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Investigations
Current
inquiries
Stena
AB / P&O
Executive
summary
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Exectuive Summary
- On 22 August 2003 the Office of
Fair Trading referred the proposed acquisition by Stena
AB (Stena) of certain assets operated by The Peninsular
and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O) on the Irish
Sea to the Competition Commission for investigation and
report. The reference was made under section 33(1) of the
Enterprise Act 2002. We are required to publish our final
report by 6 February 2004.
- The parties signed a Memorandum
of Understanding (MoU) on 27 May 2003 setting out the arrangements
for the proposed acquisition of P&O’s ferry operations
on the Irish Sea between Liverpool–Dublin and Fleetwood–Larne
and a second transaction concerning the establishment of
a joint venture for port operations at the port of Cairnryan.
The possible closure of P&O’s Mostyn–Dublin
route was announced by P&O in its press release issued
on the same day. Separate sets of conditional agreements
relating to the two transactions were signed on 10 October
2003. The OFT only referred the first transaction to us.
Under this transaction Stena would acquire five vessels
currently operated by P&O on the two routes concerned,
together with related assets, inventory and goodwill. It
also agreed to time charter two vessels from P&O presently
deployed on its Mostyn–Dublin route.
- We found that the share of supply
test was met in respect of both the tourist and freight
services provided by Stena between Great Britain and Ireland.
We also concluded that arrangements were in progress which,
if carried into effect, would result in the creation of
a relevant merger situation.
- Our report focused on the freight
market. We defined the relevant markets affected by the
proposed merger to be the markets for transporting roll-on/roll-off
and lift-on/lift-off freight between Great Britain and Ireland,
first in the northern corridor (in relation to Fleetwood–Larne)
and second in the central corridor (in relation to Liverpool–Dublin).
We did not accept that these two markets should be further
divided between driver-accompanied and unaccompanied freight,
although we recognized that these could be regarded as two
market segments.
- Pricing in the freight ferry market
is opaque. It is based on bilateral negotiations between
individual customers and the ferry company concerned and
results in agreed terms on specific routes. These are generally
based on the previous year’s prices, expectations
of volumes for the following year, and any other features
specific to that particular customer. Prices may in part
reflect the importance of that customer to the company as
a whole, including business outside the Irish Sea. Different
prices are charged for accompanied and unaccompanied traffic,
and according to time of crossing. We found a high degree
of variation in prices paid by individual customers. The
opaque nature of this market means that ferry operators
currently have the potential to price discriminate between
customers.
- There are currently three major
operators in the market for freight traffic on the northern
corridor: P&O, Norse Merchant Ferries and Stena. P&O’s
Fleetwood–Larne route constitutes around 20 per cent
of the relevant market on the northern corridor. Norse Merchant
Ferries provides the most direct competition with its diagonal
routes from Liverpool and Heysham to Belfast. Competition
is also provided by the short-sea northern routes operated
by P&O and Stena, and by Seatruck’s operation
from Heysham to Warrenpoint.
- As a result of the transfer of the
Fleetwood–Larne route, Stena’s market share
in the northern corridor would approximately double. Three
significant ferry operators would, however, remain, but
Stena would replace P&O as the largest ferry operator
on the northern corridor. The merger reduces concentration
in this market, at least in the short term. Despite the
removal of Stena as a potential entrant on the diagonal
routes, we concluded that the transfer of the Fleetwood–Larne
route from P&O to Stena could not be expected to result
in a substantial lessening of competition.
- On the central corridor, there are
currently four major operators. P&O has the largest
share of the central corridor, followed by Norse Merchant
Ferries, Irish Ferries and Stena. The freight transported
on P&O’s Liverpool–Dublin route made up
just over 20 per cent of central corridor traffic. Again
the most direct competition to P&O’s Liverpool–Dublin
route is from Norse Merchant Ferries, which provides a similar
service on the same route out of the river berths at Birkenhead,
although there is also competition from all other routes
into Dublin, including the short-sea route Holyhead–Dublin.
- Post merger, the four main competitors
on the central corridor would reduce to three, as P&O
would exit the market, and Stena’s market share would
more than double. Market concentration on the central corridor
would be significantly increased, and the merger would give
Stena a market share significantly larger than its nearest
rival. In addition, unlike its rivals, it would have a route
on both the short and long central corridor crossings.
- We believed that there was likely
to be a reduction in capacity on the central corridor as
a result of the proposed merger. We considered that the
Mostyn–Dublin route would close regardless of the
merger. However, if P&O were to retain the Liverpool–Dublin
route, we believed that it would have a clear incentive
to replace more of the withdrawn Mostyn–Dublin capacity
than would Stena were it to acquire the route.
- We concluded that there would be
scope for Stena post-merger to exercise market power, for
example by increasing prices to certain customers, and that
this would be possible given the lack of pricing transparency
in the market. In practice, such price increases would be
likely to be focused on the Liverpool–Dublin route.
We therefore expected Stena to increase prices on the Liverpool–Dublin
route to encourage traffic to move to its Holyhead service,
rather than to increase capacity on the Liverpool–Dublin
route and continue to operate the Holyhead service at lower
levels of utilization. In addition, there would be less
of an incentive for Stena to reduce prices at Holyhead in
an attempt to attract additional traffic to fill some of
its spare capacity. Absent the merger, on the other hand,
P&O would be more inclined to put additional capacity
on the Liverpool–Dublin route and possibly to lower
prices. We thought it unlikely that either Norse Merchant
Ferries or Irish Ferries would seek to increase capacity
on the central corridor to deter Stena from such a strategy.
- We did not believe our findings
in the central corridor to be very sensitive to the definition
of the relevant market for the Liverpool–Dublin route
in terms of accompanied and unaccompanied freight. We recognized
that the hauliers and ferry operators in the two market
segments may react differently to any potential price rises
but believed that the effects that we described would apply
similarly to the accompanied segment as they would to the
market as a whole.
- Although we believed that entry
was not intrinsically difficult, and that potential entrants
existed who would be prepared to come into the market under
appropriate market conditions, it would be particularly
important to have access to suitable berths and sufficient
surrounding land available at peak times. We did not believe
that at the current time, or within the next two to three
years, we could rely on large-scale entry to offset any
potential substantial lessening of competition in the central
corridor.
- We therefore concluded that, as
a result of the proposed merger, we would expect there to
be no substantial lessening of competition on the northern
corridor but would expect a substantial lessening of competition
on the central corridor. We did not expect that such a lessening
of competition would be offset by other competitive constraints,
in particular entry.
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