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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Kington SARL v Thames Water Utilities Holdings Ltd (Rev1) [2025] EWHC 84 (Ch) (21 January 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2025/84.html Cite as: [2025] EWHC 84 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF THAMES WATER UTILITIES HOLDINGS LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
KINGTON SARL |
Applicant |
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- and |
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THAMES WATER UTILITIES HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Tom Smith KC, Philip Moser KC, Charlotte Cooke and Andrew Shaw (instructed by Linklaters LLP) for the Respondent
Adam Al-Attar KC and Edouardo Lupi (instructed by Akin Gump LLP) for the Class A AHG
Hearing date: 20 January 2025
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE TROWER:
"The existence of a restriction of competition will be a matter of factual and economic expert evidence that will need to be adduced at the sanction hearing".
and
"The Chapter I prohibition only applies where on the basis of proper market analysis it can be concluded that the agreement has actual or likely anti-competitive effects on the market. That type of market analysis will involve factual and economic expert evidence being adduced and tested at the sanction hearing."
"What we have in mind is that we will put before your Lordship what the draft expert evidence will look like. What I have got, at the moment, although I am not waiving privilege over it, which means I had to ask for it, I have got a report from (inaudible) that explains why, in their view, there is a plausible argument, but I cannot put it higher than that, and I am not going to come back to the court unless there is something more solid, "
In response to this, I made clear that the court would need an explanation as to why such evidence was required because I did not really understand why it was. I then said, "So if you do come back, you need to have a proper explanation."
"But this is a tight timetable and the only way in which it will satisfactorily lead to a just and fair resolution of the dispute is by full cooperation on all sides."
"The June Release Condition will be satisfied if, by 30 June 2025, a lock-up agreement in respect of a recapitalisation solution, whether by way of an equity raise or a creditor led solution has been entered into by at least (i) 66 2/3% of the Super Senior Funding and (ii) 66 2/3% of the aggregate Class A Debt to implement such solution through a restructuring plan ."
i) the Chapter I prohibition in s.2 of CA 1998 (i.e., that the JRC "consists in an agreement between undertakings which is anticompetitive by object and/or effect") and
ii) the Chapter II prohibition in s.18 of CA 1998 (i.e., that the imposition of the JRC amounts to an abuse of the collective market power enjoyed by the Class A AHG.
"Objection 4
9. There is a 'blot' on the Plan because the June Release Condition infringes the Chapter I prohibition contained in section 2(1) of the Competition Act 1998 and/or the imposition and/or inclusion of the June Release Condition in the Plan infringes the Chapter II prohibitions contained in (respectively) section 2(1) and section 18(1) of the Competition Act 1998. The June Release Condition is thus unlawful and void and the Court should not exercise its discretion to sanction a restructuring plan which contains such a term.
10. In particular:
10.1 As to the Chapter I prohibition:
10.1.1 The June Release Condition is or results from an agreement between "undertakings", namely the Class A Creditors who have agreed to impose and/or include it in the Plan; further or alternatively, the June Release Condition is or results from an agreement between the Plan Company and the Class A Creditors.
10.1.2 The June Release Condition has the object and/or effect of restricting or distorting competition between rival sources of funding for the purposes of the Recapitalisation Transaction. In particular, by imposing and/or including the June Release Condition in the Plan, the Class A Creditors have agreed to reserve to themselves in substance a right to control, or at least a significant degree of control, over the Recapitalisation Transaction, which right or control they otherwise would not have in the absence of the Condition. This is illegitimate, being detrimental to the competitive process for the provision of funding through the Recapitalisation Transaction and, thereby, to the outcome of the Group's future restructuring.
10.1.3 The June Release Condition affects or may affect trade within the UK.
10. 2 As to the Chapter II prohibition:
10.2.1 The Class A Creditors together have market power arising from their status as Class A Creditors and the imminent liquidity crisis facing TWUL. They are exercising that market power collectively (i.e., they are collectively dominant).
10.2.2 By imposing and/or including the June Release Condition in the Plan, the Class A Creditors are abusing that dominant position. In particular, they are using their position to reserve to themselves in substance a right to control, or at least a significant degree of control, over the Recapitalisation Transaction which right or control they otherwise would not have in the absence of the Condition. This is illegitimate and not ordinary competition on the merits, being detrimental to the competitive process for the provision of funding through the Recapitalisation Transaction and, thereby, to the outcome of the Group's future restructuring.
10.2.3 The June Release Condition affects or may affect trade within the UK."
i) Section 3.3, which explains that the Class A creditors who have proposed the JRC are in a horizontal relationship, in that they are (at least) potential competitors for the provision of both debt and equity funding to the Group (although it is accepted that the characterisation of the agreement as horizontal or vertical is a matter of law and that the JRC itself appears in a vertical agreement between the Plan Company and its creditors);
ii) Section 3.3.1, which explains that the JRC shares several economic features with bid rigging, which is a 'by object' infringement under competition law because the JRC confers on the Class A creditors the ability to control the outcome of the recapitalisation transaction, an outcome which will (from the perspective of other stakeholders) be worse than the outcome which would occur under a fully competitive process; and
iii) Section 4.2, which explains that the Class A creditors have an incentive to collude in order to achieve this outcome because it enables them to choose a 'bid' which favours them (either their own bid, or a bid from a third party which protects their position).
i) Unique Pub Properties v Roddy [2018] EWHC 4019 (Ch) at [21] in which Barling J commented that competition cases: "almost invariably require the assistance of an expert economist and/or an expert who can assess and define the relevant market": and
ii) Phones 4U Ltd v EE Ltd [2021] EWHC 2879 (Ch) at [13] in which Roth J said that "evidence of economic experts is of course regularly admitted in competition cases". He also said at [33], by reference to these parts of Phones 4U's case which set out a modelling of the expected effect on market share and profitability of a decision to cease supply, that:
" this is just the kind of analysis that the Court would expect to be advanced by an economic expert as opposed to a witness of fact. It involves an analysis of expected effect, taking into account the nature of the competition, the character of the customers and the overall market conditions. Indeed, I consider that for analysis and projections of that nature expert evidence is necessary."
"It is clear that the rule in relation to the admission of additional expert evidence, the adduction of which is not envisaged by or laid down in a directions order, is that the overriding objective must be fulfilled. It is important that the process is conducted in a manner that is fair to all of the parties concerned."
"very helpful evidence of the specific considerations of those parties intending to bid to provide equity funding to Thames Water, including evidence on what alternatives these investors may have been weighing up. If more evidence of this kind (or other relevant evidence) became available, I would seek to update my analysis accordingly."