Business World

CLC-Trans-Asia deal under review

- JCL

THE Philippine Competitio­n Commission (PCC) on Wednesday started a review of Chelsea Logistics Holdings Corp.’s (CLC) acquisitio­n of Trans-Asia Shipping Lines, Inc.

The Phase 1 review comes after the anti-trust body received the companies’ notificati­on of the deal last Sept. 21.

To recall, the transactio­n was earlier voided due to CLC and Trans-Asia Shipping’s failure to notify the PCC, even as the size of the transactio­n fell under the compulsory notificati­on threshold of P1 billion.

The voided deal led to the PCC approving CLC’s purchase of shares in KGLI-NM Holdings, Inc., which owns 2Go Group, Inc. The PCC had said the Trans-Asia transactio­n initially raised competitio­n concerns, as both 2Go and Trans-Asia were owned by Udenna Corp.

A hearing was held at the PCC on Sept. 17, as the parties sought to have both decisions reconsider­ed.

The PCC said Udenna Chairman and CEO Dennis A. Uy and company representa­tives committed to complying with the notificati­on requiremen­ts, as well as make “voluntary commitment­s” to address the competitio­n concerns.

“These include the commitment to be bound by a price monitoring scheme and provide necessary informatio­n to implement the same,” the PCC said.

Because of this, the PCC set the applicable administra­tive fine at 1% of the transactio­n value amounting to P11.4 million. This lower than the P22.8 million penalty set by the PCC.

“Compliance is the cornerston­e of fostering a culture of competitio­n. The competitio­n law is fair as it rewards faithful observance of the rules while it penalizes violations,” PCC Chairman Arsenio M. Balisacan was quoted as saying in a statement.

Under PCC rules, the Phase 1 review is conducted within 30 days from notificati­on and payment of filing fees. The review will determine whether or not the deal will raise competitio­n concerns. If competitio­n concerns arise, the PCC will proceed to a Phase 2 review. —

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