The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced the annual changes to the Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) Act notification thresholds. The HSR Act requires all persons contemplating certain mergers or acquisitions that meet or exceed the jurisdictional thresholds to file notification with the FTC and the Department of Justice and to wait a designated period of time before consummating such transactions. These thresholds are adjusted annually based on changes in the U.S. gross national product (GNP). The changes are expected to become effective 30 days after notice is published in the Federal Register.
Generally, the HSR Act requires notification for mergers, acquisitions, joint venture formations, and certain exclusive pharmaceutical license agreements over a certain size and among parties over a certain size. The size-of-transaction threshold will increase to $126.4 million from $119.5 million. Transactions that will result in the purchaser holding voting securities, assets or noncorporate interests valued above that threshold will be reportable if the size-of-parties test is also satisfied and no exemptions apply.
The size-of-parties threshold will also increase. Generally, one party must have sales or assets of at least $25.3 million, and the other party must have sales or assets of at least $252.9 million. Unless an exemption applies, transactions valued in excess of $505.8 million will require premerger notification regardless of the annual sales or assets of the parties.
FTC announces changes in filing fees
In addition to announcing the new HSR thresholds, the FTC approved publication of the new merger filing fee thresholds. There are six filing fee thresholds based on the size of the transaction:
To determine reportability, parties must apply the thresholds that are or will be in effect at the time of closing. However, the applicable filing fee is based on the filing fee threshold that is in effect at the time the parties submit their HSR filings.
Summary of new HSR thresholds are as follows:
Size-of-transaction threshold:
$119.5 million will become $126.4 million
Size-of-parties thresholds:
$23.9 million will become $25.3 million
$239 million will become $252.9 million
Size-of-transaction where size-of-parties no longer relevant:
$478 million will become $505.8 million
The HSR regulations are complex and address, among other things, how to determine the size of the person and the size of the transaction and whether an exemption could apply. It is important to be familiar not only with the specific thresholds but also with how the thresholds apply to your transactions.