Hart-Scott-Rodino Act
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FTC’s Reporting Rule for Pharmaceutical Patent Transfers Upheld

On May 30, 2014, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled in favor of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in a dispute with the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) regarding the Commission’s authority to require the pharmaceutical industry to report certain transfers of exclusive patent rights under the Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) Act.

The dispute centered on a Final Rule promulgated by the FTC in November 2013.  Patents are considered assets by the FTC and their transfer may be reportable.  Some transactions provide for the transfer of certain exclusive patent rights without implicating the transfer of the patent in its entirety.  The FTC maintains that the exclusive right to commercially use all or part of a patent is, in substance, identical to a full acquisition of the patent.  The challenged rule was intended to clarify the circumstances when a transfer of exclusive rights to a pharmaceutical patent is considered a potentially reportable acquisition of an asset under the HSR Act.

PhRMA sued to have the new rule set aside.  PhRMA contended in its complaint that the FTC lacked the statutory authority to issue rules that target a single industry, as opposed to rules of general effect.  The trade organization also contended that the FTC failed to establish a rational basis for an industry-specific rule and that it failed to comply with legally required procedures in instituting the rule. PhRMA and the FTC both filed motions for summary judgment.

In granting summary judgment to the FTC, Judge Beryl Howell agreed that Congress had never spoken in the HSR Act to the specific issue of whether the FTC was authorized to issue industry-specific rules: “Nothing in this text restricts the FTC to generating only general rules rather than industry specific rules.”  Given the congressional silence on this specific question, the court next considered whether the FTC’s interpretation of the statue was a permissible one.  Under the applicable legal standard, an agency’s rule is entitled to deference “as long as it is a permissible construction of the statute.”  The FTC contended that the Final Rule did not expand “‘HSR requirements to parties or transactions not covered by the Act,’  but ‘simply clarif[ied] the types of transactions that constitute asset transfers for which the Act requires prior notification.’”  The court concluded this was a permissible construction of the authority granted to the FTC under the HSR Act.




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Tweet: No Antitrust Problems Here

by Lincoln Mayer

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has approved social media heavyweight Twitter’s $350 million stock acquisition of MoPub.  Twitter’s purchase of the mobile advertising exchange, which helps companies place ads on mobile devices, is expected to enhance Twitter’s ability to tailor mobile ads to users.  The size of the deal triggered the Hart-Scott Rodino (HSR) Act’s mandatory filing requirement, but the FTC concluded that the acquisition posed no anticompetitive obstacles.

This high-profile transaction is a reminder of the value of good planning and involving antitrust counsel early in the planning process, even where the parties do not anticipate significant antitrust issues.  With enough advance warning, counsel can work with the antitrust agencies to showcase the procompetitive aspects of the transaction, mitigate any problematic aspects and seek rapid clearance of deals that, at least from a competitive standpoint, are relatively straightforward.  In Twitter’s case, that meant being able to resolve a potential regulatory issue involving its largest acquisition to date before the launch of Twitter’s initial public offering.




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CEO Fined for H-S-R Act Violation on Acquisition of Stock-Based Compensation

by Joseph Winterscheid

In December 2011, the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) announced that a public company chief executive officer (CEO) will pay a $500,000 civil penalty to settle charges that he violated Hart-Scott-Rodino Act (H-S-R Act) premerger reporting and waiting period requirements.  The DOJ, acting at the request of the Federal Trade Commission, charged the executive for failing to satisfy the H-S-R Act’s requirements before acquiring common stock under the company’s stock-based compensation program.  The CEO allegedly exceeded the H-S-R Act filing threshold ($59.8 million when the alleged violation occurred) upon the vesting of outstanding restricted stock units awards and the reinvestment of dividends and short term interest through his 401(k) account.

Violations of the H-S-R Act’s reporting and waiting period requirements are subject to fines of up to $16,000 per day.  The DOJ’s recent enforcement action illustrates the potentially costly consequences of a failure to consider H-S-R Act compliance in connection with investment planning for corporate executives (and other individuals) who will hold or acquire stock valued in excess of the H-S-R Act’s notification threshold (currently $66 million and moving to $68.2 million effective February 27, 2012), and that violations may occur under somewhat obscure circumstances.  In this connection, it is also important to remember that the relevant valuation is determined by reference to the total value of the voting securities that will held following any given acquisition of shares.  Thus, for example, if an executive already holds shares valued at $65,999,999, a reporting obligation could be triggered by acquiring just one additional share.  Likewise, if the executive’s existing holding has already crossed the $66 million valuation threshold through appreciation, any further acquisitions could trigger a reporting obligation.               




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