By Gareth Vaughan
Chairman Mark Berry says the Commerce Commission doesn't have a line in the sand in terms of an upper limit of marketshare it's comfortable with a company having. Rather it looks at what the competitive constraints might be on the merged entity if it approves a takeover application.
And speaking to interest.co.nz, Berry said he can understand the perception the Commerce Commission, which has blocked just two takeovers in the last five years, rarely says no to a takeover application.
Asked whether the Commission has a specific marketshare percentage it doesn't want to see any company above in a given market, Berry said it doesn't. The Commission last month approved the takeover of Lumley by Insurance Australia Group, which takes IAG's share of the insurance market to just over 50%.
"We don't have any magic marketshare numbers," Berry (pictured below) said. "Our (New Zealand) marketshare numbers look very high on an international scale because we're a small country and it's just a fact of life that when we're looking at mergers often it's four to three or three to two. That quite routinely is the type of marketshare aggregation we're getting."
"We've given approvals to mergers that had marketshare that was much higher than this particular (IAG-Lumley) case," added Berry.
"The critical thing you're looking at when we would approve a merger, where you've got say 70% or north of that marketshare, is what is the competitive constraint for the merged entities? If the merged entity puts up its prices 5% or 10% what's going to happen in that market?"
"(In) a lot of the market's where we're giving approval to those kind of numbers you're dealing with tradable goods where there's a lot of import competition. So very often you'd suddenly find imports flooding in. The import parity price provides a constraint. Or particularly if you've got other domestic competitors who are well established and who have got spare capacity, naturally they're going to readily expand and compete in market where they get that opportunity."
Market dynamics rather than marketshare per se is the key for the Commission, he said.
"Marketshare is a starting point but there's no direct translation of 'here's a magic number of marketshare' that we would accept a merger on or not. We have, over a large number of years, approved market shares that are quite high, but that's partly a function of a small market like New Zealand with few players," Berry said.
'There's usually a fairly strong argument as to why approval should be given'
Over its last five financial years, including the current year that ends on June 30, the Commission has approved 50 takeover applications and declined just two. However, some of the clearances were granted on the condition divestments were made. Berry said he could understand a perception the Commission doesn't often reject takeover applications.
"I can understand that perception given the numbers of applications we get and those that get turned down. People who apply here go through a quite lengthy and costly process. And I expect when people come in here they've generally done their homework, and there's usually a fairly strong argument as to why approval should be given," Berry said.
"So there might be a lot of mergers that aren't happening because there's a realisation it wouldn't get over the threshold here (from the Commission)."
"Each case we get we do go through quite carefully because we do end up with permanent restructuring of markets, so we are careful in the way that we analyse mergers. But it's true to say that a high percentage of merger applications are successful here," Berry said.
"There aren't very many that don't have plausible arguments run with them as to why approval should be had."
The Commission's website says it aims to achieve the best possible outcomes in competitive and regulated markets for the long-term benefit of New Zealanders.
'A pro-competitive effect'
Berry also said economic efficiency in an economy as small as New Zealand's is why some industries have very few companies competing in them.
"So mergers can have a pro-competitive effect in terms of ending up with more efficient producers in the market. So there are very plausible arguments to justify the kind of market dynamics we have," Berry said.
He also noted New Zealand firms need to be able to compete against imports, and scale helps them do this.
"New Zealand firms are competing often against import competition. (So) there's problems for New Zealand firms if they are not efficient producers and that's why you do need some critical mass when you open up your economy to imports...So that's another driver for a small market economy having justifiably fairly high levels of concentration," Berry said.
Berry was appointed Commerce Commission chairman in April 2009 for an 18 month term. This was extended by five years and runs until March 2019. He's a former partner at law firm Bell Gully and ex-consultant at Chapman Tripp, another law firm.
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6 Comments
You just have to shake your head sometimes, don't you? And somebody pays these people. Less competition means a more competitive market? I see another Tui Billboard coming on.
Oh and how do cheaper imports affect things like providing parking and picking up our own rubbish, we've even managed to let that sort of thing be sold to overseas.
What a load of cods.
"if you've got other domestic competitors who are well established and who have got spare capacity, naturally they're going to readily expand and compete in market where they get that opportunity.""
No, naturally they are going to put their prices up too.
Look at the telecoms market. Mobile phone plans used to cost double what they did in Europe. Then 2degrees came along, and they dropped very quickly in price to now be only a little more expensive than Europe.
If telecom bought 2 degrees, and put up prices, Vodafone would breath a sigh of relief and put up it's prices to restore margins to the level they were before there was real competition. What on earth makes Mr Berry think Vodafone would keep their prices low to steal market-share? Why didn't they do that before 2degrees came along?
So its okay to have price-fixing and anti-compettive behaviuor among dominant market participants that results in the consumer being shafted
Like milk and fish and lamb being more expensive than in Austrlalia and among the most expensive in the world when we export so much of the this stuff we cannot possibly ever consume it all ourselves
When does the revolution against this sort of abuse come?
I think if NZ had an independent body appointing critically important regulators we would get much more fairer outcomes. If the Speaker of the House was constitionally appointed by say a 75% or greater vote and that person appointed regulators/judges etc we might get tigers not pussy cats....
If you swallow this line you will swallow anything. And they obviously have.
So this nudge nudge wink wink competition is really working isn't it?
Cement NZ $400/tonne, Australia $200/Tonne Singapore $75/Tonne Hong Kong $50/Tonne
Most other building materials 50% to 30% cheaper in Australia, 65% to 50% cheaper in the USA.
Two supermarkets with food prices higher than any other comprable country, and our major national buisness is food production.
etc etc
What planet is this fellow on? Given a fraction of a chance not to compete what does he think companies will do? Their sole buisness driving force is maximising profit! What would you expect them to do? "We know that we can jack up our prices and get away with it but we won't." Come on, get off the grass.
I find it odd that they can be very hawkish on sectors like telecomunications but totally flacid on other sectors like food and construction materials. One has to be suspicious of innapropriate influences.
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