| “The overbroad guidelines are clearly designed to deter merger activity as a whole, regardless of the risk posed to competition,” said Geoffrey Manne, president of the International Center for Law & Economics (ICLE).
A Broad New Framework for Thwarting Mergers
The draft guidelines include 13 key principles that the FTC and DOJ can use to determine if a merger is unlawfully anticompetitive. They include vast directives such as “mergers should not eliminate substantial competition between firms,” mergers “should not entrench or extend a dominant position,” mergers “should not further a trend toward concentration,” and mergers should “not otherwise substantially lessen competition.”
Of course, any merger might be said to lessen competition or increase concentration in some capacity. And any merger or acquisition involving a big company could be said to “entrench or extend” that company’s position.
Perhaps modifying words like “substantial” will do a lot of work here. But given what we know about Biden-era antitrust enforcement and attempts to block mergers, it’s more likely that these directives will be interpreted in the broadest way possible.
One of the 13 principles says “mergers should not eliminate a potential entrant in a concentrated market.” This plank could be used in attempts to stop any company that could theoretically make its own version of a technology or service from buying a company that already operates an existing version of that tech tool or service.
This was the novel argument the FTC attempted in its failed bid to stop Meta from acquiring virtual reality (V.R.) fitness app maker Within Unlimited. The FTC argued that Meta should have to make its own, additional V.R. fitness app, thus adding another option to the V.R. fitness app market. Meta buying Within Unlimited and its existing app would illegally deprive the market of competition, the FTC argued—though a federal court disagreed.
The weird Meta/Within Unlimited case highlights the impossible position big firms face from current antitrust enforcers. When these companies develop new products of their own that compete with smaller rivals, they are accused of acting nefariously to entrench their dominant position and, yes, thwart competition. Yet when they don’t make their own version, they’re accused of thwarting competition. Basically, a Big Tech firm that wants to expand by any means will find itself running afoul of Khan’s FTC.
A Chilling Effect
The last time the FTC and DOJ revised vertical merger guidelines was in 2020, but those guidelines have since been withdrawn. The last time the agencies revised horizontal merger guidelines was in 2010.
While a departure from prior federal guidelines in many ways, the new draft guidelines are entirely in keeping with the Biden administration’s “Neo-Brandeisian” slant. By taking an extremely broad view of reasons to prevent mergers and acquisitions, the FTC and DOJ can justify a desire to stop any business from getting bigger and thwart any business that’s already big.
FTC and DOJ merger guidelines are not binding in court decisions, thank goodness. And so far courts have not been terribly persuaded by the Biden administration’s efforts to stop mergers and acquisitions. But federal merger guidelines can subtly influence court decisions or normalize new frameworks.
Perhaps the biggest impact of the guidelines, however, would be the chilling effect. The draft guidelines signal to any company thinking of a merger or acquisition that it’s going to be a huge hassle to get it approved and that the FTC and DOJ have a broad directive to intervene. This could stop businesses from even attempting mergers—and deprive consumers of deals that could lower prices or increase innovation.
“While there is a lot to digest in the 51 page document with over 100 (largely stale) footnotes, the broad picture is clear: the goal of this document is to stop more mergers. Period,” writes Brian Albrecht, ICLE chief economist, at the Truth on the Market blog. “To achieve that end, the guidelines have jettisoned the insights from economics that antitrust has learned over the past 60 years and moved back to a world where virtually all conduct is presumed to be anticompetitive.”
Against Consumer Welfare
The draft merger guidelines “make a clear shift away from the long-standing legal precedent and policy principle of prioritizing consumer welfare,” notes Albrecht: |