Oracle/PeopleSoft Global Competition Review Law Centre Lunch Talk William Bishop, Lexecon Ltd4 th February 2005.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Three Types of Inefficiency in Strategic Offers: Empirical Identification from Merger Remedy Settlements Luke Garrod, Bruce Lyons and.
Advertisements

 Past experience  SIEC test  Cases  Mergers in Times of Crisis  Conclusions.
English Welsh & Scottish Railway Holdings Ltd (“EWS”)/ Marcroft Holdings Ltd Adam Land Director of Remedies and Business Analysis Usual disclaimer: Personal.
1 Data Analysis for Competition Policy: an Introduction to Econometrics Katie Curry Senior Economist, OFT.
1 REFORM OF ARTICLE 82 EC BIICL, 24 February 2006 Treatment of Rebates Johanne Peyre.
Oracle vs. PeopleSoft David Fox James Hill Matt Tschabold.
Volvo-Scania Merger. Introduction September 1999 : Volvo notified the Commission of the plans to acquire with Scania Reasons for the merger: – Economies.
Ryan Martin Sean Ogle Tiare Packard 5/16/06
6 - 1 ©2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Cost Accounting 11/e, Horngren/Datar/Foster Chapter 6 Master Budget and Responsibility Accounting Mar 7,
Marketing Management MNM202-Y MND203-S.
Economics: Principles in Action
Economics of Strategy Fifth Edition Slides by: Richard Ponarul, California State University, Chico Copyright  2010 John Wiley  Sons, Inc. Chapter 13.
The Economics of Information Exchanges Matthias Pflanz, CRA International GCLC Lunch Talk, Brussels, 6 October 2008.
Chapter Thirteen Short-Run Decision Making: Relevant Costing COPYRIGHT © 2012 Nelson Education Ltd.
The Four Conditions for Perfect Competition
External Analysis.
6 th Annual Conference Moscow, 30 May Unilateral Conduct Working Group Case Study in the Assessment of Dominance British Airways plc v. Commission.
Inefficient Offers to an Agency Subject to Judicial Review: an econometric test of remedy agreement in EC merger regulation Luke Garrod Bruce Lyons Andrei.
Market Definition and Effects Analysis European Commission, DG Competition, Chief Economist Disclaimer: the views expressed cannot be regarded as stating.
Vertical mergers - EWS/Marcroft
Case 2: Staples-Office Depot Merger
Market segmentation and targeting
Copyright © 2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 19 Pricing Strategies.
SvitzerWijsmuller A/S and Adsteam Marine Ltd Julie Bon Adam Land ACE conference November 2007 Personal views, not those of CC.
Accounting for Intangible Assets
Global competition Law centre Lunch talk, 4 February 2005 Oracle/PeopleSoft The arguments for and against Claes Bengtsson Member of Chief Economist Team,
Ryanair / Aer Lingus Giulio Federico ACE Conference - Toulouse, November
Determinants of Credit Default Swap Spread: Evidence from the Japanese Credit Derivative Market.
Creating the global research village EU Procurement Nicola Anson, DANTE TF-MSP Meeting, 1 March 2011.
Antitrust. “Is there not a causal connection between the development of these huge, indomitable trusts and the horrible crimes now under investigation?
From « Guidelines on the applicability of Article 81 of the EC Treaty to horizontal cooperation Agreements » The purpose of these guidelines is to provide.
Economics RBB 26 JANUARY 2007SIMON BISHOP THE LAW AND ECONOMICS OF LOYALTY REBATES CENTRE FOR COMPETITION LAW AND POLICY, OXFORD UNIVERSITY.
John Hayes 15 May 2008 The 8th Annual Trans-Atlantic Antitrust Dialogue Economic Issues in the Commission’s Case Against Intel.
Shareholder protection in takeover offers and schemes of arrangement Jennifer Payne Professor of Corporate Finance Law, University of Oxford University.
How to assess vertical mergers cast your vote! Miguel de la Mano* Member of the Chief Economist Team DG COMP, European Commission *The views expressed.
Does EC balances efficiency gains against anti-competitive effects? A Preliminarily Empirical Evaluation Zafeira Kastrinaki EC Competition Enforcement.
First edition Global Economic Issues and Policies PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2004 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
RESEARCH IN THE CONTEXT OF COMPETITION BY MOKUBUNG N. MOKUBUNG 1.
Merger Antitrust Law Fundamentals Dale Collins Shearman & Sterling LLP April 18, 2013.
Handbook on Residential Property Price Indices Chapter 5: Methods Jan de Haan UNECE/ILO Meeting, May 2010.
1 Chapter 6: Revenue Analysis. 2 Revenue Recognition Criteria Both the criteria should be satisfied: Good and service has been delivered Cash is collected.
Chapter 17 Pricing and product mix decisions. Major influences on pricing decisions §Customer demand and reactions §Competitor behaviour §Costs l price.
Judge Sarah S. Vance, Eastern District of Louisiana Establishing Damages Under U.S. Antitrust Law.
1 CHAPTER 15 SHORT-TERM PLANNING DECISIONS. 2 Chapter Overview  How do relevant costs and revenues contribute to sound decision making?  What type of.
Assessing the efficacy of structural merger remedies: choosing between theories of harm? Steve Davies and Matt Olczak, ACLE EC Competition.
The Impact of Organizational Structure and Lending Technology On Banking Competition Hans Degryse Luc Laeven Steven Ongena Discussion by: Fabio Panetta.
META-ANALYSIS, RESEARCH SYNTHESES AND SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS © LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION & KEITH MORRISON.
CHAPTER 3: BUYING A LOCAL BUSINESS. OBJECTIVES: To find the factors you need to consider when purchasing a local business. To get a better idea of what.
Non-Horizontal Merger Analysis Mark Whitener Senior Counsel, Competition Law & Policy General Electric Company Presented to the Competition Commission.
EU MERGER LAW: fundamentals Eleanor M. Fox Professor, New York University School of Law ABA Antitrust Section Spring Meeting 2005.
Principles of Merger Analysis The Antitrust Masters Course V September 30, 2010 Andrea Agathoklis, Department of Justice Norman A. Armstrong, Jr., Federal.
Use and limits of market definition 11 November 2015 St. Martin’s conference, Brno Alexis Walckiers Belgian Competition Authority and ECARES-Université.
Slide 4.1 Chapter 4 Annual Report: Additional Financial Statements.
Copyright ©2005 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. Introduction to Marketing.
How Projects Get Started Conducting a Project Assessment 1.
Merger Working Group Workshop March 10-11, 2009 – Taipei, Taiwan Introduction to Merger Investigation and Investigative Planning International Competition.
© 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, Accounting for Managers, 1Ce, Ch 8 1.
The Impala case at the CFI Association of Competition Economists Conference 2007 Simon Pilsbury, Managing Consultant November 30th 2007.
Performance Evaluation System. A Situation Analysis A situation analysis identifies strategic options and opportunities A situation analysis involves.
Mergers and Acquisitions
Chapter 26 pricing strategies Section 26.1 Basic Pricing Strategies
Chapter 19 Pricing Strategies.
13. Merger Review and Settlement Procedures
Pre-Close Rules of Engagement
Chapter 10.
Bellwork What is the difference between a perfectly competitive firm, monopoly and oligopoly? Give examples of each.
Analyzing Telecom Mergers*
Merger Control : Basics of Substantive Assessment Horizontal and Non-Horizontal Mergers Definition of Relevant Market.
Economics: Principles in Action
Presentation transcript:

Oracle/PeopleSoft Global Competition Review Law Centre Lunch Talk William Bishop, Lexecon Ltd4 th February 2005

Oracle/PeopleSoft 2 Introduction Oracle made a hostile bid for PeopleSoft in June 2003 Resulted in longest-ever ECMR review (>12 months) Case raises many interesting issues in economics, law, politics? Lexecon Ltd advised Oracle throughout EC process (Lexecon Inc advised PeopleSoft)

Oracle/PeopleSoft 3 Timeline Oracle announces offer9 June 2003 US: 2 nd request 30 June 2003 EC: notification14 October 2003 EC: Phase II starts17 November 2003 US: DOJ challenge26 February 2004 EC: SO / oral hearing12 March – 1 April 2004 EC: clock stopped for new bid data14 April 2004 US: trial in San FranciscoJune - July 2004 US: SF court ruling 9 September 2004 EC: clock restarts7 October 2004 EC: decision26 October 2004 Merger completed 7 January 2005

Oracle/PeopleSoft 4 Products and competitors Overlap area: enterprise application software (EAS); particularly human resources (HR) and financials (FMS) Merging parties are #2 and #3 in EAS worldwide; SAP is #1 (stronger in Europe than US) EAS overall is fragmented – more concentrated in the “high end” (largest customers, highest functionality products) Oracle is also a leader in databases – complementary to EAS Oracle intended to discontinue PeopleSoft products eventually

Oracle/PeopleSoft 5 The main economic issues “Product” market definition: is there a “high end” market? Who competes in it? –(DOJ/EC disagreed on geographic market: EC found global market; DOJ decided on N. America) Unilateral (“non-coordinated”) competitive effects analysis Coordinated effects and (briefly) vertical/conglomerate issues were also considered and rejected

Oracle/PeopleSoft 6 “Product” market definition Commission’s view: “High function HR/FMS purchased by large customers with complex functional needs…” Defined by proxies: (1) customers >10,000 employees or €1bn revenue; (2) deals >€1m net license value Relied heavily on defining market by reference to customer groups – nb EAS is sold by individual negotiation Very difficult to find clear conceptual criteria or practical proxies Key development in EC case was conclusion on who is in the market – decision accepted a significant “fringe” (i.e. not 3-to-2)

Oracle/PeopleSoft 7 Unilateral effects Concern: reduction in competition without coordination (i.e. merged entity finds it rational to raise prices without expecting similar reaction from non-merging rivals) Typically an issue in differentiated product markets, when merging parties are close substitutes, and non-merging rivals are less close Empirical questions: how closely do parties compete? How closely do rivals constrain them? –Need to look at bidding data SO reached adverse conclusions, but without much data

Oracle/PeopleSoft 8 Econometric analysis PeopleSoft had submitted a very simple (and easy to criticise) analysis, claiming discount is higher when number of bidders is higher Oracle collected detailed information on 600+ bids; we carried out extensive econometric analysis (50+ regressions) 2 key questions: –Does number of rival bidders affect Oracle discounts? –Does identity of rival bidders (esp. PeopleSoft) affect Oracle discounts? We found no systematic evidence of either – Commission agreed

Oracle/PeopleSoft 9 Some thoughts on the economic issues A classic “gap case” (apparently played a role in finalising new ECMR) Unilateral effects in bid markets: what is the threshold for a SIEC? And what does theoretical “merger simulation” contribute? Market definition for bid markets with heterogeneous customers and a continuum of characteristics – what is a “relevant product market” in this setting? Does it matter? Disconnect between geographic and product market approaches? Loss of choice; effect on PeopleSoft installed base: are they relevant?

Oracle/PeopleSoft 10 Why bidding analysis? Contracts for EAS software awarded after a process of negotiation (i.e. competition takes place for the contract) Customers normally negotiate with several supplies and there are often several rounds of negotiation Key factor is how does the merger affect customers’ alternatives – are the merging parties’ products particularly close and how close are the remaining suppliers? Commission recognised that sales were made via a bidding process

Oracle/PeopleSoft 11 Bidding analysis in mergers (1/2) Aim is to identity who are the credible bidders for a particular type of contract and assess if the merging parties are particularly important competitive constraints on one another The Commission claimed just Oracle/PS/SAP credible bidders for high- end HR & FMS, and PS an important competitive constraint on Oracle Market definition typically difficult in bidding markets, in particular because of price discrimination resulting from negotiation, so markets may be defined in terms of customer types Who competes for different types of contracts can be informative, but customers may not invite all potential suppliers to bid for contracts

Oracle/PeopleSoft 12 Bidding analysis in mergers (2/2) Estimate the effects of the merger using the variation in the number and identity of bidders as a ‘natural experiment’ –Merger reduces the number of credible bidders  examine how # of bidders affects the discounts offered the merging parties and compare coefficients on # of bidder dummies –Merger removes particular competitor  examine how the identity of bidders affects the discounts offered by the merging parties, and compare coefficients on combinations of bidders including and excluding the acquired party

Oracle/PeopleSoft 13 Bidding analyses done in Oracle/PeopleSoft Europe –SO: PeopleSoft regression (Lex Inc) –September: Oracle bidding analysis (Lex Ltd) –October: EU Decision (Commission analysis) US trial –McAfee (DoJ) –Hausman (Oracle) –Pre-trial – CapAnalysis (Oracle)

Oracle/PeopleSoft 14 Lexecon Ltd analyses – Response to the SO Reviewed PeopleSoft regression analysis. SO claimed this analysis showed that “the removal of one competitor appears to reduce the rebate with [sic] 15% on average” Problems with PeopleSoft analysis –Result depends on 8 obs with anomalous margins and 3 obs for 3- rival bids which have high discounts –Explained just 8% of variation in discount and failed standard diagnostic tests  excludes explanatory variables and possible omitted variable bias If the 8 anomalous obs excluded and dummies for the # of rivals included, then only the dummy for 3 rivals is positive and significant

Oracle/PeopleSoft 15 Lexecon Ltd analyses – Additional analysis Collected new dataset on Oracle’s sales opps to large enterprises Econometric analysis: –Effect of # of bidders on Oracle’s discounts, and –Effect of the identity of bidders on Oracle’s discounts –Control for characteristics of the sales opportunity –Two measures of the discount used, total and discretionary –Estimate regressions using 11 samples of the data – proxies for different possible market definitions

Oracle/PeopleSoft 16 Lexecon Ltd analyses – Results Data showed that suppliers other than Oracle/PS/SAP competed to supply large enterprises, but in just a limited number of occasions No consistent evidence that a higher # of bidders associated with higher discounts, or discounts were higher when there were 3 rather than 2 bidders No consistent evidence that discounts were higher when Oracle competed against PS – just isolated examples which were either due to the presence of JDE or reflected just a very small number of sales opps. Commission obtained same results

Oracle/PeopleSoft 17 Issues and problems of any bidding analysis Omitted variables – common problem with cross-sectional data. If the omitted variable is correlated with any of the explanatory variables then the estimated coefficients are biased and inefficient Customers may not negotiate with all credible suppliers, so does comparing the outcome with and without the acquired supplier really capture the effect of the merger?