2025-01252NoticeWallet

Oil Companies Slapped with Millions for Merger Impatience

Published Date: 1/21/2025

Notice

Summary

The U.S. government caught XCL Resources, Verdun Oil, and EP Energy breaking the rules by transferring ownership too soon during a merger review. They must pay nearly $5.7 million in fines, stop certain actions, and set up a program to follow antitrust laws. All this needs to happen within 30 to 60 days, keeping the energy market fair and square.

Analyzed Economic Effects

5 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 5 costs, 0 mixed.

Nearly $5.7M in Civil Penalties

The Final Judgment requires XCL and Verdun to pay $2,842,188.50 jointly and severally, and EP Energy to pay $2,842,188.50, for a total of $5,684,377.00. These civil penalties must be paid within 30 days of entry of the Final Judgment, and interest of 18% per year accrues on any late payment.

Ten-Year Injunction Against Similar Conduct

The United States asks the Court to enjoin the defendants, their officers, employees, successors, and others for ten years from engaging in any agreement, combination, or conspiracy that has the same effect as the alleged HSR Act violation. The injunction would bar repeating the same pre-closing coordination that gave rise to the case.

Ban on Pre-Closing Operational Control Transfers

During any HSR pre-consummation (waiting) period, the Final Judgment bars any party to a reportable transaction from combining, merging, or transferring operational or decision-making control over the to-be-acquired business. It also bars requiring one party to obtain approval from another for ordinary-course activities, delaying or suspending ordinary sales or development, and disclosing current or future prices or certain non-public information, subject to narrow exceptions for public information and supervised due diligence under an NDA.

Mandatory Antitrust Compliance Program and Deadlines

The Final Judgment requires the defendants to design, maintain, and operate an antitrust compliance program. They must appoint or retain a qualified Antitrust Compliance Officer within 30 days of entry, distribute the Final Judgment to key personnel within 45 days, provide required training (no later than 45 days after entry, within 30 days after a new person assumes a covered position, and at least annually), and certify observance of the compliance provisions to the United States within 60 days of entry.

HSR Filing Trigger: $368.0 Million Threshold

The complaint notes that, for the periods relevant here, the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act filing and waiting obligations applied when an acquiring person would 'hold' assets or voting securities above the HSR Act's size-of-transaction threshold, which was $368.0 million during the relevant period.

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Key Dates

Published Date
1/21/2025

Department and Agencies

Department
Independent Agency
Agency
Justice Department
Antitrust Division
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