FTC officials say 7-Eleven purchase of Speedway chain likely illegal
despite closing
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[May 15, 2021] WASHINGTON
(Reuters) -The completion of 7-Eleven's purchase of thousands of
Speedway gas and convenience stores is potentially illegal and may raise
competitive concerns in hundreds of local U.S. markets, two top U.S.
Federal Trade Commission officials said as a dispute between the agency
and companies broke into the open on Friday.
Marathon Petroleum Co, which owned the Speedway chain, and 7-Eleven,
owned by Japan's Seven & I Holdings Co Ltd, announced Friday they had
closed the $21 billion deal involving some 3,800 stores in 36 states.
"The parties have closed their transaction at their own risk. The
Commission will continue to investigate to determine an appropriate path
forward," said FTC acting Chairwoman Rebecca Slaughter and Rohit Chopra,
a commissioner. Both are Democrats.
The two officials said they believed "this transaction is illegal," and
said the commission had failed to reach an agreement with the companies
to resolve antitrust concerns.
7-Eleven said in a statement that it was legally allowed to close the
transaction. "Statements or implications to the contrary are false," the
company said.
The company said it had reached an agreement with FTC staff in late
April to sell 293 fuel outlets with a plan to close on May 14.
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The logo of 7-Eleven is seen at a 7-Eleven convenience store in
Tokyo, Japan December 6, 2017. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
But on May 11, Slaughter and Chopra said they wanted more time, the company
said. "7-Eleven took the request very seriously," it said. "Given that 7-Eleven
was abiding by the negotiated settlement agreement, we closed today on
schedule," it added.
In a separate statement, Marathon Petroleum said that it and "7-Eleven worked
very cooperatively over many months with the FTC and will continue to do so
going forward."
The two Republican FTC commissioners, Noah Phillips and Christine Wilson, said
in a statement that they also believed the deal violated antitrust law.
"Rather than resolve the issues and order divestitures (or sue to block the
transaction), the acting chairwoman and Commissioner Chopra have issued a
strongly worded statement. Their words do not bind the merging parties, leaving
consumers completely unprotected," Phillips and Wilson said.
(Reporting by Makini Brice and Diane BartzEditing by Marguerita Choy, Cynthia
Osterman and Leslie Adler)
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