U.S. Merger Notification Threshold Increases to $119.5 Million
Annual increases in U.S. merger notification thresholds and substantially increased filing fees take effect on March 6, 2024.
The Federal Trade Commission ("FTC") announced that the Hart-Scott-Rodino ("HSR") Act filing thresholds will increase again in 2024. These thresholds determine which mergers and acquisitions must be reported to the federal government before consummation. The higher thresholds are expected to take effect on March 6, 2024, and will remain in effect through early 2025.
The FTC also confirmed that new HSR filing fee thresholds will take effect the same day. Parties to any transaction that will close on or after March 6, 2024, may wish to confirm their HSR filing analysis using the adjusted thresholds.
Adjusted HSR Jurisdictional Thresholds
Size-of-Transaction Threshold. An HSR filing may be required if an acquirer will hold, as a result of a transaction, voting securities, noncorporate interests, and/or assets of an acquired person valued in excess of $119.5 million (the 2023 threshold was $111.4 million). If the Size-of-Transaction is between $119.5 million and $478 million, the transaction also must satisfy the Size-of-Person threshold, described below. Transactions valued in excess of $478 million need not satisfy the Size-of-Person threshold.
Size-of-Person Threshold. A transaction meets the Size-of-Person threshold if either the acquired or acquiring person has annual net sales or total assets of at least $239 million and the other party to the transaction has at least $23.9 million in annual net sales or total assets. (The 2023 thresholds were $222.7 million and $22.3 million, respectively.) If the acquired person is not "engaged in manufacturing," the threshold is not met unless that person has at least $23.9 million in total assets or $239 million in annual net sales.
The table below summarizes these threshold changes.
There are exceptions to the reporting requirements under the HSR Act. Qualified counsel should be consulted whenever a transaction may implicate this statute.
Interlocking Directorates Thresholds And Civil Penalties Amounts Also Increase
In January, the FTC also increased the jurisdictional thresholds for the prohibition on interlocking directorates under Section 8 of the Clayton Act. Section 8 prohibits a person from serving as an officer or director of competing corporations if each company has a net worth of more than $48,559,000. However, there is no violation if the competitive sales of either are less than $4,855,900.
Also in January, the FTC announced an increase in the maximum civil penalty for violations of the HSR Act (among other statutes) from $50,120 per day to $51