Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Insurance merger scrapped as Justice Department sues

- By Ephrat Livni

Two of the world’s largest insurance brokers, Aon and Willis Towers Watson, announced Monday they had called off a planned $30 billion merger, just a little more than a month after the Department of Justice sued to block the union.

The announceme­nt was a victory for the Biden administra­tion. The case against the proposed merger was the first big trustbusti­ng move by the administra­tion, which has signaled a willingnes­s to be tough on corporate consolidat­ion.

President Joe Biden signed a sweeping executive order to address competitio­n in industries as diverse as tech, railroads, and meat and poultry. And last week, he named Jonathan Kanter, an antitrust lawyer who has spent much of his career fighting big tech, to run the Justice Department’s antitrust division. Biden has also named other critics of big tech to prominent roles, such as Lina Khan to lead the Federal Trade Commission, and Tim Wu to an economic policy role at the White House.

But the White House has faced setbacks in its push to rein in the power of technology giants. Last month, a federal judge threw out an antitrust lawsuit against Facebook brought by the FTC. The agency was given 30 days to amend and refile its lawsuit, and Friday it asked for a three-week extension, to Aug. 19, which the judge has granted.

On Monday, Aon and Willis Towers Watson said they had decided to end the Justice Department’s litigation rather than face a lengthy court battle.

“We reached an impasse with the U.S. Department of Justice,” Aon’s CEO, Greg Case, said in a statement.

“This is a victory for competitio­n and for American businesses, and ultimately, for their customers, employees and retirees across the country,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement.

The merger, first proposed in March 2020, faced scrutiny from regulators around the world. Some, including officials in the European Union, granted conditiona­l approval based on various concession­s and divestment­s.

But the Justice Department’s lawsuit was not scheduled to head to trial until at least November, which would have postponed the deal until the first quarter of 2022 at the earliest, a delay that was untenable for Aon, a company spokesman told The New York Times.

The government’s complaint argued that the combined companies would “eliminate substantia­l head-to-head competitio­n and likely lead to higher prices and less innovation.” It said the companies dominated markets for risk and reinsuranc­e brokering, health and pension benefits brokering, actuarial services for employer benefit programs and private exchanges that offer retiree benefits.

The government said previously the companies were aware they already operated in an oligopoly.

“If permitted to merge, Aon and Willis Towers Watson could use their increased leverage to raise prices and reduce the quality of products relied on by thousands of American businesses and their customers, employees and retirees,” the Justice Department wrote last month.

The decision to block the merger sends a clear signal that the White House is willing to take a stronger stand on competitio­n than the Trump administra­tion, which reviewed the deal but did not take steps to fight it.

The firm stance also involves more trans-Atlantic cooperatio­n between U.S. and European regulators. For instance, after the European Union in April challenged the $8 billion merger of the life sciences companies Illumina and Grail, the FTC announced that it was dropping a request in federal court to block the deal, a strategy that helps preserve agency resources. And European antitrust officials have said they expect more cooperatio­n as the two government­s’ perspectiv­es increasing­ly align.

With the merger between the insurance brokers terminated, a slew of contingent deals will be called off, too. Some of the regulatory approvals that the combined companies received, for example in South Africa and the European Union, were dependent on Aon and Willis getting rid of some business units.

Aon said it would pay a $1 billion terminatio­n fee to Willis Towers Watson.

Both companies are incorporat­ed in Ireland and have headquarte­rs in London. Aon, which reported revenue of more than $11 billion last year, has around 50,000 employees around the world and more than 100 offices in the United States. Willis Towers Watson employs about 45,000 people globally, with more than 80 offices in the United States. It reported revenue of more than $9 billion in 2020.

 ?? JAKUB PORZYCKI — GETTY IMAGES ?? Aon and Willis Towers Watson, two of the world’s largest insurance brokers, announced Monday they had called off a planned $30 billion merger in the face of an antitrust lawsuit by the Justice Department.
JAKUB PORZYCKI — GETTY IMAGES Aon and Willis Towers Watson, two of the world’s largest insurance brokers, announced Monday they had called off a planned $30 billion merger in the face of an antitrust lawsuit by the Justice Department.

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