95-18596. Premerger Notification; Reporting and Waiting Period Requirements  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 145 (Friday, July 28, 1995)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 38930-38941]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-18596]
    
    
    
    
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    Part V
    
    
    
    
    
    Federal Trade Commission
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    16 CFR Parts 801 and 802
    
    
    
    Premerger Notification; Reporting and Waiting Period Requirements; 
    Proposed Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 145 / Friday, July 28, 1995 / 
    Proposed Rules
    
    [[Page 38930]]
    
    
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
    
    16 CFR Parts 801 and 802
    
    
    Premerger Notification; Reporting and Waiting Period Requirements
    
    AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: This notice proposes amendments to the premerger notification 
    rules that require the parties to certain mergers or acquisitions to 
    file reports with the Federal Trade Commission and the Assistant 
    Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division of the Department 
    of Justice and to wait a specified period of time before consummating 
    such transactions. The reporting and waiting period requirements are 
    intended to enable these enforcement agencies to determine whether a 
    proposed merger or acquisition may violate the antitrust laws if 
    consummated and, when appropriate, to seek a preliminary injunction in 
    federal court to prevent consummation.
        This notice seeks comments on five proposed rules that would define 
    or create exemptions to the requirements imposed by the act. These 
    proposed rules have been developed to clarify the types of transactions 
    that are in the ordinary course of business of the parties to the 
    transaction and are exempt under section 7A(c)(1) of the Hart-Scott-
    Rodino-Act. They also provide several new exemptions under section 
    7A(d)(2)(B) for certain types of acquisitions of realty and carbon-
    based mineral reserves that appear unlikely to violate the antitrust 
    laws. These proposed rules are designed to reduce the compliance burden 
    on the business community by eliminating the application of the 
    notification and waiting requirements to a significant number of 
    transactions that, in most cases, are unlikely to violate the antitrust 
    laws. They will also allow the enforcement agencies to focus their 
    resources more effectively on those transactions that present the 
    potential for competitive harm.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before September 29, 1995.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comments should be submitted to both (1) the 
    Secretary, Federal Trade Commission, Room 136, Washington, DC 20580, 
    and (2) the Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Division, Department 
    of Justice, Room 3214, Washington, DC 20530.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Melea R. Epps, Attorney, or John M. Sipple, Jr., Assistant Director, 
    Premerger Notification Office, Bureau of Competition, Room 303, Federal 
    Trade Commission, Washington, DC 20580. Telephone: (202) 326-3100.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The proposed amendments to the Hart-Scott-Rodino premerger 
    notification rules are designed to reduce the burden of reporting on 
    the public. The Commission has determined that none of the proposed 
    rules is a major rule, as that term is defined in Executive Order 
    12291. The amendments will not result in any of the following: an 
    annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more; a major increase 
    in costs or prices for consumers, individual industries, Federal, 
    State, or local government agencies, or geographic regions; or 
    significant adverse effects on competition, employment, investment, 
    productivity, innovation, or on the ability of United States-based 
    enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises in the domestic 
    market. None of the amendments expands the coverage of the premerger 
    notification rules in a way that would affect small business. 
    Therefore, pursuant to section 605(b) of the Administrative Procedure 
    Act, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), as added by the Regulatory Flexibility Act, Pub. 
    L. 96-354 (September 19, 1980), the Federal Trade Commission has 
    certified that these rules will not have a significant economic impact 
    on a substantial number of small entities. Section 603 of the 
    Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 603, requiring a final 
    regulatory flexibility analysis of these rules, is therefore 
    inapplicable.
    
    Background
    
        Section 7A of the Clayton Act (``the act''), 15 U.S.C. 18a, as 
    added by sections 201 and 202 of the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust 
    Improvements Act of 1976, requires parties to certain acquisitions of 
    assets or voting securities to give advance notice to the Federal Trade 
    Commission (hereafter referred to as ``the Commission'') and the 
    Assistant Attorney General of the Antitrust Division of the Department 
    of Justice (hereafter referred to as ``the Assistant Attorney 
    General''). The parties must then wait certain designated periods 
    before the consummation of such acquisitions. The transactions to which 
    the advance notice requirement is applicable and the length of the 
    waiting period required are set out respectively in subsections (a) and 
    (b) of section 7A. This amendment to the Clayton Act does not change 
    the standards used in determining the legality of mergers and 
    acquisitions under the antitrust laws.
        The legislative history suggests several purposes underlying the 
    act. Congress wanted to ensure that certain acquisitions were subjected 
    to meaningful scrutiny under the antitrust laws prior to consummation. 
    To this end, Congress intended to eliminate the ``midnight merger'' 
    which is negotiated in secret and announced just before, or sometimes 
    only after, the closing takes place. Congress also provided an 
    opportunity for the Commission or the Assistant Attorney General (who 
    are sometimes hereafter referred to as the ``antitrust agencies'' or 
    the ``enforcement agencies'') to seek a court order enjoining the 
    completion of those transactions that either agency determines would 
    present significant antitrust problems. Finally, Congress sought to 
    facilitate an effective remedy when a challenge by one of the 
    enforcement agencies proved successful. Thus, the act requires that the 
    antitrust agencies received prior notification of certain acquisitions, 
    provides tools to facilitate a prompt, thorough investigation of the 
    competitive implications of these acquisitions, and assures the 
    enforcement agencies an opportunity to seek a preliminary injunction 
    before the parties to an acquisition are legally free to consummate it. 
    The problem of unscrambling the assets after the transaction has taken 
    place is thereby reduced.
        Subsection 7A(d)(1) of the act, 15 U.S.C. 18a(d)(1), directs the 
    Commission, with the concurrence of the Assistant Attorney General, in 
    accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553, to require that the notification be in 
    such form and contain such information and documentary material as may 
    be necessary and appropriate to determine whether the proposed 
    transaction may, if consummated, violate the antitrust laws. Subsection 
    7A(d)(2) of the act, 15 U.S.C. 18a(d)(2), grants the Commission, with 
    the concurrence of the Assistant Attorney General, in accordance with 5 
    U.S.C. 553, the authority to (a) define the terms used in the act, (b) 
    exempt from the act's notification and waiting period requirements 
    additional classes of persons or transactions which are not likely to 
    violate the antitrust laws, and (c) prescribe such other rules as may 
    be necessary and appropriate to carry out the purposes of section 7A.
        The Commission, with the concurrence of the Assistant Attorney 
    General, promulgated implementing rules (``the rules'') and the 
    Notification and Report Form (the ``Form'') and issued an accompanying 
    Statement of 
    
    [[Page 38931]]
    Basis and Purpose, all of which were published in the Federal Register 
    of July 31, 1978, 43 FR 33451, and became effective on September 5, 
    1978.
        The rules are divided into three parts which appear at 16 CFR parts 
    801, 802, and 803. Part 801 defines a number of the terms used in the 
    act and rules, and explains which acquisitions are subject to the 
    reporting and waiting period requirements. Part 802 contains a number 
    of exemptions from these requirements. Part 803 explains the procedures 
    for complying with the act. The Form, which is completed by persons 
    required to file notification, is an appendix to part 803 of the rules.
        Changes of a substantive nature have been made in the premerger 
    notification rules or Form on ten occasions since they were first 
    promulgated: 44 FR 66781 (November 21, 1979); 45 FR 14205 (March 5, 
    1980); 46 FR 38710 (July 29, 1981); 48 FR 34427 (July 29, 1983); 50 FR 
    38742 (September 24, 1985); 51 FR 10368 (March 28, 1986); 52 FR 7066 
    (March 6, 1987); 52 FR 20058 (May 29, 1987); 54 FR 21425 (May 18, 1989) 
    and 55 FR 31371 (August 2, 1990).
        The current set of proposed changes to the rules interprets the act 
    and expands the current policies of the Commission's Premerger 
    Notification Office regarding transactions in the ordinary course of 
    business that are exempt from the notification and waiting requirements 
    of the act. The proposals also include several new exemptions for 
    acquisitions of certain types of real property assets and carbon-based 
    mineral reserves. The Commission, as part of its ongoing review of the 
    rules, invites interested persons to submit comments on these proposed 
    rules and the Statement of Basis and Purpose.
    
    Statement of Basis and Purpose for the Commission's Proposed Revisions 
    to the Premerger Notification Rules
    
        Proposed Secs. 802.1, 802.2, 802.3, 802.4, and 802.5 describe 
    certain types of acquisitions that would be exempt from the 
    notification requirements of the act. They would replace and expand 
    existing Sec. 802.1, which describes certain applications of the 
    exemption granted by section 7A(c)(1) of the act for acquisitions of 
    goods or realty in the ordinary course of business. Proposed revisions 
    to Sec. 801.15 would define when the aggregation rules apply to 
    acquisitions covered by these newly proposed rules.
        In 1985, the Commission proposed three new provisions under part 
    802. Previously proposed Sec. 802.1 would have addressed the statutory 
    ``ordinary course of business'' exemption; previously proposed 
    Sec. 802.2 would have exempted certain acquisitions of unimproved land, 
    office buildings and residential properties; and previously proposed 
    Sec. 802.3 would have exempted certain acquisitions of carbon-based 
    mineral reserves.
        In response to the 1985 notice of proposed rulemaking, the 
    Commission received twenty comments that focused wholly or in part on 
    the then proposed Secs. 802.1, 802.2, and 802.3. The persons who 
    commented are listed in the Federal Register of March 6, 1987, 52 FR 
    7066. The comments are available for public inspection in the Federal 
    Trade Commission's Public Reference Room, Reference number 223.2.1-1-E 
    and F.
        On March 23, 1995, the Chairman of the Commission and the Assistant 
    Attorney General for the Antitrust Division of the Department of 
    Justice jointly announced eight initiatives for review of transactions 
    under the act. One of the initiatives is a reduction in the number of 
    filings received pursuant to the act. A draft of several revisions to 
    the Hart-Scott-Rodino rules under consideration by the staff of the 
    Commission's Premerger Notification Office (PNO) was made available to 
    the public. Those revisions would eliminate the necessity to file 
    premerger notification for certain transactions that are not likely to 
    violate the antitrust laws. The draft reflected careful consideration 
    by the staff of the comments received in response to the 1985 
    proposals, the experience of the PNO during the intervening years in 
    its determinations of the reportability of a large number of 
    transactions not specifically exempted by the act or the rules an the 
    experience of the enforcement agencies in conducting their antitrust 
    review of premerger filings.
        Included in the March 23 draft was a series of questions to be 
    considered in determining whether the revisions under consideration by 
    the PNO effectively exempted transactions that were unlikely to violate 
    the antitrust laws and facilitated uncomplicated application of the 
    rules. In response to an invitation for comment, the staff of the 
    Commission received extensive input from the private antitrust bar and 
    worked closely with the Department of Justice to address the questions 
    raised in the draft. As a result, the draft revisions were reformulated 
    significantly to enhance their effectiveness in exempting classes of 
    transactions that are unlikely to create competitive problems, while 
    ensuring that the enforcement agencies continue to receive notification 
    of classes of acquisitions that are more likely to present potential 
    antitrust concerns. The Commission now formally proposes the following 
    amendments to the premerger notification rules.
        Criteria for the Rules. Section 7A(c)(1) of the act exempts 
    ``acquisitions of goods or realty transferred in the ordinary course of 
    business.'' Existing Sec. 802.1(a) interprets this statutory language 
    to apply the exemption to acquisitions of voting securities of entities 
    holding only realty. Existing Sec. 802.1(b) denies the exemption to the 
    sale of goods or real property if they constitute ``all or 
    substantially all of the assets of that entity or an operating division 
    thereof'' unless the entity qualifies for the exemption under existing 
    Sec. 802.1(a) because its assets consist solely of real property and 
    assets incidental to the ownership of real property.
        The reportability of transfers in the ordinary course of business 
    has long been a frequent source of questions from the public. Proposed 
    Sec. 802.1 represents interpretations of section 7A(c)(1) made by the 
    PNO over the years, and it also broadens these interpretations to 
    exempt additional classes of acquisitions that are unlikely to violate 
    the antitrust laws.
        Proposed Sec. 802.1(a) preserves the concept of existing 
    Sec. 802.1(b) and makes the exemption unavailable for acquisitions of 
    all or substantially all of the assets of an operating unit. Operating 
    unit is defined as assets operated by the acquired person as a business 
    undertaking in a particular area or for particular products or 
    services. The sale of all or substantially all of the assets of a 
    business is generally equivalent to the sale of a business enterprise. 
    Although it is possible that the effects of selling capacity might be 
    to enhance competition, it can also diminish competition, and each 
    acquisition must be judged individually. The current and proposed rules 
    therefore require generally that acquisitions that transfer the 
    equivalent of a business remain subject to the prior notification 
    obligations of the act.
        Proposed Sec. 802.1 also defines categories of acquisitions of 
    goods that are deemed to be in the ordinary course of business and are 
    therefore exempt from the notification requirements. Individual review 
    of such transactions is typically unnecessary because selling goods is 
    the essence of manufacturing, wholesaling, and retailing businesses. 
    Sales in the ordinary course of business should not in any way diminish 
    the capacity of the selling firm to compete.
    
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        Proposed Sec. 802.1 provides that certain acquisitions of used 
    durable goods qualify for exemption from the reporting requirements as 
    transfers of goods in the ordinary course of business. These exemptions 
    for specific types of acquisitions of used durable goods acknowledge 
    that certain transfers of productive assets are made in the ordinary 
    course to increase or upgrade capacity and to improve efficiencies. 
    However, the ordinary course of business exemption generally will not 
    reach other acquisitions involving productive capacity. The Commission 
    invites comment regarding other types of transfers of productive 
    assets, especially those not involving operating units, that may 
    qualify for the ordinary course of business exemption.
        Proposed Sec. 802.2 (concerning real property assets) and proposed 
    Sec. 802.3 (concerning carbon-based mineral reserves and rights) are 
    based, for the most part, on the Commission's authority in section 
    7A(d)(2)(B) of the act to exempt transactions that are unlikely to 
    violate the antitrust laws. These proposals provide exemptions for 
    certain acquisitions of assets that are usually abundant and are used 
    in markets that are unconcentrated. These two factors make it unlikely 
    that a transfer of these types of assets will have anticompetitive 
    effects. It is thus not necessary to examine each individual 
    transaction to determine if it will violate the antitrust laws.
        To accommodate parties who choose to structure their transactions 
    as acquisitions of voting securities rather than as acquisitions of the 
    underlying assets, proposed Sec. 802.4 exempts acquisitions of voting 
    securities of issuers whose assets consist solely of the assets 
    exempted by proposed Secs. 802.2 and 802.3.
        Proposed Sec. 802.5 exempts acquisitions by certain investors of 
    rental real property, the acquisition of which is not already exempted 
    by Sec. 802.2. Proposed Sec. 802.5 is based on the use to which those 
    buyers put the acquired assets. It would exempt institutional investors 
    (as defined in Sec. 802.64) and persons whose sole business is the 
    acquisition or management of investment rental property from the 
    requirements of the act when they are acquiring investment rental 
    property assets. The Commission believes that, so long as the assets 
    remain as investment rental property assets, the acquisition of these 
    assets is unlikely to violate the antitrust laws.
        Proposed Secs. 802.1, 802.2, 802.3, 802.4 and 802.5 are based on 
    the Commission's authority in section 7A(d)(2)(A) of the act to 
    ``define the terms used in (section 7A)'' (with the concurrence of the 
    Assistant Attorney General) and sections 7A(d)(2) (B) and (C) to 
    ``exempt * * * transactions which are not likely to violate the 
    antitrust laws'' and to ``prescribe such other rules as may be 
    necessary and appropriate to carry out the purposes of [section 7A].'' 
    However, the Commission reserves the right to investigate certain 
    transactions exempted from the reporting requirements by the proposed 
    rules if these transactions are characterized by factors that increase 
    the likelihood that the consummation of the transactions may violate 
    the antitrust laws.
        The Commission is aware that even with the significant coverage of 
    the proposed rules, the exempt status of many transactions will remain 
    unaddressed. These proposed rules do not interpret or apply to the 
    entire statutory exemption created by section 7A(c)(1); there remain 
    categories of transactions involving goods and realty that are not 
    expressly treated under the proposed rules. For example, certain 
    acquisitions of credit card receivables and certain acquisitions of 
    assets subject to a lease financing arrangement may qualify for 
    exemption as transfers in the ordinary course of business. Persons who 
    desire advice on the exempt status of any transfer of goods, realty or 
    other assets may contact the Premerger Notification Office, Bureau of 
    Competition, Room 303, Federal Trade Commission, Washington, DC 20580, 
    or phone (202) 326-3100.
    I. Proposed Section 802.1: Acquisition of Goods in the Ordinary Course 
    of Business
    
        Section 7A(c)(1) of the act exempts ``acquisitions of goods or 
    realty transferred in the ordinary course of business.'' Proposed 
    Sec. 802.1 defines some acquisitions of assets that are in the ordinary 
    course of business and other acquisitions that are not. This proposed 
    section only covers transfers of goods. Transfers of realty are covered 
    in proposed Sec. 802.2.
        Proposed Sec. 802.1 defines four categories of acquisitions of 
    goods: acquisitions of an operating unit, acquisitions of new goods, 
    acquisitions of current supplies, and acquisitions of used durable 
    goods. The proposed section states whether and under what circumstances 
    each type of acquisition is exempt. These four categories of asset 
    acquisitions are not comprehensive. As noted above, some asset 
    acquisitions may not fit neatly into any of these defined categories.
        Proposed Sec. 802.1 has four paragraphs: Paragraph (a) denies the 
    ordinary course of business exemption to any transfer of goods that is 
    equivalent to the sale of a business. The next three paragraphs define 
    acquisitions of goods that may be exempt. Paragraph (b) exempts the 
    acquisition of new goods, and paragraph (c) exempts the acquisition of 
    current supplies. Paragraph (d) defines certain transfers of used 
    durable goods that are within the ordinary course of business. These 
    include the following: acquisitions by or from bona fide dealers and 
    resellers; transfers by an acquired person that has replaced the 
    productive capacity of the assets being sold; and transfers by an 
    acquired person that has outsourced an auxiliary function that was 
    provided by the goods being sold.
        In determining whether a given acquisition of goods is in the 
    ordinary course of business and is therefore exempt under a provision 
    of Sec. 802.1, one should first determine if the goods constitute an 
    operating unit. If the goods being sold make up an operating unit of 
    the seller, the inquiry ends there, and the transaction is not exempt. 
    If the goods do not constitute an operating unit, then they should be 
    classified as either new goods, current supplies or used durable goods, 
    and the appropriate provisions under Sec. 802.1 should be applied.
        The organization of Sec. 802.1 is intended to make it easier to 
    identify routine acquisitions that meet the criteria of section 
    7A(c)(1) for an exemption as an acquisition of goods transferred in the 
    ordinary course of business. Sales of new goods and purchases of 
    current supplies are frequent. The objective of the businesses covered 
    by paragraphs (b) and (c) is to buy and sell such goods and supplies; 
    thus such transactions meet the common meaning of transfers in the 
    ordinary course of business. Exempting these transactions facilitates 
    acquisitions of new goods that normally expand the supply of products 
    or expand productive capacity and therefore do not tend to lessen 
    competition. In contrast, acquisitions of entire businesses have 
    greater potential to concentrate productive capacity and thereby may 
    diminish competition.
        A. Operating Units. Proposed Sec. 802.1(a) excludes the acquisition 
    of all or substantially all of the assets of an ``operating unit'' from 
    the ordinary course of business exemption. An ``operating unit'' can be 
    thought of as a collection of assets that has been operated as a 
    business undertaking. The assets of an operating unit can include 
    realty, current supplies and durable goods. Common examples of 
    operating units include, but are not limited to, 
    
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    regional divisions or company branches, international operations, a 
    financial group, transportation operations, a factory or an oil 
    processing facility. Factors important in determining whether a group 
    of asset constitutes an operating unit include the extent to which the 
    assets being sold are devoted to producing a certain product, or the 
    extent to which such assets serve one or more specific geographic 
    markets.
        The proposal uses the term ''operating unit'' rather than the term 
    ``operating division'' used in existing Sec. 802.1(b). The latter term 
    has created some uncertainty because some business entities use the 
    term ``division'' in a manner that may not be consistent with this 
    rule. For example, a business might use the term ``division'' to 
    designate an unincorporated administrative segment of its enterprise, 
    such as the ``East Coast Division'' or ``Tri-State Division.'' Such 
    usage is designed to serve the needs of the business. The term 
    ``operating unit'' has been proposed in order to make clear that the 
    application of the rule is not dependent on the terminology used by a 
    business.
        The term ``operating unit'' is defined in the rule as ``assets that 
    are operated by the acquired person as a business undertaking in a 
    particular geographic area or for particular products and services, 
    even though those assets may not be organized as a separate legal 
    entity.'' Example 1 to Sec. 802.1 illustrates a combination of assets 
    that is considered to be an operating unit, the acquisition of which 
    would be excluded from the ordinary course of business exemption. As 
    further guidance in determining when a collection of assets constitutes 
    an operating unit, the following factors are relevant: (1) Whether the 
    seller is terminating a business function as a result of the sale, such 
    as ceasing to sell in a geographic region or manufacture products for a 
    particular business segment; (2) whether the industry perceives the 
    assets as a separate unit; and (3) whether the sale of assets includes 
    durable goods and the current supplies that are used in the operation 
    of those durable goods.
        The sale of an operating unit is one kind of transfer that the 
    premerger notification program was intended to review and thus is not 
    exempt under the ordinary course of business exemption. During review, 
    the antitrust agencies consider whether, and to what extent, 
    concentration of productive capacity may be increased by the sale of a 
    business and whether competition will be adversely affected by the 
    acquisition of a business.
        B. New Goods. Proposed Sec. 802.1(b) describes the type of 
    acquisitions of goods that are most commonly referred to as 
    acquisitions ``in the ordinary course of business.'' This paragraph 
    exempts acquisitions of new goods that were produced by the seller for 
    the purpose of sale or that were held by the seller solely for the 
    purpose of resale.
        Paragraph (b) of proposed Sec. 802.1 focuses on the purpose for 
    which the seller holds the new goods to determine if the transaction is 
    in the ordinary course of business and is therefore exempt. The sales 
    of new goods which the paragraph exempts are routine sales of inventory 
    by manufacturers, wholesalers or retailers conducted in the ordinary 
    course of business. As a general matter, there is no difficulty 
    identifying the goods in the two circumstances in which this exemption 
    applies. Goods that are ``produced'' mean goods not used by the seller 
    to which he has added value through processing or manufacture and may 
    include refurbished goods. ``New goods held at all times by the 
    acquired person solely for resale'' means inventory held for sale that 
    is not to be used by the seller or others prior to sale. When the 
    seller uses goods that are held for sale, the exemption does not apply. 
    The paragraph is specifically worded to deny this exemption to any sale 
    of goods that were purchased for use, even if the goods are 
    subsequently sold without being used.
        The exemption set forth in paragraph (b) does not apply to any 
    acquisition of new goods which are sold as part of a transaction that 
    includes all or substantially all of the assets of an operating unit. 
    This limitation on the exemption of new goods would apply even if all 
    the assets transferred were new goods held solely for the purpose of 
    resale. For example, if a marine supply wholesaler, which owned only an 
    extensive inventory of hundreds of items from different manufacturers, 
    sells its entire inventory to one person, the acquisition would not be 
    exempt even though the sale is composed entirely of new goods. The sale 
    of all of its inventory would be considered the sale of all or 
    substantially all of its business since the primary assets of such a 
    wholesaling business are inventory.
        C. Current Supplies. Proposed Sec. 802.1(c) described another 
    category of asset acquisitions--the acquisition of ``current 
    supplies''--that qualify for the ordinary course exemption. ``Current 
    supplies'' is a new term to the rules and is described in subparagraphs 
    (1), (2) and (3). Current supplies include goods bought for resale, raw 
    materials, components, maintenance supplies and the like. Current 
    supplies are purchased frequently and are either consumed in the daily 
    conduct of business or incorporated into a final product. The proposal 
    states that current supplies do not include used durable goods, which 
    are discussed in proposed Sec. 802.1(d).
        The acquisition of current supplies is unlikely to create or 
    extinguish a competitive entity and is therefore exempt unless acquired 
    as part of an acquisition of an operating unit. Parties are permitted 
    to claim the exemption even if the goods purchased are not new (so long 
    as they are not used durable goods), so long as the acquired goods are 
    to be held for resale, are to be consumed by the buyer, or are 
    otherwise incorporated in the acquiring person's final product.
        In applying paragraph (c), the focus is on the business of the 
    acquiring person to determine if the exemption is available.
        D. Used Durable Goods. Proposed Sec. 802.1(d) provides that certain 
    acquisitions of used durable goods qualify for the ordinary course of 
    business exemption. The Commission recognizes that sales of used 
    durable goods often meet a common sense definition of transfers of 
    goods in the ordinary course of business and that not all used durable 
    goods acquisitions have competitive significance. Sales of such used 
    durable goods may be routine and considered by parties to be in the 
    ordinary course of their businesses.
        Sales of used durable goods may also facilitate the purchase of a 
    new generation of equipment that will increase the productive capacity 
    of a business. Therefore, paragraph (d) represents an attempt to 
    identify certain categories of transfers of used durable goods that 
    meet a common sense definition of ``ordinary course'' and appear 
    unlikely to violate the antitrust laws: When goods are being acquired 
    by or from persons holding the goods solely for resale; when the 
    acquired person is replacing or upgrading the productive capacity 
    provided by the goods being sold; and when the acquired person is 
    outsourcing the auxiliary support functions performed by the goods 
    being sold. Sales of used durable goods that diminish a company's 
    productive capacity or sales of productive assets that result in a 
    company's exit from a given product or geographic market are not 
    included in the ordinary course of business exemption.
        Proposed Sec. 802.1(d) defines an acquisition of used durable goods 
    as a transaction that is in the ordinary course of business if it meets 
    specific criteria. The term ``used durable good'' is new to the rules 
    currently in force. It is defined in proposed Sec. 802.1(d) as a used 
    good 
    
    [[Page 38934]]
    which was ``designed to be used repeatedly and has a useful life 
    greater than one year.''
        An acquisition of used durable goods is exempt as within the 
    ordinary course of business if two requirements are satisfied. The 
    first requirement is that they must not be acquired as part of a 
    transfer of an operating unit, defined in paragraph (a) as ``assets 
    that are operated by the acquired person as a business undertaking in a 
    particular geographic area or for particular products or services.'' 
    This restriction prevents a company from using Sec. 802.1(d) to 
    transfer assets that result in the company's exit from a particular 
    product line or regional market without first observing the reporting 
    requirements.
        The second requirement for exempting an acquisition of a used 
    durable good is that any one of four criteria set forth in the proposed 
    rule must be satisfied. The first criterion, that the acquiring person 
    must hold the goods at all times solely for resale, and the second, 
    that the acquired person must have held the goods at all times solely 
    for resale, represent an exemption for dealers whose business is to 
    purchase and sell used goods. The proposed exemption is unavailable if 
    the person making the acquisition is in reality an intermediary for 
    either the seller or another person who intends to use the goods (see 
    Example 5 to Sec. 802.1). This limitation attempts to forestall abuse 
    of the dealer exemption by requiring notification in circumstances 
    where there is any possibility that the dealer might be acting as a 
    broker or an agent for an acquiring person or a third party. After 
    considerable assessment of the necessity and applicability of this 
    exemption, the Commission believes that the exemption should be 
    included to allow dealers to make transfers within the ordinary course 
    of their business without having to observe the reporting and waiting 
    requirements. However, the Commission will closely monitor such 
    transactions to ensure that the exemption is not being used as a ploy 
    to circumvent the notification requirements of the act.
        The third criterion recognizes that it is in the ordinary course of 
    business for a company to replace or upgrade productive capacity and to 
    sell the capacity it is replacing. Thus, an exemption is permitted for 
    the sale of used durable goods if the productive capacity of these 
    goods is replaced substantially or upgraded. Such replacements may 
    result in an increase in the acquired person's productive capacity or 
    manufacturing efficiencies. The proposed rule allows replacement of the 
    used durable goods by acquisition or by lease. No minimum lease term is 
    specified, however, in order for a transfer of the goods being replaced 
    to be in the ordinary course of business, the replacement goods must be 
    leased for a period that is substantially long enough to maintain or 
    increase the company's current productive capacity. Such a period is 
    industry specific and must be determined in good faith by the acquired 
    person. Because this proposed provision requires that the productive 
    capacity must be replaced substantially, the exemption is lost if the 
    replacement goods result in more than a de minimis decease in the 
    acquired person's capacity or an exit from a line of business or 
    specific product or geographic market in which the acquired person 
    currently operates.
        The fourth criterion permits an exemption for sales of used durable 
    goods if the acquired person is replacing an auxiliary support function 
    that had been performed internally using the goods being sold by 
    contracting with the purchaser or a third party to perform 
    substantially similar functions. This provision essentially provides an 
    exemption for the transfer of goods by persons that have elected to 
    outsource certain of their auxiliary support functions. For example, a 
    company may decide that it would be more cost effective to have a third 
    party provide its data processing needs. To accomplish this objective, 
    the company may enter into a contract with a third party for these 
    services and sell all of the equipment it used internally to provide 
    this function. Such transfers appear unlikely to pose any competitive 
    concerns.
        Auxiliary support functions include management, accounting, data 
    processing, legal services, research and development, testing and 
    warehousing. Although companies will sometimes outsource the 
    manufacturing of some products they market, the sale of used durable 
    goods that were used to produce those products does not qualify for 
    exemption under this provision. Manufacturing, including the 
    manufacturing of inputs for other products produced by the acquired 
    person, is not an auxiliary function.
        The exemption for the transfer of goods in connection with the 
    outsourcing of auxiliary functions may include the sale of goods, such 
    as machinery, that may constitute a discrete business unit. However, 
    such a transfer does not constitute the acquisition of an operating 
    unit unless the goods being sold are also used to derive revenues by 
    providing services to entities not included within the acquired person. 
    A company division that only provides auxiliary support services to the 
    company's operating units is not itself an operating unit. A company 
    unit that provides auxiliary services supports or benefits the 
    company's operating units. For example, in a company containing a unit 
    that only provides the company's internal data processing needs, that 
    unit would be deemed to provide auxiliary support functions. However, 
    if that unit derived revenues from providing data processing services 
    to third parties, then the unit would be considered to be an operating 
    unit. The distinction between an operating unit and a unit providing 
    auxiliary support functions is, to some extent, industry specific.
        The replacement and outsourcing exemptions both require that before 
    the exemptions apply, the acquired person has already taken definitive 
    steps to replace the goods being sold or obtain the auxiliary support 
    functions that the goods being sold formerly provided. In addition, 
    these steps must have been taken in good faith; this requirement 
    prevents sham contracts that the acquired person cancels after 
    transferring the productive capacity without observing the notification 
    requirements and without replacing the capacity.
    
    II. Proposed Section 802.2: Certain Acquisitions of Real Property 
    Assets
    
        Proposed Sec. 802.2 identifies six categories of real property 
    acquisitions that would be exempt from the reporting requirements of 
    the act. It would exempt certain acquisitions of new facilities, 
    unproductive real property, office and residential property, hotels and 
    motels, agricultural property, and rental retail space and warehouses.
        Some of these proposed provisions would create entirely new 
    exemptions, and they result in part from an extensive review by the 
    enforcement agencies of categories of real property acquisitions that 
    appear ``not likely to violate the antitrust laws.'' Certain of the 
    categories expand the exemption provided in current section 7A(c)(1) 
    for acquisitions of realty in the ordinary course of business. For the 
    most part, the types of real property assets that are included within 
    this exemption are abundant, and their holdings are widely dispersed. 
    Transfers of these categories of real property are generally small 
    relative to the total amount of holdings, and entry into regional and 
    local markets for these types of real property assets is usually easy.
        The exemptions for new facilities, unproductive real property, 
    office and residential property, hotels and motels, 
    
    [[Page 38935]]
    agricultural property, rental retail space and warehouses state that 
    any non-exempt assets that are being transferred as part of an 
    acquisition of the exempt assets are separately subject to the 
    requirements of the act and the rules. This approach to non-exempt 
    portions of acquisitions is also used in Sec. 802.3.
        A. New Facilities. Proposed Sec. 802.2(a) exempts the acquisition 
    of new facilities, which may include real estate, equipment and assets 
    incidental to the ownership of the new facility. The term ``new 
    facility'' is new to the rules, and reflects the position of the PNO 
    that transfers of ``turnkey'' facilities, i.e., new facilities capable 
    of commencing operations immediately, are acquisitions of realty in the 
    ordinary course of business and thus are exempt under 7A(c)(1). 
    Although the provision is intended primarily to exempt turnkey 
    facilities, it does not require that the facility be ready for 
    immediate occupancy. The facility may need additional construction or 
    outfitting at the time it is purchased and still qualify for the 
    exemption.
        The exemption applies only to new facilities that have not produced 
    income. It also applies only if the acquired person has held the 
    facility at all times solely for sale. The language of the exemption 
    allows holders of the new facilities to be either builders of the 
    facility (``constructed by the acquired person for sale'') or other 
    persons, such as a creditor, who take possession of a new facility with 
    the intention of selling it (``held at all times by the acquired person 
    solely for resale''). These limitations prevent the sale by an acquired 
    person of capacity constructed for the acquired person's use, as 
    Example 1 to Sec. 802.2 illustrates.
        Proposed Sec. 802.2(a) requires separate valuation of non-exempt 
    assets being purchased in an acquisition of a new facility. If the 
    value of the non-exempt assets exceed $15 million, and no other 
    exemptions apply, then the purchase of these assets are subject to the 
    notification requirements.
        B. Unproductive property. Proposed Sec. 802.2(b) exempts certain 
    acquisitions of unproductive real property. The primary purpose of this 
    exemption is to eliminate filing requirements for acquisitions of 
    properties that have not generated a significant amount of income 
    during a certain period of time. The exemption incorporates the 
    concepts of undeveloped, non-income producing property, the acquisition 
    of which is in the ordinary course of business, and abandoned property, 
    which is no longer used to generate revenues.
        Unproductive real property is real property that has not produced 
    revenues of $5 million during the 36 months preceding the transaction 
    and includes raw land, structures or other improvements and natural 
    resources. Structures and improvements are additions to the real 
    property that add value and include, for example, buildings, parking 
    lots, recreational facilities (e.g., golf courses), orchards and 
    vineyards. Natural resources refers to any assets growing or appearing 
    naturally on the land, such as timber and mineral deposits. Proposed 
    Sec. 802.2(b) excludes from the exemption acquisitions of manufacturing 
    and non-manufacturing facilities that have not yet begun operations 
    (turnkey facilities)--these are addressed in Sec. 802.2(a)--as well as 
    facilities that began operations within twelve months before the 
    acquisition. Production machinery and equipment are not included in the 
    definition of structures and improvements.
        The revenue test will exempt most wilderness and rural land that is 
    not used commercially and urban land that is vacant or contains 
    structures that have generated a minimal amount of income during the 
    most recent three-year period.
        C. Office and residential property. Proposed Sec. 802.2(c) exempts 
    acquisitions of office and residential property. The definition of 
    office or residential property has two components: (1) Real property, 
    the acquisition of which is not exempt under any other provision of the 
    act; and (2) real property used primarily for office or residential 
    purposes. Although the proposed rule does not specify the meaning of 
    ``primarily,'' it is contemplated that at least 75 percent of the space 
    in the qualifying property, excluding common areas and parking 
    facilities, is used for office or residential purposes. Under this 
    definition, the total space being measured should consist of non-exempt 
    property. Therefore, in determining whether a building is being used 
    primarily for office or residential purposes, any portion of the 
    building consisting of rental retail space, the acquisition of which is 
    exempt under Sec. 802.2(f), should be excluded from the determination. 
    This proposal represents a broader exemption than the current PNO 
    policy, which exempts office and residential property only if the value 
    of the retail space being acquired in the same Standards Metropolitan 
    Statistical Area does not exceed $15 million.
        If the acquisition includes assets other than office or residential 
    property, the acquisition of those assets is separately subject to the 
    notification requirements. For example, if the acquiring person is also 
    purchasing a factory for $20 million, the acquisition of the factory is 
    separately subject to the reporting requirements. The proposed rule 
    also specifies that if the purchaser is acquiring a business that is 
    conducted on the office or residential property, the acquisition of the 
    business, including the space in which the business is conducted, is 
    subject to the notification requirements of the act. If the value of 
    the business and the space in which the business is conducted exceeds 
    $15 million, the acquisition is reportable.
        The inclusion of ``assets incidental to the ownership of office and 
    residential property'' is derived from the language of existing 
    Sec. 802.1. Although incidental assets may have value apart from the 
    real property, they are often necessary for the continued and 
    uninterrupted use of the property. Therefore, incidental assets are 
    included in the description in proposed Sec. 802.2(c) of office and 
    residential property and are exempt assets.
        D. Hotels and motels. Proposed Sec. 802.2(d) exempts from the 
    reporting requirements acquisitions of hotels and motels, except when 
    these assets are to be acquired in connection with the acquisition of a 
    ski resort or a casino or other gaming facility. The proposed exemption 
    is based on the Commission's observation that acquisitions of hotels 
    and motels, except for those excluded from the exemption, are unlikely 
    to violate the antitrust laws. These types of assets are plentiful and 
    widely held, and often they are owned by investor groups that hire 
    management firms or national chains to operate the facilities. Even in 
    local market entry appears to be relatively easy.
        This exemption would include the acquisition by a national hotel 
    chain of hotel assets of another hotel chain. However, if the 
    acquisition includes assets other than hotels and motels, e.g., the 
    selling firm's trademark or its hotel management business, these assets 
    must be separately valued to determine whether their acquisition is 
    subject to the notification requirements.
        E. Agricultural property. This section exempts acquisitions of 
    agricultural property and associated assets integral to the 
    agricultural business activities conducted on the property. 
    Agricultural property that is intended to be covered by this exemption 
    is real property that generally derives revenues under Major Groups 01 
    and 02 of the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) Manual. 
    Associated assets integral to the agricultural business activities 
    
    [[Page 38936]]
    conducted on the property to be acquired include equipment, structures, 
    (e.g., barns used to house livestock and other animals), fertilizer, 
    animal feed inventory (e.g., livestock, poultry, crops, fruits, 
    vegetables, milk, and eggs),
        As described in the proposed rule, the exemption for the 
    acquisition of agricultural property does not include processing 
    facilities, even though revenues from processing facilities located on 
    a farm may be reported under SIC codes starting with 01 or 02. If a 
    dairy or poultry processing market is concentrated in a given local 
    area, the transfer of in-house processing capacity may have a 
    significant effect on the market. For this reason, the Commission 
    believes that such transfers should be reviewed prior to consummation 
    so the enforcement agencies can determine whether the proposed 
    acquisition will affect competition adversely.
        This exemption reflects the Commission's continuing efforts to 
    develop exemptions for categories or acquisitions that are not likely 
    to violate the antitrust laws. In the case of agricultural property 
    exempted by Sec. 802.2, there is an abundance of real property assets 
    with widely dispersed ownership. Such acquisitions are unlikely to have 
    adverse effects on competition.
        F. Rental retail space; warehouse. Proposed Sec. 802.2(f) exempts 
    acquisitions of two other categories of real property, rental retail 
    space and warehouses. Rental retail space includes structures that 
    house retail establishments, such as shopping centers, strip smalls, 
    and stand alone buildings. These types of assets are abundant and 
    widely held by insurance companies, banks, other institutional 
    investors and individual investors as investments and rental property. 
    The Commission believes that acquisitions of these types of real 
    property assets are unlikely to violate the antitrust laws.
        However, the proposed rule provides that if the acquiring person is 
    also acquiring a business that is conducted on the real property, the 
    acquisition of that business, including the portion of the real 
    property on which the business is conducted, is separately subject to 
    the notification requirement of the act. For example, if any purchaser 
    (including a department store chain) proposed to acquire from any 
    seller (including another department store chain) several shopping 
    centers and the stores of the seller located in the shopping centers, 
    the acquisition of the stores including the portion of the shopping 
    centers in which the stores were located, would be separately subject 
    to the notification requirements. However, the acquisition of the 
    portion of the shopping centers that housed other retail establishments 
    would be exempt under this proposed rule. Example 8 illustrates that 
    the exemption for the acquisition of warehouses is lost if warehouses 
    are being acquired in connection with the acquisition of a wholesale 
    distribution business.
        The proposed rule also provides that if an acquisition of rental 
    retail space or a warehouse includes other assets, those other assets 
    are separately subject to the reporting requirements of the act.
    III. Proposed Section 802.3: Acquisition of Carbon-Based Mineral 
    Reserves
    
        Proposed Sec. 802.3 adds an exemption for certain acquisitions of 
    carbon-based mineral reserves, whether such reserves are currently in 
    production or have ever been in production. The Commission proposes to 
    exempt acquisitions of carbon-based mineral reserves valued at $200 
    million or less.
        This proposal is designed to exempt acquisitions of producing 
    reserves. If the reserves being acquired are not yet producing, or are 
    producing at a level below the income threshold in Sec. 802.2(b), the 
    acquisition may be exempted by Sec. 802.2(b) as an acquisition of 
    unproductive real property. If the reserves qualify as unproductive 
    property, their acquisition is exempt, regardless of the value of the 
    reserves. Producing reserves are governed by the valuation requirement 
    of Sec. 802.3 and are not exempt if their value exceeds $200 million.
        The Commission's studies of the coal and oil and gas industries 
    have shown that the value of the reserves in these industries are 
    substantial compared with asset holdings in other industries. The 
    holdings of reserves in these industries are widely dispersed, and 
    individual acquisitions have had minimal effect on concentration. 
    However, the Commission believes that an unlimited exemption for 
    reserves in these industries is inappropriate, because the scale of the 
    largest acquisitions of reserves warrants an examination of the 
    potential effects on competition.
        The $200 million threshold in proposed Sec. 802.3 applies to 
    reserves, rights to the reserves and associated exploration or 
    production assets. The acquisition of these associated assets is not 
    separately reportable because these assets generally have no 
    competitive significance separate from the reserves. In many instances, 
    producing reserves contain dedicated equipment that may have a market 
    value exceeding $15 million but have no practical value absent the 
    reserves. In addition, the wide availability of used equipment in the 
    oil and gas and coal industries makes it unlikely that a servicer of 
    oil fields or coal mines could purchase reserves to restrict supply of 
    available equipment in a given region. Thus, the Commission believes 
    that the inclusion of associated exploration and production assets is 
    necessary to facilitate meaningful application of the exemption.
        Associated exploration or production assets are defined in the 
    current proposal to include equipment, machinery, fixtures and other 
    assets that are integral to the exploration or production activities of 
    the reserves. In the oil and gas industry, examples of associated 
    exploration or production assets include proprietary or licensed 
    geological and geophysical data, wells, pumps, compressors, easements, 
    permits and rights of way. Excluded from these assets are flow and 
    gathering pipelines, distribution pipelines, interests in pipelines, 
    processing facilities and refineries. Acquisitions of these assets in 
    certain local markets have, from time to time, raised competitive 
    concerns prompting investigations by the enforcement agencies, and the 
    Commission does not believe that such acquisitions as a class are not 
    likely to violate the antitrust laws.
        In the coal industry, associated production assets are facilities 
    and equipment that are dedicated exclusively to production of the 
    reserves being transferred. For example, in surface mining in the 
    western U.S., such assets may consist of various load out facilities, 
    including storage barns and railroad spurs, and heavy equipment such as 
    draglines. Associated production assets would also include the long-
    term coal contracts and federal leases related to the reserves.
        It has been suggested that any exemption for carbon-based mineral 
    reserves be expanded to included all mineral reserves and renewable 
    natural resources. The perceived need for such an exemption regarding 
    non-producing reserves may be lessened by the inclusion in these 
    proposals of Sec. 802.2(b), which would exempt acquisitions of other 
    such reserves that are either not yet producing or have generated 
    revenues below the threshold amount. Regarding producing reserves, the 
    Commission has not included these in Sec. 802.3 because it does not 
    have an adequate factual basis for determining that these categories of 
    transactions should be exempt from the requirements of the act or 
    subject to a threshold higher than the $15 million threshold that is 
    identified in Sec. 802.20.
    
    [[Page 38937]]
    
    
    IV. Proposed Section 802.4: Acquisitions of Voting Securities of 
    Issuers Holding Only Real Property and Carbon-Based Mineral Reserves
    
        Proposed Sec. 802.4 is designed to exempt the acquisition of voting 
    securities of certain real estate companies that hold real property 
    assets the direct acquisition of which are exempt from the reporting 
    requirements pursuant to proposed Secs. 802.2 and 802.3. This provision 
    derives in part from existing Sec. 802.1(a) which exempts ``an 
    acquisition of the voting securities of an entity whose assets consist 
    solely of real property'' and related assets, if a direct acquisition 
    of those real property and related assets would be exempt.
    
        As the Commission stated when it promulgated existing 
    Sec. 802.1: (T)he applicability of (existing 802.1(a)) should not 
    depend upon the form of the acquisition. At least from an antitrust 
    standpoint, whether real estate is acquired directly or by acquiring 
    voting securities would seem to make no difference * * *. 43 FR 
    33488, July 31, 1978.
    
    Proposed Sec. 802.4(a) retains this approach with regard to new 
    facilities, unproductive real property, office and residential 
    property, hotels and motels, agricultural property, rental retail space 
    and warehouses. Proposed Sec. 802.4(b) contains a comparable exemption 
    for carbon-based mineral reserves.
    V. Proposed Section 802.5: Acquisitions of Investment Rental Property 
    Assets by Certain Investors
    
        Proposed Sec. 802.5 would exempt acquisitions of investment rental 
    property by institutional investors (as defined by Sec. 802.64 of the 
    rules) and by persons whose sole business is the acquisition or 
    management of investment rental property. This exemption is based in 
    part on section 7A(c)(11) of the act which exempts ``acquisitions, 
    solely for the purpose of investment, by a bank, bank association, 
    trust company, investment company, or insurance company, of * * * (B) 
    assets in the ordinary course of its business.'' It is designed to 
    exempt most types of real property acquisitions typically made by 
    institutional investors or real estate development and management 
    companies that are not exempted by proposed Sec. 802.2. The proposed 
    rule supplements proposed Sec. 802.2 by recognizing that there may be 
    additional categories of assets that, when transferred to certain 
    parties, are not likely to violate the antitrust laws.
        Institutional investors, such as financial institutions, insurance 
    companies, pensions plans and REITs, typically acquire for investment 
    real property such as hotels and shopping centers. Acquisitions of 
    these types of assets are exempt under Sec. 802.2(d) and 
    Sec. 802.2(f)(1), respectively. Proposed Sec. 802.5 is intended to 
    exempt acquisitions of other types of real estate, such as industrial 
    parks, that institutional investors and real estate development and 
    management companies often purchase.
        This exemption is applicable only to institutional investors or 
    persons engaged solely in the business of acquiring or managing 
    investment rental property. It applies only to acquisitions of real 
    property that will be held by the purchaser solely for rental or 
    investment purposes. Thus, the intent of the purchaser at the time of 
    the acquisition must be considered to determine whether the exemption 
    is available.
        Acquisitions of real property by institutional investors and real 
    estate development and management companies are typically made solely 
    for investment. These investors play no active role in the business 
    conducted on these properties and seek only to profit from their 
    investment in the real estate. In order to reduce risk of loss in the 
    value of the real estate they hold, purchasers of numerous properties 
    generally do not concentrate their investments in a single geographic 
    market. In many cases, these properties are purchased from persons who 
    already maintain them as investment rental property. Given the size and 
    unconcentrated nature of the real estate market, such acquisitions are 
    not likely to violate the antitrust laws.
        The requirement that real property, in order to come within the 
    definition of ``investment rental property assets,'' be held solely for 
    rental or investment purposes is designed to exclude from the exemption 
    acquisitions of rental property that may reduce competition. In one 
    such scenario, the acquiring person purchases property that is leased 
    to a competitor of an entity within the same person as the 
    institutional investor, and then chooses not to renew the competitor's 
    lease in order to disadvantage the competitor. Since the purchaser 
    intends to use its ownership of the property to disadvantage a 
    competitor, the property will not be held solely for rental or 
    investment purposes, and the Sec. 802.5 exemption is not available. The 
    requirement that property will be rented only to entities not included 
    within the acquired person is also designed to assure that the 
    exemption will not be available for any acquisition that is designed to 
    achieve business objectives that are not related to the real estate 
    market.
        For some acquisitions, in order to determine prior to the 
    acquisition whether the buyer's use requirement will be fulfilled post-
    acquisition, it may be necessary to examine the acquisition intent of 
    the acquiring person, particularly if that investor is controlled by a 
    person that also controls entities engaged in other businesses. The 
    acquisition intent can be inferred from the context of the transaction 
    and from actions by the acquiring person before the acquisition. 
    Circumstances or conduct such as the following may be scrutinized 
    separately or in combination to determine whether the acquiring person 
    has an intent that is fully consistent with holding property solely as 
    investment rental property assets: (1) The acquiring person undertook, 
    prior to the acquisition, a study of the cost of converting the 
    property for use by one of its businesses; (2) the property is to be 
    converted for use by the acquiring person; (3) the property will be 
    transferred to an entity within the acquiring person which would not 
    qualify for an exemption under Sec. 802.5; (4) prior to the 
    acquisition, the property is being leased to or used by entities 
    included within the acquiring person; (5) a portion of the acquired 
    property is being leased at the time of the acquisition to a competitor 
    of the acquiring person; and (6) the purchase price reflects the value 
    of a business operated on the property rather than the investment 
    rental value of the property.
        The investment rental property exemption may apply to real 
    property, such as office or residential property, hotels and motels, 
    that is also exempt under proposed Sec. 802.2. However, the important 
    distinction between Sec. 802.2 and Sec. 802.5 is that Sec. 802.2 
    exempts acquisitions of specific classes of assets by any acquiring 
    person and does not incorporate the intent-based test of Sec. 802.5. 
    Proposed Sec. 802.5 exempts any type of asset that can be classified as 
    investment rental property, but it is available only to institutional 
    investors and real estate development and management companies. In 
    addition, the exemptions for acquisition of real property under 
    Sec. 802.2 apply even if the acquiring person occupies the property for 
    any purpose; proposed Sec. 802.5 permits the acquiring person to use 
    the acquired investment rental property assets only to manage or 
    operate real property.
    
    VI. Aggregation Rules
    
        Section 801.15 states that the aggregation rules of Sec. 801.13 do 
    not apply to specified classes of transactions. At present, 
    transactions exempted by section 7A(c)(1) of the act fall within one of 
    the classes listed. As a result of Sec. 801.15(a), in determining 
    
    [[Page 38938]]
    whether the more than $15 million size-of-transaction criterion of 
    section 7A(a)(3) is met, the value of assets acquired in the ordinary 
    course of business is never counted. Because proposed Sec. 802.1 merely 
    declares that certain acquisitions are and are not considered in the 
    ordinary course of business under section 7A(c)(1), it does not appear 
    necessary to list proposed Sec. 802.1 separately in Sec. 801.15(a). 
    However, to eliminate possible confusion, proposed Sec. 802.1 is listed 
    in proposed Sec. 801.15(a), along with 7A(c)(1), to make clear that 
    assets exempted pursuant to Sec. 802.1(a), (b) and (c)(1) are not 
    deemed to be held as the result of an acquisition for aggregation 
    purposes. Therefore, a acquisition of current supplies valued at $8 
    million is not aggregated with later acquisitions from the same person 
    to determine if a proposed acquisition would exceed the $15 million 
    size-of-transaction notification threshold, since the current supplies 
    are exempt pursuant to section 7A(c)(1) and Sec. 802.1(b).
        The other proposed exemptions based on section 7A(c)(1) and other 
    sections of the act, e.g., section 7A(d)(2)(B), are listed separately 
    in Sec. 801.15 to make clear whether and under what circumstances the 
    assets they describe must be aggregated pursuant to Sec. 801.13. 
    Proposed Sec. 802.2, which would exempt acquisitions of new facilities, 
    unproductive real property, office and residential property, hotels and 
    motels, agricultural property, rental retail space and warehouses, is 
    also listed in Sec. 801.15(a), because Sec. 802.2 sets no dollar limit 
    on the amount of exempt assets that may be acquired without prior 
    notification. Proposed Sec. 802.4(a), which exempts acquisitions of 
    voting securities of issuers holding assets whose purchase would be 
    exempt under Sec. 802.2, and proposed Sec. 802.5, which exempts 
    acquisitions of investment rental property by certain investors, also 
    appear in proposed Sec. 801.15(a).
        Proposed Sec. 802.3, which exempts acquisitions of carbon-based 
    mineral reserves, and proposed Sec. 802.4(b), which exempts 
    acquisitions of voting securities of issuers holding exempt assets 
    under Sec. 802.3, appear in Sec. 801.15(b). This provision requires 
    parties to aggregate the value of otherwise exempt assets that are 
    transferred in separate acquisitions. Section 801.15(b) provides that 
    the aggregation rules of Sec. 801.13 are to be applied if, as a result 
    of a proposed subsequent transaction, the assets from that transaction 
    and an earlier transaction will exceed a quantitative limitation on the 
    exemption of assets of that kind. Thus the $200 million carbon-based 
    mineral reserves limitation in Sec. 802.3 which was not reached in an 
    earlier acquisition may be exceeded by a subsequent acquisition of 
    reserves.
        Example 4 of Sec. 801.15 amends the current Example 4, in which the 
    acquiring person is purchasing two mines. The existing example does not 
    indicate whether the mines contain carbon-based minerals. Based on the 
    value of the mines stated in the example, proposed Sec. 802.3 would 
    exempt their acquisition, if they are carbon-based mineral reserves. To 
    avoid possible confusion, the acquired assets have been changed to 
    manufacturing plants.
    List of Subjects in 16 CFR Parts 801 and 802
    
        Antitrust.
    
    Proposals
    
        The Commission proposes to amend title 16, chapter I, subpart H, 
    the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
    
    PART 801--COVERAGE RULES
    
        1. The authority citation for part 801 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 7A(d), Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18a(d), as added 
    by sec. 201, Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, 
    Pub. L. 94-435, 90 Stat. 1390.
    
        2. Section 801.15(a) (2) and (b) are revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 801.15  Aggregation of voting securities and assets the 
    acquisition of which was exempt.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) * * *
        (2) Sections 802.1, 802.2, 802.4(a), 802.5, 802.6(b)(1), 802.8, 
    802.31, 802.35, 802.50(a)(1), 802.51(a), 802.52, 802.53, 802.63, and 
    802.70;
        (b) Assets or voting securities the acquisition of which was exempt 
    at the time of acquisition (or would have been exempt, had the act and 
    these rules been in effect), or the present acquisition of which is 
    exempt, under section 7A(c)(9) and Secs. 802.3, 802.4(b), 802.50(a)(2), 
    802.50(b), 802.51(b) and 802.64 unless the limitations contained in 
    section 7A(c)(9) or those sections do not apply or as a result of the 
    acquisition would be exceeded, in which case the assets or voting 
    securities so acquired will be held; and
    * * * * *
        3. Section 801.15, Example 4 is revised, and Example 5 is added to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 801.15  Aggregation of voting securities and assets the 
    acquisition of which was exempt.
    
    * * * * *
        Examples: * * *
        4. Assume that acquiring person ``B,'' a United States person, 
    acquired from corporation X two manufacturing plants located abroad, 
    and assume that the acquisition price was $40 million. In the most 
    recent year, sales in the United States attributable to the plants 
    were $15 million, and thus the acquisition was exempt under 
    Sec. 802.50(a)(2). Within 180 days of that acquisition, ``B'' seeks 
    to acquire a third plant from X, to which United States sales of $12 
    million were attributable in the most recent year. Since under 
    Sec. 801.13(b)(2), as a result of the acquisition, ``B'' would hold 
    all three plants of X, and the $25 million limitation in 
    Sec. 802.50(a)(2) would be exceeded, under paragraph (b) of this 
    rule, ``B'' would hold the previously acquired assets for purposes 
    of the second acquisition. Therefore, as a result of the second 
    acquisition of all three plants before acquiring the third plant.
        5. ``A'' acquires $100 million in coal rights from ``B.'' Two 
    months later, ``A'' agrees to acquire oil and gas rights valued at 
    $75 million from ``B.'' Paragraph (b) of this section and 
    Sec. 801.13 require aggregating the previously exempt acquisition of 
    coal rights with the second acquisition. If the two acquisitions, 
    when aggregated, exceed the $200 million limitation on the exemption 
    for carbon-based mineral reserves in Sec. 802.3, ``A'' and ``B'' 
    would be required to file notification for the latter acquisition, 
    including within the filings the earlier acquisition. Since, in this 
    example, the total value of the assets in the two acquisitions, when 
    aggregated, is less than $200 million, both acquisitions are exempt 
    from the notification requirements.
    
    PART 802--EXEMPTION RULES
    
        1. The authority citation for part 802 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 7A(d), Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18a(d), as added 
    by sec. 201, Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, 
    Pub. L. 94-435, 90 Stat. 1390.
    
        2. Section 802.1 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 802.1  Acquisitions of goods in the ordinary course of business.
    
        Acquisitions of goods in the ordinary course of business are, 
    pursuant to section 7A(c)(1), exempt from the notification requirements 
    of the act. This section identifies certain acquisitions of goods that 
    are exempt as transfers in the ordinary course of business. This 
    section also identifies certain acquisitions of goods that are not in 
    the ordinary course of business and, therefore, do not qualify for the 
    exemption.
        (a) Operating unit. An acquisition of all or substantially all the 
    assets of an operating unit is not an acquisition in the ordinary 
    course of business. An operating unit means assets that are operated by 
    the acquired person as a business undertaking in a particular 
    
    [[Page 38939]]
    geographic area or for particular products or services, even though 
    those assets may not be organized as a separate legal entity.
        (b) New goods. An acquisition of new goods produced by the acquired 
    person for sale, or of new goods held by the acquired person solely for 
    resale, is in the ordinary course of business, except when acquired as 
    part of an acquisition described in paragraph (a) of this section.
        (c) Current supplies. An acquisition of current supplies is in the 
    ordinary course of business except when acquired as part of an 
    acquisition described in paragraph (a) of this section. The term 
    ``current supplies'' includes the following kinds of assets:
        (1) Goods acquired for the purpose of resale (e.g., inventory),
        (2) Goods acquired for consumption in the acquiring person's 
    business (e.g., office supplies, maintenance supplies or electricity), 
    and
        (3) Goods acquired to be incorporated in the final product (e.g., 
    raw materials and components).
        The term ``current supplies'' does not include used durable goods 
    (see paragraph (d) of this section.
        (d) Used durable goods. A good is ``durable'' if it is designed to 
    be used repeatedly and has a useful life greater than one year. An 
    acquisition of used durable goods is an acquisition in the ordinary 
    course of business if the goods are not acquired as part of an 
    acquisition described in paragraph (a) of this section and any of the 
    following criteria are met:
        (1) The goods are acquired and held by the acquiring person solely 
    for resale; or
        (2) The goods are acquired from an acquired person who acquired and 
    has held the goods solely for resale; or
        (3) The productive capacity of the goods being sold has been 
    replaced substantially by the acquired person, by acquisition or lease, 
    or the acquired person has in good faith executed a contract, agreement 
    in principle or letter of intent to replace substantially, by 
    acquisition or lease, the productive capacity of the goods being sold; 
    or
        (4) The goods have been used by the acquired person to provide 
    auxiliary functions, such as management services, accounting, data 
    processing, and legal services, that support its primary business 
    functions, and the acquired person has in good faith executed a 
    contract, agreement in principle or letter of intent to obtain 
    substantially similar auxiliary functions as were provided by the goods 
    being sold.
    
        Examples: 1. Stereo Corporation, which manufacturers cassette 
    and compact disc players, decides to sell all of the assets of its 
    Customer Service Division to ``X'' for $16 million. This division 
    repairs the company's products and products manufactured by others. 
    The division's assets include a repair facility valued at $10 
    million and an inventory of replacement parts valued at $6 million. 
    The combined assets constitute an operating unit of Stereo 
    Corporation. Thus, no part of the acquisition is exempt as an 
    acquisition in the ordinary course of business.
        2. ``A,'' a manufacturer of airplane engines, agrees to pay $20 
    million to ``B,'' a manufacturer of airplane parts, for certain 
    engine components to be used in the manufacture of the airplane 
    engines. The acquisition is exempt under Sec. 802.1(b) as new goods 
    as well as under Sec. 802.1(c)(3) as current supplies.
        3. ``A,'' a power generation company, proposes to purchase from 
    ``B,'' a coal company, $25 million of coal under a long-term 
    contract for use in its facilities to supply electric power to a 
    regional public utility and steam to several industrial sites. This 
    transaction is exempt under Sec. 802.1(c)(2) as an acquisition of 
    current supplies. However, if ``A'' proposed to purchase coal 
    reserves rather than enter into a contract to acquire output of a 
    coal mine, the acquisition would not be exempt as an acquisition of 
    goods in the ordinary course of business. The acquisition may still 
    be exempt pursuant to Sec. 802.3 as an acquisition of reserves of 
    carbon-based minerals if the requirements of that section are met.
        4. ``A,'' a national producer of canned fruit, preserves, jams 
    and jellies, agrees to purchase from ``B'' for $25 million a total 
    of 10,000 acres of orchards and vineyards in several locations 
    throughout the U.S. ``A'' plans to harvest the fruit from the 
    acreage for use in its canning operations. The acquisition is not 
    exempt under Sec. 802.1 because orchards and vineyards are real 
    property, not ``goods.'' If, on the other hand, ``A'' had contracted 
    to acquire from ``B'' the fruit and grapes harvested from the 
    orchards and vineyards, the acquisition would qualify for the 
    exemption as an acquisition of current supplies under 
    Sec. 802.1(c)(3). Although the transfer of orchards and vineyards is 
    not exempt under Sec. 802.1, the acquisition would be exempt under 
    Sec. 802.2 as an acquisition of agricultural property.
        5. ``A,'' a major passenger airline, proposes to sell two of its 
    used aircraft for $15.5 million to ``B,'' a used airplane dealer who 
    purchases planes from the major U.S. airline companies. ``B's'' 
    acquisition of the used airplanes is exempt under Sec. 802.1(d)(1) 
    provided that ``B'' is not acting as a broker or as the agent for 
    the seller or the ultimate purchaser of the used airplanes.
        6. ``A,'' a passenger airline, plans to sell for $18 million two 
    of its used airplanes to ``B,'' a cargo airline. ``A'' will also 
    sell three of its used airplanes for $25 million to ``C,'' a 
    regional passenger air carrier. ``A'' has, in good faith, executed a 
    contract to acquire planes with essentially the same capacity from 
    an airplane manufacturer to replace the planes it is selling to 
    ``B'' and ``C.'' Since ``B'' and ``C'' are acquiring goods that the 
    seller, ``A,'' has contracted to replace, both acquisitions are 
    exempt under Sec. 802.1(d)(3).
        7. ``A,'' a manufacturing company, has acquired several new 
    machines that will replace equipment on one of its production lines. 
    ``A's'' capacity to produce the same products will increase modestly 
    when the integration of the new equipment is completed. ``B,'' a 
    manufacturing company that produces products similar to those 
    produced by ``A,'' has entered into a contract to acquire for $18 
    million the machinery that ``A'' is replacing. Since ``A'' is 
    replacing with new machinery the productive capacity of the used 
    equipment it is selling, the acquisition by ``B'' is exempt under 
    Sec. 802.1(d)(3).
        8. ``A'' will sell to ``B'' for $16 million all of the equipment 
    ``A'' uses to perform ``A's'' data processing requirements. ``A'' 
    and ``B'' also entered into a contract which requires ``B'' to 
    perform ``A's'' data processing requirements. Although the assets 
    ``B'' will acquire make up essentially all of the assets of one of 
    ``A's'' auxiliary support services divisions, the acquisition 
    qualifies for the exemption in Sec. 802.1(d)(4) because auxiliary 
    support functions, however organized, are not an operating unit as 
    defined by Sec. 802.1(a). Auxiliary functions are not a ``business 
    undertaking'' as that term is used in Sec. 802.1(a). Rather, 
    auxiliary functions provide support and benefit to the company's 
    operating units and support the company's primary business 
    activities. However, if the assets being sold also derived revenues 
    from providing data processing services to third parties, then the 
    transfer of these assets would not be exempt under Sec. 802.1(d)(4), 
    since the equipment is being used in connection with a business 
    undertaking of ``A,'' in addition to providing auxiliary functions 
    to ``A''.
        In this example, the acquisition by ``B'' is exempt under 
    Sec. 802.1(d)(4) because ``A'' has entered into a contract for the 
    provision of the auxiliary functions provided by the goods being 
    sold. The exemption would apply even if ``A'' were contracting for 
    the provision of these services with a party other than ``B.''
        9. ``A,'' an automobile manufacturer, is discontinuing its 
    manufacture of metal seat frames for its cars. ``A'' enters into a 
    contract with ``B,'' a manufacturer of various fabricated metal 
    products, to sell its seat frame production lines and to purchase 
    from ``B'' all of its metal seat frame needs for the next five 
    years. This transfer of productive capacity by ``A'' is not exempt 
    pursuant to Sec. 802.1(d)(4). ``A's'' sale of production lines is 
    not the transfer of goods that provide auxiliary functions to 
    support the primary business activities of ``A''; this manufacturing 
    equipment is an integral part of ``A's'' production operations and 
    thus comprises an operating unit.
    
        3. Part 802 is amended by adding Secs. 802.2, 802.3, 802.4 and 
    802.5 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 802.2  Certain acquisitions of real property assets.
    
        (a) New facilities. An acquisition of a new facility is exempt as a 
    transfer of realty in the ordinary course of business. A new facility 
    is a structure that has not produced income and was 
    
    [[Page 38940]]
    either constructed by the acquired person for sale or held at all times 
    by the acquired person solely for resale. The new facility may include 
    realty, equipment or other assets associated with the operation of the 
    new facility. In an acquisition that includes a new facility, the 
    transfer of any other assets shall be subject to the requirements of 
    the act and these rules as if they were being acquired in a separate 
    acquisition.
        (b) Unproductive real property. An acquisition of unproductive real 
    property shall be exempt from the requirements of the act. In an 
    acquisition that includes unproductive real property, the transfer of 
    any assets that are not unproductive real property shall be subject to 
    the requirements of the act and these rules as if they were being 
    acquired in a separate acquisition.
        (1) Unproductive real property is any real property, including raw 
    land, structures or other improvements and natural resources, that has 
    not generated total revenues in excess of $5 million during the thirty-
    six (36) months preceding the acquisition.
        (2) Unproductive real property does not include manufacturing and 
    non-manufacturing facilities that have not yet begun operation or 
    manufacturing or non-manufacturing facilities that began operation 
    within the twelve (12) months preceding the acquisition.
        (c) Office and residential property. (1) An acquisition of office 
    or residential property shall be exempt from the requirements of the 
    act. In an acquisition that includes office or residential property, 
    the transfer of any assets that are not office or residential property 
    shall be subject to the requirements of the act and these rules as if 
    such assets were being transferred in a separate acquisition.
        (2) Office and residential property is real property, the 
    acquisition of which is not exempt under another provision of the act, 
    that is used primarily for office and residential purposes and 
    includes:
        (i) Office buildings,
        (ii) Residences,
        (iii) Common areas on the property, including parking and 
    recreational facilities, and
        (iv) Assets incidental to the ownership of such property, including 
    cash, prepaid taxes or insurance, rental receivables and the like.
        (3) If the acquisition includes the purchase of a business 
    conducted on the office and residential property, the transfer of that 
    business, including the space in which the business is conducted, shall 
    be subject to the requirements of the act and these rules as if such 
    business were being transferred in a separate acquisition.
        (d) Hotels and motels. (1) An acquisition of a hotel or motel shall 
    be exempt from the requirements of the act. In an acquisition that 
    includes a hotel or motel, the transfer of any assets that are not a 
    hotel or motel shall be subject to the requirements of the act and 
    these rules as if they were being acquired in a separate acquisition.
        (2) An acquisition of a hotel or motel that includes a casino, or a 
    hotel or motel that is being acquired as part of the acquisition of a 
    ski resort, shall be subject to the requirements of the act and these 
    rules.
        (e) Agricultural property. An acquisition of agricultural property 
    and associated agricultural assets shall be exempt from the 
    requirements of the act. Agricultural property is real property and 
    assets that primarily generate revenues from the production of crops, 
    fruits, vegetables, livestock, poultry, milk and eggs.
        (1) Associated agricultural assets are assets integral to the 
    agricultural business activities conducted on the property. Associate 
    agricultural assets include, but are not limited to, inventory (e.g., 
    livestock, poultry, crops, fruit, vegetables, milk, eggs); equipment 
    dedicated to the income-generating activities conducted on the real 
    property; structures that house livestock and other animals raised on 
    the real property; and fertilizer and animal feed. Associated 
    agricultural assets do not include processing facilities, such as 
    poultry slaughtering and processing facilities.
        (2) If an acquisition of agricultural property includes processing 
    facilities and other assets that are not associated agricultural 
    assets, these facilities and assets are subject to the requirements of 
    the act and these rules as if they were being acquired in a separate 
    acquisition.
        (f) Retail rental space; warehouses. An acquisition of retail 
    rental space (including shopping centers) or warehouses shall be exempt 
    from the requirements of the act, except when the retail rental space 
    or warehouse is to be acquired in an acquisition of a business 
    conducted on the real property. In an acquisition of retail rental 
    space or warehouses, the transfer of any assets that are neither retail 
    rental space nor warehouses shall be subject to the requirements of the 
    act and these rules as if such assets were being transferred in a 
    separate acquisition.
    
        Examples: 1. ``A,'' a major automobile manufacturer, builds a 
    new automobile plant in anticipation of increased demand for its 
    cars. The market does not improve and ``A'' never occupies the 
    facility. ``A'' then sells the facility to ``B,'' another automobile 
    manufacturer. This acquisition is not exempt as an acquisition of an 
    new facility, even though the facility has not produced any income, 
    since ``A'' did not construct the facility for sale. Also, the 
    acquisition is not exempt as an acquisition of unproductive property 
    since manufacturing facilities that have not yet begun operations 
    are explicitly excluded from that exemption.
        2. ``A'' proposes to acquire a $100 million tract of wilderness 
    land from ``B.'' Copper deposits valued at $17 million and timber 
    reserves valued at $20 million are situated on the land and will be 
    conveyed as part of this transaction. During the last three fiscal 
    years preceding the sale, the property generated $50,000 from the 
    sale of a small amount of timber cut from the reserves. ``A's'' 
    acquisition of the wilderness land from ``B'' is exempt as an 
    acquisition of unproductive real property because the property did 
    not generate annual revenues exceeding $5 million during the thirty-
    six months preceding the acquisition. The copper deposits and timber 
    reserves are by definition unproductive real property and, thus, are 
    not separately subject to the notification requirements.
        3. ``A'' proposes to purchase from ``B'' for $40 million an old 
    steel mill that is not currently operating to add to ``A's'' 
    existing steel production capacity. The mill has not generated 
    revenues during the 36 months preceding the acquisition but contains 
    equipment valued at $16 million that ``A'' plans to refurbish for 
    use in its operations. ``A's'' acquisition of the mill and the land 
    on which it is located is exempt as unproductive real property. 
    However, the transfer of the equipment and any other assets other 
    than the unproductive property is not exempt and is separately 
    subject to the notification requirements of the act.
        4. ``A'' proposes to purchase two downtown lots, Parcels 1 and 
    2, from ``B'' for $40 million. Parcel 1 contains no structures or 
    improvements. A hotel is located on Parcel 2 and has generated $9 
    million in revenues during the past 3 years. The purchase of Parcel 
    1 is exempt if it qualifies as unproductive real property; i.e., it 
    has not generated annual revenues in excess of $5 million in the 
    three fiscal years prior to the acquisition. Parcel 2 is not 
    unproductive real property, but its acquisition is exempt under 
    Sec. 802.2(d) as the acquisition of a hotel.
        5. ``A'' intends to purchase a poultry farm from ``B.'' The 
    acquisition of the poultry farm is a transfer of agricultural 
    property that is exempt pursuant to Sec. 802.2(e). If, however, 
    ``B'' has a poultry slaughtering and processing facility on his 
    farm, ``A'' would be required to file notification for the 
    acquisition of the processing facility if the higher of the 
    acquisition price or the fair market value of the facility exceeds 
    $15 million.
        6. ``A'' proposes to purchase the prescription drug wholesale 
    distribution business of ``B'' for $50 million. The business 
    includes six regional warehouses used for ``B's'' national wholesale 
    drug distribution business. Since ``A'' is acquiring the warehouses 
    in connection with the acquisition of ``B's'' prescription drug 
    
    [[Page 38941]]
    wholesale distribution business, the acquisition of the warehouses in 
    not exempt.
    Sec. 802.3  Acquisitions of carbon-based mineral reserves.
    
        (a) An acquisition of carbon-based mineral reserves (oil, natural 
    gas, coal, shale or tar sands) or rights to carbon-based mineral 
    reserves, whether such reserves are presently in production or have 
    ever been in production, and associated exploration or production 
    assets shall be exempt from the requirements of the act if the value of 
    the carbon-based mineral reserves, the rights and the associated 
    exploration or production assets to be held as a result of the 
    acquisition does not exceed $200 million. In an acquisition that 
    includes carbon-based mineral reserves, rights to carbon-based mineral 
    reserves and associated exploration or production assets, the transfer 
    of any other assets shall be subject to the requirements of the act and 
    these rules as if they were being acquired in a separate acquisition.
        (b) Associated exploration or production assets means equipment, 
    machinery, fixtures and other assets that are integral to current or 
    future exploration or production activities associated with the carbon-
    based mineral reserves that are being acquired. Associated exploration 
    or production assets do not include any pipeline system or processing 
    facility.
    
        Example: 1. ``A'' proposes to purchase from ``B'' for $250 
    million gas reserves that are not yet in production and have not 
    generated any income. ``A'' will also acquire from ``B'' for $180 
    million producing oil reserves and associated assets such as wells, 
    compressors, pumps and other equipment. The acquisition of the gas 
    reserves is exempt as a transfer of unproductive property under 
    Sec. 802.2(b). The acquisition of the oil reserves and associated 
    assets is exempt pursuant to Sec. 802.3, since the acquisition price 
    does not exceed the $200 million limitation.
        2. ``A,'' an oil company, proposes to acquire oil reserves 
    currently in production, several associated processing facilities 
    and a gathering pipeline system for $180 million. The acquisition of 
    the reserves is exempt. However, ``A'' must determine the value of 
    the processing facilities and the gathering pipeline system, since 
    these assets are excluded from the exemption in Sec. 802.3 for 
    transfers of associated exploration or production assets. If their 
    value exceeds $15 million, and their acquisition is not otherwise 
    exempt, ``A'' must file with respect to the transfer of the 
    facilities and the pipeline system.
        3. ``A,'' an oil company, proposes to acquire a coal mine and 
    associated production assets for $90 million from ``B,'' an oil 
    company. ``A'' will also purchase from ``B'' oil reserves valued at 
    $100 million and an oil refinery valued at $13 million. The 
    acquisition of the coal mine and the oil reserves is exempt pursuant 
    to Sec. 802.3. Although the refinery is excluded from the exemption 
    in Sec. 802.3 for transfers of associated exploration and production 
    assets, ``A's'' acquisition of the refinery is not subject to the 
    notification requirements of the act because its value does not 
    exceed $15 million.
    
    
    Sec. 802.4  Acquisitions of voting securities of issuers holding 
    certain real property assets.
    
        (a) An acquisition of voting securities of an issuer whose assets 
    consist solely of assets whose purchase would be exempt from the 
    requirements of the act pursuant to Sec. 802.2 is exempt from the 
    reporting requirements.
        (b) An acquisition of voting securities of an issuer whose assets 
    consist or will consist solely of assets whose purchase would be exempt 
    from the requirements of the act pursuant to Sec. 802.3 is exempt from 
    the reporting requirements.
    
        Example 1. ``A,'' a real estate investment company, proposes to 
    purchase 100 percent of the voting securities of Company C, a 
    wholly-owned subsidiary of ``B,'' a construction company. C's assets 
    are a newly constructed, never occupied hotel, including fixtures, 
    furnishings and insurance policies. The hotel qualifies as a new 
    facility under Sec. 802.2(a), and is also exempt under 
    Sec. 802.2(d). Therefore, the acquisition of the voting securities 
    of C is exempt pursuant to Sec. 802.4(a).
    
    
    Sec. 802.5  Acquisitions of investment rental property assets by 
    certain investors.
    
        (a) Acquisitions of investment rental property assets, or of voting 
    securities of an entity the assets of which consist solely of 
    investment rental property assets, by an institutional investor (as 
    defined by Sec. 802.64) or by any person whose sole business is the 
    acquisition or management of investment rental property assets, shall 
    be exempt from the requirements of the act.
        (b) Investment rental property assets. Investment rental property 
    assets means real property that:
        (1) Will be rented only to entities not included within the 
    acquiring person; and
        (2) Will be held solely for rental or investment purposes. 
    Investment rental property assets include:
        (i) Property currently rented,
        (ii) Property held for rent but not currently rented,
        (iii) Common areas on the property,
        (iv) Assets incidental to the ownership of property, which may 
    include cash, prepaid taxes or insurance, rental receivables and the 
    like, and
        (v) Space occupied by the acquiring person for the sole purpose of 
    maintaining, managing, or supervising the operation of real property.
    
        Example: 1. Insurance Company ``A'' proposes to acquire a 
    hospital currently leased to and operated by ``B,'' a major for-
    profit hospital corporation. ``A'' intends to continue ``B's'' lease 
    with the exception of one floor of the hospital, which ``A'' will 
    lease to an independent radiology clinic which the hospital will use 
    for its outpatient radiology needs. This acquisition is an exempt 
    acquisition of investment rental property assets since ``A'' intends 
    to rent the facility to the hospital and an independent clinic and, 
    thus, is holding the hospital solely for rental and investment 
    purposes.
    
        By direction of the Commission.
    Donald S. Clark,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-18596 Filed 7-27-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6750-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/28/1995
Department:
Federal Trade Commission
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
Document Number:
95-18596
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before September 29, 1995.
Pages:
38930-38941 (12 pages)
PDF File:
95-18596.pdf
CFR: (14)
16 CFR 802.50(a)(2)
16 CFR 801.13(b)(2)
16 CFR 802.2(b)
16 CFR 802.1(c)(3)
16 CFR 802.1(d)(3)
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