In its January 2020 decision on CVC's acquisition of Celtic Rugby DAC (the rights holder in respect of the PRO14 rugby union competition), the Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC) continued its trend of imposing behavioural remedies which are unusual in an international context. As a condition to approval of this acquisition (during an extended Phase I review period lasting just over two months), the CCPC required a commitment that restricts behaviour which is not directly related to the notified transaction. Specifically, the CCPC obtained a commitment that:

if an entity invested in by CVC Funds, directly or indirectly, enters a legally binding agreement to acquire control over the commercial activities of the Six Nations Championship, it will voluntarily notify that transaction to the CCPC in the event the transaction does not meet the mandatory notification thresholds.

This is not the first time that the CCPC has imposed a behavioural commitment on an acquirer to notify future acquisitions (regardless of whether this would be legally required based on the turnover test). Such a commitment was obtained in the 2019 Phase II approval of LN-GAIETY's acquisition of MCD and in the 2017 Dalata/Clarion/Clayton extended Phase I approval.(1) However, it seems that the commitment obtained from CVC may cross a new frontier in its breadth given that it covers a future acquisition by any 'entity invested in by CVC Funds', the definition of which would seem to cover entities in which CVC has a minority non-controlling interest. It is difficult to see how this could be right and something in respect of which a commitment could reasonably be given by someone in CVC's position.

Endnotes

(1) For further information please see "CCPC accepts extensive remedies in LN-GAIETY's acquisition of MCD".