Sunday, December 22, 2024

ACCC says proposed Chemist Warehouse merger with Sigma raises ‘competition concerns’

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The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission says the proposed merger between Chemist Warehouse and Sigma Healthcare raises “competition concerns” and would be a “major structural change” for the country’s pharmacy sector.

The competition watchdog has released its preliminary statement of issues outlining a number of competition concerns, should the merger between the two companies proceed.

“This is a major structural change for the pharmacy sector, involving the largest pharmacy chain by revenue merging with a key wholesaler to thousands of independent pharmacies that in turn compete against Chemist Warehouse,” ACCC Commissioner Stephen Ridgeway said in a statement.

The ACCC said the deal would create a “new business model for the pharmacy sector” that “could raise barriers to rivals expanding or entering, which may lessen competition”.

“This lessening of competition may lead to reduced service quality for goods and services provided in pharmacies as well as higher prices for consumers,” Mr Ridgeway said.

“The transaction may also weaken the competitiveness of the different product and services offered by Sigma’s banner pharmacies.”

Sigma Healthcare manufactures a number of pharmaceutical products and operates hundreds of retail stores.(Facebook: Sigma Healthcare)

The proposed merger would see the company have end-to-end control of the pharmaceutical supply chain, from product creation, distribution, wholesale and retail sales — which the ACCC said it was particularly concerned by.

“We are focused on how the newly merged company may have the ability and incentive to favour Chemist Warehouse stores or worsen terms to non-Chemist Warehouse banner stores, raising their costs and rendering them less competitive,” Mr Ridgeway said.

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