Same-Industry
Marriages
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
Thanks to our ever-vigilant plucky planners, Charlestown has averted the horror of having a new Dollar Store. Click here for Westerly Sun coverage. |
The
same-industry marriages that will probably affect the largest number of people
are those being proposed in the health insurance industry, where Aetna is
seeking to buy Humana, and Anthem (formerly known as Wellpoint) is playing the
mating game with Cigna, though UnitedHealth may get in on the act. Additional
concentration does not bode well for keeping insurance premiums under control.
There’s
a lot more going on. This was driven home to me recently while I was updating
the parent-subsidiary linkages in the Subsidy Tracker database I oversee in my role as
research director of Good Jobs First. I had to make adjustments relating to
dozens of recently completed mergers.
Among
these are the combination of Heinz and Kraft Foods arranged by Warren Buffett
and the Brazilian investment firm 3G Capital, the union of deep-discount chains
Dollar Tree and Family Dollar, and the merger of packaging giants MeadWestvaco
and Rock-Tenn into a combined firm called WestRock.
An
interesting trend is increasing German control over what remains of the U.S.
industrial sector. Siemens recently completed its purchase of the industrial
equipment firm Dresser-Rand, and ZF Friedrichshafen acquired TRW Automotive.
Other
deals still in the pipeline include Staples’ bid for Office Depot, Expedia’s
plan to acquire Orbitz (after gobbling up Travelocity), Monsanto’s offer for
Syngenta, and AT&T’s plan to buy Dish Network, which in the meantime is
looking to acquire T-Mobile.
Business
apologists complain when the occasional deal — such as the attempted mergers of
Sysco and US Foods, and Comcast and Time Warner Cable — is blocked, but the
fact is that a large portion of proposed combinations face little opposition.
And
when regulators do protest, they can often been placated with relatively minor
concessions, such as the requirement that Dollar Tree sell off only 330 out
of the more than 8,000 outlets in the Family Dollar chain.
These
corporate combinations are all about profit. In a country that claims to revere
free competition, large corporations tend to move in the opposite direction:
they want to control markets. While human marriages, as Justice Kennedy put it,
are all about dignity, these business unions are about power and are thus one
kind of marriage we should not be celebrating.