Thursday , September 19 2024
Home / The Angry Bear / FTC is Interfering with Kroger and Albertson’s Consolidation

FTC is Interfering with Kroger and Albertson’s Consolidation

Summary:
Yes, it is true. That is only part of the story. There is more to it as to why the FTC is interfering. I am surprised there is not more “current” information on Cerberus and Apollo Global involvement in the Kroger-Albertsons merger. I keep reading the same blathering over and over. billion at play here. And both private equity guys are out to break the bank. Kroger is already threating to go to SCOTUS because the FTC’s Lina M. Khan is getting in their way of making off with $billion. Hope you read it as this is the reality. Private Equity Guys Trying to Shoplift a Super-Market Chain Before They Sell It Earlier this week, four state attorneys general filed two separate lawsuits seeking to stop private equity firms from swiping

Topics:
Angry Bear considers the following as important: , ,

This could be interesting, too:

Angry Bear writes Early Read on Existing Home Sales in August

NewDealdemocrat writes Industrial and Manufacturing Production Rebounded Strongly in August

Angry Bear writes Lots of Shoulds and Coulds in a Recital of a Potential Heart in the Harris-Walz Economic Policies

Angry Bear writes A strong dollar is good news for most of us — but not everybody wins

Yes, it is true. That is only part of the story. There is more to it as to why the FTC is interfering. I am surprised there is not more “current” information on Cerberus and Apollo Global involvement in the Kroger-Albertsons merger. I keep reading the same blathering over and over.

$25 billion at play here. And both private equity guys are out to break the bank.

Kroger is already threating to go to SCOTUS because the FTC’s Lina M. Khan is getting in their way of making off with $billion. Hope you read it as this is the reality.

Private Equity Guys Trying to Shoplift a Super-Market Chain Before They Sell It

Crazier still is what happened Thursday night:

A judge granted the Washington AG’s motion for a temporary restraining order, ordering the private equity guys to hold off on their cash grab, scheduled to go down on Monday, pending the results of a preliminary hearing on Nov. 10.

Discovery may reveal that the “Special Dividend” reflects a calculated effort to leave Albertsons just battered enough for Defendants to argue later (to regulators or a court) that it is a “flailing” or “failing” firm that Kroger should be allowed to acquire lest it go out of business anyway, but still worth its hard assets and Kroger’s gain from neutralizing a competitor.

But even if $4 billion cash grab isn’t part of a diabolical conspiracy to circumvent antitrust law to force an illegal merger, the D.C. lawsuit maintains, it still, in itself, constitutes an unlawful restraint of trade under Section 1 of the Sherman Act:

But whatever the motivation, the antitrust laws do not care: Defendants have an agreement that, as detailed herein, will have an anticompetitive effect on competition among supermarkets in the District of Columbia, California, and Illinois, and that is sufficient basis for this Court to stop the Special Dividend from being paid, and protect consumers and workers in all the States. By stripping Albertsons of necessary cash at a time when its deteriorating bond ratings will make access to capital harder for Albertsons, this agreement between Kroger and Albertsons curtails Albertsons’ ability to compete on price, services, other quality metrics, and innovation. Because it increases Albertsons’ leverage, empirical economics suggests this reduction in Albertsons’ competitiveness will reduce the intensity of price competition market wide.

But what if, as the state AGs are now contending, “Wall Street looting” is already illegal? Because it chokes off the resources necessary for institutions to meaningfully “compete” in the marketplace, thereby violating a whole host of long-neglected prohibitions on anticompetitive restraints of trade?

What this argument lacks in Old Testament moral outrage, it makes up for in its appeal to a critically important group of attorneys: antitrust enforcers. Unlike bankruptcy or securities law, enforcing antitrust law is the business of elected officials, many of whom have found it an increasingly useful tool for attacking the unchecked power of companies victimizing their constituents. Antitrust law also happens to be in the throes of a kind of renaissance, driven by a small group of scholars who at some point realized that their forefathers had left them a toolbox for contending with the abuses of corporate concentration and monopoly power, and that those tools were so politically popular most of them had never actually been repealed, just marginalized and forgotten as a combination of monopoly denial doctrine exemplified by Robert Bork’s “consumer welfare standard” and the real life “benevolence” of monopolies like Walmart and Amazon conspired to consign the Sherman Act to the proverbial dustbin.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *