31st January 2025
Changes to the UK merger control regime, set out in the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act (the DMCC Act), came into force on 1 January 2025. In particular, this means that anyone party to an acquisition involving a target with UK sales or activities, needs to consider different rules to determine whether the Competition and Markets Authority (the CMA) has jurisdiction to review the transaction.
In this article, we look at:
Until the end of 2024, the CMA had jurisdiction to review a transaction where:
As of 1 January 2025:
Unlike the 25% share of supply threshold which has been brought forward from the old regime, the new hybrid test does not require any overlap in the parties’ UK activities. Given the CMA’s considerable discretion to establish the goods or services to which it applies the share of supply test, it is likely to be relatively easy for it to find that a business which generates £350 million turnover in the UK also supplies 33% of a particular category of goods or services in the UK.
Note also, that the second limb of the hybrid test can be met simply on the basis that the party in question:
The new thresholds apply to any deals that did not complete before 1 January 2025, provided the CMA had not already launched a Phase 1 review into the transaction by that date.
Further changes that have been implemented since 1 January 2025 are that:
The UK continues to operate a voluntary merger control regime and, unlike in many other jurisdictions, parties are free to complete a transaction which satisfies the merger control thresholds without notifying the CMA or obtaining its prior approval. However, where a transaction meets the jurisdictional thresholds, the CMA has four months from the date of completion and material facts about the transaction being made public to decide whether to refer it for an in-depth Phase 2 investigation. If, following such an investigation, the transaction is found to give rise to a substantial lessening of competition, the CMA can take various steps, including ordering full or partial divestment of the target business.
Firms which are party to an acquisition involving a target with UK sales or activities should therefore consider at an early stage whether the CMA may have jurisdiction to review a transaction under the new rules and if so, the best strategy to address the risk of a “call-in”.
Depending on factors such as the substantive competition issues raised by the transaction, the parties’ risk appetite and the deal timetable, options will include:
Once the first firms are designated as having SMS (which is expected to be in October 2025), parties will also have to consider if their deals trigger the mandatory reporting obligation described above. On 14 January 2025, the CMA launched an investigation into whether Google should be designated as having SMS in respect of general search and search advertising. Just a week later, the CMA announced a further investigation, this time into both Google and Apple in respect of their mobile ecosystems.
Our Competition team has extensive experience advising firms on the application of the UK (and non-UK) merger control rules to their transactions and, as appropriate, shepherding them through the filing and clearance process.