control referred to in sub-section
(2) of Section 6 of the Act.
14Regulation 4(2) of Revised Combination
Regulations
15Schedule to Revised Exemption Rules
and Schedule I of the Existing Combination Regulations
16Commercially sensitive information
has not been defined in the Revised Combination
Regulations.
17Regulation 6(4), 6(5) and 6(6) of
Revised Combination Regulations; Rule 3 of CoC Rules.
18Rule 3(2) of CoC Rules.
19Notification F. No. 5/4/2003-IGC/CS
20Notification S.O. 1131 (E) No. 1074
dated March 7, 2024.
21Rule 3 of Deminimis Rules.
22Section 6A of the Act, as amended
through the Competition Amendment Act.
23Regulation 6 of Revised Combination
Regulations.
24Section 29(1B) of the Act, as amended
through the Competition Amendment Act.
25CCI Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
26Regulation 11(a) of Revised Combination
Regulations.
27Regulation 11(b) of Revised Combination
Regulations.
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