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FEDERAL REGISTER
Vol. 64, No. 124
Notices
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION (FTC)
Premerger Notification: Reporting and Waiting Period Requirements
64 FR 34804
DATE: Tuesday, June 29, 1999
ACTION: Notice of amendment of Formal Interpretation 15.
  SUMMARY: The Premerger Notification Office ("PNO") of
the Federal Trade Commission ("FTC"), with the concurrence of the Assistant Attorney General
incharge of the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice ("DOJ"), is amending a Formal
Interpretation of the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act, which requires persons planning certain mergers,
consolidations, or other acquisitions to report information about the proposed transactions to the
FTC and DOJ. The Interpretation concerns the reportability of certain transactions involving the
formation of a Limited Liability Company ("LLC"), a relatively new form of entity authorized by
state statutes, resulting in the combination of businesses into the new LLC.
  This Formal Interpretation was first published on October
13, 1998, together with a request for comments, to become effective on December 14, 1998. 63
FR 54713 (October 13, 1998). The PNO received six comments which were placed on the public
record. On December 2, 1998, the effective date of this Interpretation was postponed until
February 1, 1999, to give the PNO staff more time to analyze and respond to the comments. 63
FR 66546 (December 2, 1998).
  Formal Interpretation 15 was modified in response to the
comments and republished on February 5, 1999. 64 FR 5808 (February 5, 1999). Under the
revised Interpretation, the formation of an LLC which combines under common control in the
LLC two or more pre-existing businesses will be treated as subject to the requirements of the
HSR act under @ 801.2(d) of the HSR rules, 16CFR 801.2(d), which governs mergers and
consolidations. Because Formal Interpretation 15 had been modified substantially, the effective
date of the Interpretation was postponed until March 1, 1999. Id.
  Shortly after the Interpretation became effective, it became
apparent that the Interpretation as it applies to transactions involving existing LLCs does not
give clear guidance. The section of the Interpretation dealing with acquisitions of and by existing
LLCs has therefore been amended in a number of respects to explain how much transactions are
to be analyzed. First, the first full paragraph in the third column 64 FR 5809 (February 5, 1999)
has been deleted. Second, the four paragraphs in this notice which begin with the phrase "The
acquisition of a membership interest in an existing LLC will be a potentially reportable event * *
*" and end with phrase "* * * whether there is a change in any member's membership interest."
have been inserted between the carryover paragraph and the first full paragraph in the second
column at 64 FR 5810. Third, Example 2, at 64 FR 5811, has been revised in a number of
respects. Fourth, a new Example 3 has been added, and current Examples 3 and 4 at 64 FR 5811
have been renumbered as Examples 4 and 5, Fifth, a new Example 6 has been added, and current
Examples 6-8 at 64 FR 5811 have been renumbered as Example 8-10. Finally, current Example 8
(now Example 10) has been revised a number of respects. The new language in the
Interpretation is shown in italics.
  Formal Interpretation 15, as published on February 5, 1999,
will continue in effect until the Amended Formal Interpretation 15 becomes effective.
DATES: The Amended Formal Interpretation 15 will become effective on July 1,1999.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard B. Smith, Deputy Assistant Director,
Premerger Notification Office, Bureau of Competition, Room 301, Federal Trade Commission,
Washington, DC 20580. Telephone (202) 326-2850. Thomas F. Hancock, Attorney, Premerger
Notification Office, Bureau of Competition, Room 301, Federal Trade Commission,
Washington, DC 20580. Telephone: (202) 326-2946.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The text of Formal Interpretation Number 15, as
amended, is set out below.
Formal Interpretation Number 15
  Formal Interpretation pursuant to @ 803.30 of the Premerger
Notification Rules, 16 CFR 803.30, Concerning the Reporting Requirements for the Formation
of Certain Limited Liability Companies ("LLCs").
  This is a Formal Interpretation pursuant to @ 803.30 of the
Premerger Notification Rules ("the rules"). The rules implement Section 7A of the Clayton Act,
15 U.S.C. 18a, which was added by sections 201 and 202 of the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust
Improvements Act of 1976 ("the act"). This Formal Interpretation and a request for comments
were originally published on October 13, 1998, to become effective on December 14, 1998. See
63 FR 54713 (October 13, 1998). The PNO staff received six comments. The staff postponed the
effective date until February 1, 1999, in order to have more time to analyze these comments. 63
FR 66546 (December 2, 1998). Formal Interpretation 15, published here, has been modified
substantially in response to the comments received and postpones the effective date until March
1, 1999.
  The act requires the parties to certain acquisitions of voting
securities or assets to notify the FTC and the DOJ and to wait a specified period of time before
consummating the transaction. The purpose of the act and the rules is toensure that such
transactions receive meaningful scrutiny under the antitrust laws, with the possibility of an
effective remedy for violations, prior to consummation. Under the rules, certain types of
transactions, such as mergers, consolidations, and the formation of corporate joint ventures, are
treated as acquisitions of voting securities potentially subject to the act, while other transactions,
such as the formation of partnerships, are deemed non-reportable.See @@ 801.2(d) and 801.40
of the rules, 16 CFR 801.2(d) and 801.40.
  The LLC n1 is a relatively new form of business
organization that is neither a partnership nor a corporation but a hybrid legal entity that
combines certain desirable features of both partnerships and corporations. Specifically, an LLC
is taxed as a partnership but shields its members from liability as a corporation shields its
shareholders. The first LLC statute was passed in 1977 by Wyoming n2 and a trickle of other
states followed. The use of LLC's expanded significantly after 1988 when the Internal Revenue
Service ("IRS") concluded that an LLC organized under the Wyoming statute was taxable as a
partnership. n3By 1993 all 51 jurisdictions had LLC laws of one form or another.
  n1 This Formal Interpretation applies only to the
reportability of the formation of certain LLC's. The position of the FTC staff on the status and
treatment under the act of other non-corporate entities such as partnerships remains
unchanged.
  n2 Wyo Stat. @@ 17-15-101 to -135 (Supp. 1989).
  n3 Rev. Rul. 88-76, 1988-2 C.B. 360, 361.
  When it first encountered these types of organizational
structures, the PNO concluded that as "companies" LLCs are "entities" within the meaning of @
801.1(a) (2), 16 CFR 801.1(a) (2), and that, until it had more experience with them, the PNO
would treat LLCs like corporations. Initially, therefore, @ 801.40 of the rules, 16 CFR 801.40,
"Formation of joint venture or other corporations," governed the formation of LLCs and an
interest in an LLC was treated as a voting security for HSR purposes.
  On further analysis, the PNO concluded that this initial
approach was too inclusive. LLCs at the time were primarily used as vehicles for the creation of
start-up businesses. The PNO's treatment of LLCs resulted in requiring HSR filings in a large
number of transactions that did not raise antitrust concerns. Furthermore, the PNO believed that
in most LLCs the interest held by the members of the LLC was more like a partnership interest
than a voting security interest.Consequently, in 1994, the PNO began to informally advise parties
that the treatment of LLCs for reporting purposes would depend on a determination of whether
the interest acquired in the LLC was more like a voting security interest or more like a
partnership interest. n4
  n4 Specifically, the information of an LLC was treated as
potentially reportable only if the LLC had a group that functioned like a board of directors and
the LLC ownership interest resulted in the holders appointing person(s) other than their
employees, officers, or directors (or those of entities controlled by such holder or its ultimate
parent entity) to that group. In such cases, the LLC interest was treated as a voting security
interest. In all other instances, LLC interests were treated as partnership interests and the
acquisition of these interests was not reportable (unless the acquiring person would hold 100
percent of the interests as a result of the acquisition).
  This treatment of LLCs has not been completely satisfactory.
The use of LLCs has evolved, and while LLCs continue to be used as vehicles for start-up
enterprises, they are now often used to combine competing businesses under common control.
Indeed, the Commission's litigation staff has investigated several transactions raising potential
antitrust concerns involving the formation of LLCs. In these transactions, previously separate
businesses were combined under common control when they were both contributed to a single,
newly-formed LLC. Nevertheless, the creation of the LLC to combine competing businesses
under common control was typically not treated as reportable under the PNO's then-current
treatment. However, the union of competing businesses under common control is of obvious
potential antitrust concern. Since the past treatments of LLCs have not been satisfactory at
singling out those transactions that were the most likely to have anticompetitive effects, the PNO
staff has decided to revise its approach to LLCs in order to better carry out the purposes of the
act.
  The formation of an LLC into which two or more businesses
are contributed, like other unions of businesses under common control, is a kind of merger or
consolidation. n5 Section 801.2(d) (1) (i) of the rules, 16 CFR 801.2(d) (1) (i), states that
"[m]ergers and consolidations are transactions subject to the act ** *." n6
A filing
requirement for those LLC formations that involve the combination of businesses is appropriate
and advances the purposes of the act and the rules, namely, to ensure that the antitrust
enforcement agencies have advance notice of, and a timely opportunity to challenge,
transactions which may violate the antitrust laws.
  n5 While combining businesses in an LLC may not be a
"merger" or"consolidation" in the strictest sense because they do not involve corporations, the
rationale of this interpretation is similar to that used by the PNO under @801.2(d) to require
filing for acquisitions of non-profit corporations which, like LLCs, typically do not issue voting
securities. (See ABA, The Premerger Notification Practice Manual, 1991 ed., Interp.
#109.)
  n6 In fact, as it was originally promulgated in 1978, @
801.2(d) (1) (I), 16CFR 801.2(d) (1) (I), stated that "[a] merger, consolidation, or other
transaction combining all or any part of the business of two or more persons shall be an
acquisition subject to the act * * *." (emphasis added) 43 FR 33539, July 31,1978. In 1983, this
section was changed to clarify the treatment of mergers and consolidations under the rules, and
the italicized wording was eliminated. However, there is no indication that this change was
intended to narrow the scope of @ 801.2(d). Rather, according to the Statement of Basis and
Purpose to the 1983 changes, 48 FR 34430, July 29, 1983, the Commission simply sought to
make clear that mergers and consolidations are treated as acquisitions of voting securities and to
aid the parties to a merger in determining which is the acquiring person and which is the
acquired person.
  This Formal Interpretation, therefore, changes the PNO's
treatment of LLC's as follows: The PNO will henceforth treat as reportable the formation of an
LLC if (1) two or more preexisting, separately controlled businesses will be contributed, and (2)
at least one of the members will control the LLC (i.e., have an interest entitling it to 50 percent
of the profits of the LLC or 50 percent of the assets of the LLC upon dissolution. n7 The
formation of all other LLCs will be treated similar to the formation of a partnership which, under
the PNO's longstanding position on partnership formations, will not be reportable.
  n7 Of course, as with all transactions, the HSR size of
person and size of transaction requirements need to be met as well, and exemptions may
apply.
  In determining what is a "business" for purposes of this
Interpretation, the PNO will look to the definition of "operating unit" for purposes of @
802.1(a) of the rules, 16 CFR 802.1(a), namely, "* * * assets that are operated * * * as a business
undertaking in a particular location or for particular products or services, even though those
assets may not be organized as a separate legal entity." In addition, for purposes of this Formal
Interpretation, the contribution to an LLC of an interest in intellectual property, such as apatent,
a patent license, know-how, and so forth, which is exclusive against all parties including the
grantor, is the contribution of a business, whether or not the intellectual property has generated
any revenues.
  Under this Interpretation, the approach of @ 801.2(d) will
be used to determine the acquiring person(s) and acquired person(s) for potentially reportable
LLC formations. n8 Section 801.2(d)(2)(i) states that "[a]ny person party to a merger or
consolidation is an acquiring person if as a result of the transaction such person will hold any
assets or voting securities which it did not hold prior to the transaction" (emphasis added). In the
context of the formation of a new LLC, this means that any person that will control an LLC in
which two or more previously separate businesses will be combined will be an acquiring person.
Thus, if "A" and "B" form a 60-40 LLC, the 60 percent member,"A," will be an acquiring person
with respect to the contributions of "B."Section 801.2(d) (2) (ii) states that "[a]ny person party to
a merger or consolidation is an acquired person if as a result of the transaction the assets or
voting securities of any entity included within such person will be held by any other person"
(emphasis added). In the above example of the formation of a 60-40 LLC, "B" would therefore
be an acquired person. If "A" and "B" were to form a 50-50 LLC to which both were to
contribute businesses, both would be both acquiring and acquired persons because both would
control the LLC and thus hold assets or voting securities it did not hold prior to the transaction.
"A" and"B" would file in both capacities, assuming the relevant size criteria were met.Thus, both
the acquiring and acquired persons will be required to file notification and, in accordance with
@ 803.10 of the rules, the 30-day waiting period will begin when both persons have substantially
complied with the notification requirements.
  n8 The Formal Interpretation as published in October
described a method to determine reportability that was based on concepts found in @ 801.40 of
the HSR rules, 16 CFR 801.40. Certain comments suggested that such an approach was
confusing and would increase the likelihood that parties would make erroneous conclusions on
their reporting obligations. In light of those comments, and the change in approach this Formal
Interpretation adopts, there will no longer be any need to look to @ 801.40 to determine
reporting obligations.
  Under this Interpretation, the nature of the acquisition(s)
taking place when an LLC is formed, that is, whether it is an acquisition of assets or of voting
securities, depends on what is being contributed by the other member(s) of the LLC. n9 In the
50-50 LLC described above, suppose that "A" contributes a group of assets constituting a
business and "B" contributes 50 or more percent of the voting securities of a corporate
subsidiary, S. In this example, "B" will be deemed to have made an acquisition of assets and "A,"
an acquisition of voting securities.
  n9 In this respect, the Interpretation necessarily departs from
the text of @801.2(d) (1) (i), which provides that all mergers and consolidations shall betreated
as acquisitions of voting securities.
  In addition, any exemption in the act of rules that would
make any other acquisition non-reportable may make the acquisition by one or more of the
contributors to an LLC non-reportable. If, for example, "A's" asset contribution consists of hotel
properties the acquisition of which would be exempt under @ 802.2(e), "B's" acquisition in the
formation of this LLC would not be reportable. Similarly, if S has sales and assets of less than $
25million and the value of the S stock that will be held by "A" as a result of the acquisition is $
15 million or less, then "A's" acquisition in the formationwould be exempted by @
802.20(b).
  To determine whether a filing is required, the parties to
potentially reportable formation transactions also must determine the size-of-person and
size-of-transaction, which should be done just as in any other asset or voting securities
acquisition in accordance with @@ 801.10 and 801.11 of the HSR rules.Since these transactions
are similar to asset exchanges, for most such transactions there will not be a determined
acquisition price for the acquired assets or voting securities to use in applying the
size-of-transaction test. For such transactions, parties should use the market price or fair market
value where another contributor contributes 50 or more percent of the voting securities of an
issuer (see @ 801.10(a)), or the fair market value where another contributor puts assets
constituting a business into the LLC (see @801.10(b)).
  The acquisition of a membership interest in an existing LLC
will be apotentially reportable event (1) if it results in the acquiring person holding100 percent
of the membership interests in that LLC, and (2) that person had not previously filed for and
consummated the acquisition of control of that LLC. Such an acquisition is reportable as the
acquisition of all the assets of the LLC. This is similar to the PNO's treatment of acquisitions of
partnership interests.
  Acquisitions of additional businesses by existing LLCs fall
into one of two categories. First, those that result in a change in the percentage membership
interest of any member will be treated by the PNO as the formation of a new LLC under this
Interpretation. In such a new formation, the acquisition by any person that will control the new
LLC of the assets or voting securities of the business(es) being contributed that it did not
previously control is potentially reportable. Both additional businesses and the business(es)
already in the existing LLC are regarded as being contributed to the new LLC. These transactions
should be analyzed using the criteria for formations. Accordingly, persons will be regarded as
acquiring only those businesses that they come tocontrol as a result of the transaction.
  Second, those acquisitions of businesses by existing LLCs
that do not result in a change in the percentage membership interest of any member are not
treated as new formations but, rather, as the acquisition of the assets or voting securities of the
business by the LLC or, if it is controlled, by its ultimate parent entity, or entities, and, as such,
are potentially reportable.
  The acquisition by an existing LLC of assets or voting
securities not constituting a business will be treated as the acquisition of assets or voting
securities by the LLC or, if it is controlled, by its post-acquisition ultimate parent entity, or
entities, and, as such, is potentially reportable. This treatment will pertain without regard to
whether there is a change in anymember's membership interest.
  This Formal Interpretation will not require reporting of some
LLC formations and some acquisitions of existing LLC interests that would have required
reporting under the Interpretation announced by the PNO in October of 1998. Unlike the
October version, this Formal Interpretation requires reporting of the formation of an LLC only if
the formation brings to gether with the LLC twoformerly separately controlled businesses.
Comments received suggested that the treatment announced in the October version would have
covered a substantial number of LLCs that are not likely to raise competitive concerns. For
example, the October Formal Interpretation would have viewed LLCs that are created solely as
financing vehicles as reportable. In these transactions, a financial institution (or other party
providing financing) in the ordinary course of its business contributes only cash or other
financial assets and one other party contributes one or more operating units to a new LLC that
the financialinstitution may control for HSR purposes, at least for a period of time. Under this
revised Interpretation, so long as such financing transactions do not result in the contribution of
a business to the LLC by two or more members, it will not be treated as reportable. n10
  n10 There is no evidence to suggest now that LLC
formations where only one business is contributed are being used to accomplish a merger or
consolidation of two businesses. However, the PNO will look carefully at these transactions in
the future and, it they begin to be used to accomplish a merger or consolidation, will re-visit this
issue.
  As described above, except for a situation where, as a result
of an acquisition, the acquiring person would hold 100 percent of the interests in an existing
LLC, no acquisition of an interest in an existing LLC is reportableunder this Interpretation.
Several comments indicated that LLC agreements are sometimes entered into in which the right
to receive more than 50 percent of the LLC's profits shifts from one member to another upon the
happening of some event outside the control-or even the knowledge-of the members. Under the
definition of control applicable to LLCs (i.e., @ 801.1(b)(ii)), under the October Interpretation,
such a shift in the right to receive profits might have created a reporting obligation. The
commenters argued that it would be unduly burdensome to require the beneficiaries of such
shifts to file and that no substantive law enforcement interest would be served. The PNO does
not intend that such shifts be reportable under this Formal Interpretation. Since such a shift
would be the post-formation acquisition of any interest in an existing LLC without the
contribution of another business, it will not be treated as subject to the reporting requirements of
the act.
  Some of the reasons for concluding that the formation of
certain LLCs should be treated as reportable may apply equally well to partnerships. The
position ofthe PNO, however, is that the formation of a partnership is not reportable and
acquisitions of partnership interests that do not result in one person's holding 100 percent of the
interests in a partnership are non-reportable. Several comments received on the Formal
Interpretation published in October suggested that no change to the treatment of partnerships
was necessary at this time. The treatment of partnerships was originally adopted, in part, because
of the difficulty of monitoring compliance with HSR reporting obligations since many
partnerships can be formed informally or by implication in many typical business arrangements.
Furthermore, there has been no suggestion in any of the comments that partnerships are being
used with any greater frequency now to combine competing businesses. Consequently, the PNO
has decided not to change its treatment of partnerships at this time, but it may re-visit this issue
in the future as developments require.
  The following examples are an integral part of this Formal
Interpretation:
  1. "A" and "B" both plan to contribute businesses to a new
LLC in which each will acquire a 50 percent interest. This LLC formation would involve both
"A" and "B" making reportable acquisitions if the size-of-person and size-of-transaction tests are
met. Each acquisition would be reportable unless exempted by Section 7A(c) of the act or Part
802 of the HSR rules. "A" would file as an acquiring person and "B" as an acquired person for
"A's" acquisition of the assets being contributed by "B," and "B" would file as an acquiring
person and "A" as an acquired person for "B's" acquisition of the assets contributed by "A." If
"A" or "B" (or both) contributed 50 percent or more of the voting securities of a corporation, the
acquisition(s) would be treated as an acquisition of voting securities of the issuer whose shares
are contributed.
  2. "A," "B," and "C" form an LLC in year 1 in which each
receives a one-third interest and to which each contributes a business valued at approximately $
20 million. "A," "B," and "C" are $ 100 million persons. This formation would not be reportable
because no member controls the LLC. In year 2, "X," also a $ 100 million person, acquires the
membership interests of "A" and "B" for cash. This would not be reportable because acquisitions
of membership interests in existing LLCs are potentially reportable only if they result in one
person holding 100 percent of the interests in the LLC. Note that if "X" also contributes a
business to the LLC in exchange for the LLC membership interest it receives, the transaction
will be treated as the formation of a new LLC. The acquisition of the new business will not be
reportable because "X" already controls it. "X"may, however, have a filing obligation as an
acquiring person with respect to the businesses already in the LLC if the size tests are met and no
exemption applies. The existing LLC would be the acquired person because no member controls
it. Note also that in the example where "X" contributed only cash and did not file under HSR, if
"X" were subsequently also to acquire "C's" membership interest it would then hold 100 percent
of the interests in this LLCand would therefore have to file for the acquisition of all of the assets
of the LLC.
  3. In year 1, "A" and "B" form an LLC to which "A"
contributes a business and takes back a 60 percent interest and "B" contributes cash and takes
back a 40 percent interest. This transaction is not reportable. Suppose, however, that in year
4:
  a. "B" contributes a new business, "A" contributes cash, and
there is no change in percentage membership interests. This would not be analyzed as a new
formation but would be treated as an acquisition by the LLC. "A," as the ultimate parent entity of
the LLC, would file as acquiring and "B" as acquired for the acquisition of the business.
  b. "A" contributes a business, "B" contributes cash, and their
interests change so that "A" has 61 percent and "B" has 39 percent. This is a new formation
because of the changes in the [*34808] membership interests but it is not reportable because two
or more separately controlled businesses are not being contributed, as "A" controlled both
businesses before the transaction.
  c. "B" contributes a business, "A" contributes cash, and their
interestschange so that "A" has 59 percent and "B" has 41 percent. This is also a new formation.
"A" will file to acquire the business being contributed by "B."
  d."B" contributes a business and the membership interests
change so that "B" has 60 percent and "A" has 40 percent. This is a new formation, and "B"
would file to acquire the business contributed by the LLC. "A," as the ultimate parent entity of
the existing LLC, would file as the acquired person.
  e. "C" contributes assets not constituting a business and the
percentage interests are adjusted so that "A" has 50 percent, "B" has 30 percent, and "C" has 20
percent. This is not a new formation because the assets being contributed are not a business. "A,"
as ultimate parent entity of the LLC, will file to acquire these assets from "C."
  4. "A" and "B" form a new LLC, to which "A" will
contribute its widget business and "B" will contribute cash for operating capital. This formation
would not be reportable because two previously separate businesses are not being contributed to
the LLC.
  5. "A," "B," and "C" form a 60-20-20 LLC to which "A"
contributes cash and receives a 60 percent membership interest and "B" and "C" each contribute
an operating unit for a 20 percent interest. This is a kind of a consolidation of "B's" and "C's"
operating units into the new LLC and "A" will control the LLC. There are two reportable
transactions (assuming the size criteria are met and no exemption applies): "A" acquiring the
operating unit contributed by "B," and "A" acquiring the operating unit contributed by "C".
  6. In year 1, "A," "B," and "C" form a new LLC to which
each contributes a business and takes back a one-third membership interest. In year 4, the LLC
acquires all the voting securities of another business from "D" in exchange forcertain assets not
constituting a business. This acquisition would not be analyzed as the formation of a new LLC
because no member's percentage interest changes as a result of the transaction. Rather, the LLC
would be viewed as acquiring the voting securities of the new business from "D." This
transaction will be reportable if the size criteria are met and no exemption applies. "D"will, of
course, have to analyze its acquisition of assets from the LLC to determine if it is also
reportable.
  7. "A" proposes to consolidate its widget business, which it
has conducted in two subsidiaries and a division, into a newly-formed LLC in which it will hold
a 60 percent membership interest. This would not be reportable because, although separate
businesses are being combined, they were not under separate control prior to the
transaction.
  8. "A," "B," and "C" form a new LLC in which "A" will have
a 60 percent interest and "B" and "C" each will have 20 percent interests. "A," a large,
international pharmaceutical company, contributes $ 100 million in cash and the assets of a
pharmaceutical product which is currently on the market. This pharmaceutical product line
constitutes a business. "B" contributes licenses toseveral patents which it will also continue to
use to manufacture various drugs. "C" will contribute licenses which are exclusive even against
itself for several drugs which are still at the testing stage and which have never been marketed.
With a 60 percent interest, "A" will control the LLC. Since the licenses "B"will contribute are
not exclusive as against it, they do not constitute a business. However, the licenses being
contributed by "C" do constitute a business, even though they have not generated any revenue.
"A" has a potential reporting obligation for the formation of this LLC for acquiring assets from
"C." This formation combines two pre-existing, separately controlled businesses in an LLC
which "A" will control.
  9. "A" and "B" are both regional grocery store chains which
do their data processing in-house. "A's" data processing unit does work only for "A" and
"B's"only for "B." "A" and "B" decide to contribute the assets used in their data processing
operations to a new jointly-controlled LLC which will provide data processing services to "A"
"B." Assume the size tests are met. This would not be reportable because the assets used to
provide such management and administrative support services do not constitute businesses. Cf
@ 802.1(d)(4) of the rules and Examples 10 and 11, 16 CFR 802.1(d)(4). This would be the case
even if the new LLC intends to begin offering data processing services to third parties, since this
would be beginning a new business rather than uniting existing businesses. Note, however, that
the result would be different if "A" and "B" had used their equipment to provide any data
processing services to others prior to contributing it to the new LLC, for then each would be
contributing an existing business.
  10. In year 1, "A," "B," and "C" form a new LLC to which
each contributes a business in exchange for a one-third interest. This formation is not reportable
because no member controls the LLC. Suppose that in year 2 "A" sells additional assets to the
LLC for cash. This transaction is not analyzed as a new formation under this Formal
Interpretation. However, the LLC has a potential filing obligation as the acquiring person of
those assets and "A" as the acquired person. Note that it is irrelevant whether the assets sold by
"A" in year 2 constitute a business. Note also that if assets not constituting a business are
acquired by an LLC, even if the percentage membership interests change in the transaction, this
is not analyzed as the formation of a new LLC, either, but as an acquisition by the LLC (or its
post-acquisition ultimate parent entity).
Benjamin I. Berman,
Acting Secretary.
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