(Corrects termination fee in last paragraph)
WASHINGTON, Feb 23 (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Trade
Commission said on Friday it would challenge in court the
Norwegian company Wilhelmsen Maritime Services' WWI.OL plan to
buy smaller U.S. rival Drew Marine Group.
The FTC said the $400 million proposed deal would reduce
competition in the market for marine water treatment chemicals,
used in a ship's boiler water and engine cooling water systems.
If Wilhelmsen closed the deal with New Jersey's Drew Marine,
the FTC said the company would have 60 percent of the market for
marine water treatment chemicals, while its closest competitor
would have 5 percent.
"We disagree with the FTC's evaluation and will continue to
work towards a positive outcome," Wilhelmsen spokeswoman
Benedicte Teigen Gude told Reuters.
She said the deal had been submitted to antitrust enforcers
in London and Singapore. It had received approval from Britain,
while Singapore's review was ongoing, she said.
The FTC has filed an administrative complaint with an agency
judge asking for the deal to be scrapped.
It also authorized staff to request a preliminary injunction
in federal court temporarily stopping the deal while the
administrative process goes forward.
In most cases, if the agency wins in federal court, the
companies cancel their proposed transaction.
The deal has a $20 million termination fee, according to a
statement from Wilhelmsen when the transaction was announced in
April 2017.
(Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
((Diane.Bartz@thomsonreuters.com; 1 202 898 8313;))
Keywords: DREWMARINE M&A/WILHELMSEN