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Tuesday, 10 July, 2001, 10:37 GMT 11:37 UK
Patricia Hewitt statement in full
Patricia Hewitt, Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, has decided not to permit the proposed acquisition by Lloyds TSB Group plc (Lloyds TSB) of Abbey
National plc (Abbey).
Ms Hewitt accepted the findings and recommendations of the Competition Commission and the advice of the Director General of Fair Trading that the merger may be expected to operate against the public interest. Ms Hewitt said: "I accept the unanimous conclusions of the CC, endorsed by the DGFT, that the merger would be against the public interest and should be prohibited. "This is because it would reduce competition in the markets for personal current accounts and banking services for small and medium sized enterprises, with the adverse effects in both markets of higher prices to customers and reduced innovation. "The CC considered a range of behavioural and structural remedies but concluded that such steps would not be effective and that prohibiting the merger was the only remedy capable of fully addressing the adverse effects. "I have asked the DGFT to seek suitable undertakings from Lloyds TSB to effect the prohibition of the merger." The Commission noted that personal current accounts (PCAs) were the core product in personal banking. The merger would increase the share of the PCA market held by the four leading banks (Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds TSB and RBS/NatWest - the "big four") from 72 to 77%. Within that Lloyds TSB, already the market leader, would increase its share from 22 to 27%. The merger would also remove one of the main sources of competition to the big four. The Commission concluded that it was important for competition that there are well-established rivals to the big four banks because:
The merger would remove one of the main sources of competition to the big four. The Commission considered that Abbey National was an important force for competition in the PCA market, regardless of whether the proposed merger between Bank of Scotland and Halifax proceeded. It concluded that the acquisition of Abbey National by Lloyds TSB could be expected to lead to higher prices and a loss of innovation. In SME banking, the commission concluded that the market was highly concentrated, and dominated by the big four. The commission noted that Abbey National was only a recent entrant to this market, but considered that its brand name, national network of branches and presence in personal and some business markets made it one of the very few players outside the big four able to compete in the SME market. The commission accepted that the merger would yield some efficiency savings. However, it did not consider that these would be passed on to consumers in reduced prices. It also concluded that the merger would harm consumer choice, with the possible loss of existing Abbey National products. The commission considered a number of possible remedies for the adverse effects it had identified. These included the divestment of existing Lloyds TSB or Abbey National businesses, including Cheltenham and Gloucester and Cahoot; the divestment of large numbers of bank branches including their customer base; undertakings regarding the terms of individual products to be offered by the merged group; and steps to improve customer information. It concluded that such steps would not be effective and raised practical problems of implementation, and that prohibiting the merger was the only remedy capable of fully addressing the adverse effects. The Director General of Fair Trading agreed with the CC's conclusions and recommendations, and Ms Hewitt's decision is in accordance with his advice.
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