Question
By Hand
Mr. Victor Cohen
Bureau of Competition
Room 303
Â鶹´«Ã½ Trade Commission
6th Street & Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20580
Dear Mr. Cohen:
This letter follows our conversation of March 8, 1996 concerning certain issues arising under 16 C.F.R. §§ 802.50 and 802.51.
The facts as discussed with you were as follows. Company A is a U.S. issuer and indirectly controls all of the shares of Company B, a foreign issuer. Company B has various subsidiaries which are foreign issuers (referred to as Companies C and D). Company B (including all entities it controls) did not have sales in or into the United States of $25 million or more in its most recent fiscal year. Company B also owns 100 percent of the shares of Company E which is an U.S. issuer. Company E does not have any assets located in the United States having aggregate book value of $15 million or more. Company E owns 100 percent of the shares of Company F, a foreign issuer. Company F has foreign assets possibly exceeding $15 million in value.
Based on the facts set forth above, we discussed two possible scenarios with respect to the possible sale by Company A of all of the stock of Company B.
The first scenario was that all of the shares of Company B are sold to a U.S. purchaser. My understanding was that such transaction is exempt from an HSR filing under 16 C.F.R. § 802.50(b) because Company B (including all entities it controls) does not hold assets located in the United States having an aggregate book value of $15 million or more, nor did Company B (including all entities it controls) have aggregate sales in or into the United States of $25 million or more in its most recent fiscal year.
The second scenario was that all of the shares of Company B are sold to a foreign purchaser. My understanding was that such transaction is exempt from an HSR filing under 16 C.F.R. § 802.51(b) because it would not confer control of an issuer with assets located in the U.S. having an aggregate book value of $15 million or more, or control of a U.S. issuer with annual net sales or total assets of $25 million or more. In making the calculation required by 16 C.F.R. § 802.51(b)(2), I understand that one does not attribute to a U.S. issuer (in the case we discussed, Company E) the sales or assets of any foreign issuer which the U.S. issuer controls (in the case we discussed, the sales or assets of Company F). On the other hand, in making the calculations required by 16 C.F.R. § 802.51(b)(2), I understand that the sales or assets of other U.S. issuers controlled by a U.S. issuer, if there are any (in the case we discussed Company E controlled no other U.S. issuer), would be aggregated with those of the controlling U.S. issuer.
Subsequent to our discussion, I learned that the facts were somewhat different than as set forth above and as I had described in my conversation with you; specifically, during 1995, Company B owned 100 percent of the shares of a U.S. issuer, referred to here as Company G, which indirectly 1 had sales in the U.S. in 1995 exceeding $25 million. However, prior to year end 1995, all of the shares of Company G (and thus its direct and indirect holdings in Companies H through J) were transferred to another subsidiary of A, Company K, which is outside of the ownership chain of relevance for purposes of any sale of Company B stock, such chain being Company A to Company B to Companies C, D, E and F. The current ownership structure is reflected in the enclosed chart. Since any current U.S. or foreign purchaser of Company B’s stock would not hold, as a result of the acquisition, voting securities of any company that presently has annual sales in or into the U.S. in excess of $25 million, my understanding is that any such U.S. or foreign purchaser’s acquisition of all of the shares of Company B would still be exempt under 16 C.F.R. §§ 802.50(b) and 802.51(b), even though an entity previously indirectly controlled by Company B had U.S. sales in 1995 in excess of $25 million. See paragraph 268 of ABA’s Premerger Notification Practice Manual (copy enclosed).
Finally, we discussed a third possible scenario under which all of the shares of Company E, rather than Company B, are sold to either a domestic or foreign purchaser for a price in excess
of $15 million. My understanding is that the exemptions set forth in 16 C.F.R. §§ 802.50 and 802.51 are not available since they do not apply to the acquisition of shares of U.S. issuers; thus the transaction would necessitate an HSR filing unless another exemption is available.
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If you disagree with any of the understandings I have outlined above, including most particularly the understanding based on paragraph 268 of the Premerger Notification Practice Manual, please let me know as soon as possible.
Thank you very much for your assistance in connection with this matter.
Sincerely yours,
(redacted)
Enclosures
Company G has two wholly-owned subsidiaries which are U.S. issuers, referred tohere as Companies H and I, which together own all of the interests in a U.S.-based partnership,Company J, which generated 1995 sales in the U.S. in excess of $15 million.