[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 16, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 16CFR801.4]

[Page 586-587]
 
                     TITLE 16--COMMERCIAL PRACTICES
 
                   CHAPTER I--FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
 
PART 801_COVERAGE RULES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 801.4  Secondary acquisitions.

    (a) Whenever as a result of an acquisition (the ``primary 
acquisition'') an acquiring person will obtain control of an issuer 
which holds voting securities of another issuer which it does not 
control, then the acquisition of the other issuer's voting securities is 
a secondary acquisition and is separately subject to the act and these 
rules.
    (b) Exemptions. (1) No secondary acquisition shall be exempt from 
the requirements of the act solely because the related primary 
acquisition is exempt from the requirements of the act.
    (2) A secondary acquisition may itself be exempt from the 
requirements of the act under section 7A(c) or these rules.

    Examples: 1. Assume that acquiring person ``A'' proposes to acquire 
all the voting securities of corporation B. This section provides that 
the acquisition of voting securities of issuers held but not controlled 
by B or by any entity which B controls are secondary acquisitions by 
``A.'' Thus, if B holds more than $50 million of the voting securities 
of corporation X (but does not control X), and ``A'' and ``X'' satisfy 
Sections 7A (a)(1) and (a)(2), ``A'' must file notification separately 
with respect to its secondary acquisition of voting securities of X. 
``X'' must file notification within fifteen days (or in the case of a 
cash tender offer, 10 days) after ``A'' files, pursuant to Sec. 801.30.
    2. If in the previous example ``A'' acquires only 50 percent of the 
voting securities of B, the result would remain the same. Since ``A'' 
would be acquiring control of B, all of B's holdings in X would be 
attributable to ``A.''
    3. In the previous examples, if ``A's'' acquisition of the voting 
securities of B is exempt, ``A'' may still be required to file 
notification

[[Page 587]]

with respect to its secondary acquisition of the voting securities of X, 
unless that acquisition is itself exempt.
    4. In the previous examples, assume A's acquisition of B is 
accomplished by merging B into A's subsidiary, S, and S is designated 
the surviving corporation. B's voting securities are cancelled, and B's 
shareholders are to receive cash in return. Since S is designated the 
surviving corporation and A will control S and also hold assets or 
voting securities it did not hold previously, ``A'' is an acquiring 
person in an acquisition of voting securities by virtue of Sec. Sec. 
801.2 (d)(1)(ii) and (d)(2)(i). A will be deemed to have acquired 
control of B, and A's resulting acquisition of the voting securities of 
X is a secondary acquisition. Since cash, the only consideration paid 
for the voting securities of B, is not considered an asset of the person 
from which it is acquired, by virtue of Sec. 801.2(d)(2) ``A'' is an 
acquiring person only. The acquisition of the minority holding of B in X 
is therefore a secondary acquisition by ``A,'' but since ``B'' is an 
acquired person only, ``B'' is not deemed to make any secondary 
acquisition in this transaction.
    5. In example 4 above, suppose the consideration paid by ``A'' for 
the acquisition of B is $60 million worth of the voting securities of 
``A.'' By virtue of Sec. 801.2(d)(2), ``A'' is both an acquiring and 
acquired person; B is an acquired person and B's shareholders are 
acquiring persons. A will still be deemed to have acquired control of B, 
and therefore the resulting acquisition of the voting securities of X is 
a secondary acquisition. Although B's shareholders are now also 
acquiring persons, unless one of them gains control of ``A'' in the 
transaction, no B shareholder makes a secondary acquisition of stock 
held by ``A.'' If the consideration paid by ``A'' is the voting 
securities of one of ``A''s subsidiaries and a shareholder of B thereby 
gains control of that subsidiary, the shareholder will make secondary 
acquisitions of any minority holdings of that subsidiary.
    6. Assume that A and B propose through consolidation to create a new 
corporation, C, and that both A and B will lose their corporate 
identities as a result. Since no participating corporation in existence 
prior to consummation is the designated surviving corporation, ``A'' and 
``B'' are each both acquiring and acquired persons by virtue of Sec. 
801.2(d)(2)(iii). The acquisition of the minority holdings of entities 
within each are therefore potential secondary acquisitions by the other.

    (c) Where the primary acquisition is--
    (1) A cash tender offer, the waiting period procedures established 
for cash tender offers pursuant to sections 7A(a) and 7A(e) of the act 
shall be applicable to both the primary acquisition and the secondary 
acquisition;
    (2) A non-cash tender offer, the waiting period procedures 
established for tender offers pursuant to section 7A(e)(2) of the act 
shall be applicable to both the primary acquisition and the secondary 
acquisition.

[43 FR 33537, July 31, 1978, as amended at 48 FR 34432, July 29, 1983; 
52 FR 7080, Mar. 6, 1987; 66 FR 8688, Feb. 1, 2001; 67 FR 11902, Mar. 
18, 2002]