Saint Alphonsus Medical Center v. St. Luke's Health System, Ltd , 778 F.3d 775 ( 2015 )


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  •                  FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    SAINT ALPHONSUS MEDICAL                No. 14-35173
    CENTER - NAMPA INC.; SAINT
    ALPHONSUS HEALTH SYSTEM                   D.C. Nos.
    INC.; SAINT ALPHONSUS                1:12-cv-00560-BLW
    REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER,             1:13-cv-00116-BLW
    INC.; TREASURE VALLEY
    HOSPITAL LIMITED
    PARTNERSHIP; FEDERAL TRADE               OPINION
    COMMISSION; STATE OF IDAHO,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    and
    IDAHO STATESMAN PUBLISHING,
    LLC; THE ASSOCIATED PRESS;
    IDAHO PRESS CLUB; IDAHO
    PRESS-TRIBUNE LLC; LEE
    PUBLICATIONS INC.,
    Intervenors,
    v.
    ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYSTEM,
    LTD.; ST. LUKE’S REGIONAL
    MEDICAL CENTER, LTD.;
    SALTZER MEDICAL GROUP,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    2   ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Idaho
    B. Lynn Winmill, Chief District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    November 19, 2014—Portland, Oregon
    Filed February 10, 2015
    Before: Richard R. Clifton, Milan D. Smith, Jr.,
    and Andrew D. Hurwitz, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Hurwitz
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.                3
    SUMMARY*
    Clayton Act
    The panel affirmed the district court’s judgment in favor
    of the Federal Trade Commission, the State of Idaho, and two
    local hospitals, holding that the 2012 merger of two health
    care providers in Nampa, Idaho, violated § 7 of the Clayton
    Act.
    Section 7 of the Clayton Act bars mergers whose effect
    “may be substantially to lessen competition, or to tend to
    create a monopoly.” The plaintiff must first establish a prima
    facie case that a merger is anticompetitive, and the burden
    then shifts to the defendant to rebut the prima facie case.
    The panel held that the district court did not clearly err in
    determining that Nampa, Idaho, was the relevant geographic
    market. The panel also held that the district court did not
    clearly err in its factual findings that the plaintiffs established
    a prima facie case that the merger will probably lead to
    anticompetitive effects in that market. The panel further held
    that a defendant can rebut a prima facie case with evidence
    that the proposed merger will create a more efficient
    combined entity and thus increase competition. The panel
    held that the district court did not clearly err in concluding
    that the defendant did not rebut the plaintiffs’ prima facie
    case where the defendant did not demonstrate that efficiencies
    resulting from the merger would have a positive effect on
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    4   ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    competition. Finally, the panel held that the district court did
    not abuse its discretion in choosing a divestiture remedy.
    COUNSEL
    Brian K. Julian, Anderson, Julian & Hull LLP, Boise, Idaho,
    for Defendant-Appellant Saltzer Medical Group.
    J. Walter Sinclair, Brian C. Wonderlich, Holland & Hart LLP,
    Boise, Idaho; Jack R. Bierig (argued), Scott D. Stein, Charles
    K. Schafer, Ben Keith, Tacy F. Flint, Sidley Austin LLP,
    Chicago, Illinois, for Defendants-Appellants St. Luke’s
    Health System, Ltd. and St. Luke’s Regional Medical Center,
    Ltd.
    Keely E. Duke, Duke Scanlan Hall PLLC, Boise, Idaho;
    David A. Ettinger (argued), Honigman Miller Schwartz &
    Cohn LLP, Detroit, Michigan, for Plaintiffs-Appellees Saint
    Alphonsus Medical Center-Nampa Inc.; Saint Alphonsus
    Health System Inc.; Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical
    Center, Inc.
    Raymond D. Powers, Portia L. Rauer, Powers Tolman Farley,
    PLLC, Boise, Idaho, for Plaintiff-Appellee Treasure Valley
    Hospital Limited Partnership.
    Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General, Brett T. DeLange,
    Deputy Attorney General, Deborah L. Feinstein, Director,
    Bureau of Competition, J. Thomas Greene, Peter C. Herrick,
    Henry C. Su, Boise, Idaho; Jonathan E. Nuechterlein, General
    Counsel, David C. Shonka, Principal Deputy General
    Counsel, Joel Marcus (argued), Washington, D.C., for
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.   5
    Plaintiffs-Appellees The Federal Trade Commission and The
    State of Idaho.
    Barbara D.A. Eyman, Eyman Associates, PC, Washington,
    D.C., for Amicus Curiae America’s Essential Hospitals.
    Lynn S. Carman, Natallia Mazina, Medicaid Defense Fund,
    San Anselmo, California, for Amici Curiae International
    Center of Law & Economics and Medicaid Defense Fund.
    Joe R. Whatley, Jr., Edith M. Kallas, Whatley Kallas, LLP,
    New York, New York, for Amici Curiae Economics
    Professors.
    Donald M. Falk, Mayer Brown LLP, Palo Alto, California;
    Robert E. Bloch, Michael B. Kimberly, Mayer Brown LLP,
    Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae The Association of
    Independent Doctors.
    Joseph M. Miller, Michael S. Spector, America’s Health
    Insurance Plans; Pierre H. Bergeron, Mark J. Botti, Squire
    Patton Boggs (US) LLP, Washington, D.C., for Amicus
    Curiae America’s Health Insurance Plans.
    Bruce L. Simon, Pearson, Simon & Warshaw, LLP, San
    Francisco, California; Alexander R. Safyan, Pearson, Simon
    & Warshaw, LLP, Sherman Oaks, California, for Amicus
    Curiae Catalyst for Payment Reform.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General of California, Mark
    Breckler, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Kathleen E.
    Foote, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Emilio Varanini,
    Deputy Attorney General, San Francisco, California; Robert
    W. Ferguson, Attorney General of Washington, Darwin P.
    6   ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    Roberts, Deputy Attorney General, Jonathan A. Mark, Chief,
    Antitrust Division, Stephen T. Fairchild, Assistant Attorney
    General, Seattle, Washington; Kathleen G. Kane, Attorney
    General of Pennsylvania, James A. Donahue, III, Executive
    Deputy Attorney General, Tracy W. Wertz, Chief Deputy
    Attorney General, Jennifer A. Thomson, Senior Deputy
    Attorney General, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; George Jepsen,
    Attorney General of Connecticut, Hartford, Connecticut;
    Joseph R. Biden III, Attorney General of Delaware,
    Wilmington, Delaware; Lisa Madigan, Attorney General of
    Illinois, Carolyn E. Shapiro, Solicitor General, Chicago,
    Illinois; Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General of Iowa, Des
    Moines, Iowa; Jack Conway, Attorney General of Kentucky,
    Frankfort, Kentucky; Janet T. Mills, Attorney General of
    Maine, Augusta, Maine; Douglas F. Gansler, Attorney
    General of Maryland, William F. Brockman, Deputy Solicitor
    General, Baltimore, Maryland; Jim Hood, Attorney General
    of Mississippi, Jackson, Mississippi; Tim Fox, Attorney
    General of Montana, Helena, Montana; Catherine Cortez
    Masto, Attorney General of Nevada, Carson City, Nevada;
    Gary K. King, Attorney General of New Mexico, Santa Fe,
    New Mexico; Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General of
    Oregon, Salem, Oregon; Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney
    General of Tennessee, Nashville, Tennessee, for Amicus
    Curiae The States of California, Washington, Pennsylvania,
    Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine,
    Maryland, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico,
    Oregon, and Tennessee.
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.          7
    OPINION
    HURWITZ, Circuit Judge:
    This case arises out of the 2012 merger of two health care
    providers in Nampa, Idaho. The Federal Trade Commission
    (“FTC”) and the State of Idaho sued, alleging that the merger
    violated § 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18, and state law;
    two local hospitals filed a similar complaint. Although the
    district court believed that the merger was intended to
    improve patient outcomes and might well do so, the judge
    nonetheless found that the merger violated § 7 and ordered
    divestiture.
    As the district court recognized, the job before us is not to
    determine the optimal future shape of the country’s health
    care system, but instead to determine whether this particular
    merger violates the Clayton Act. In light of the careful
    factual findings by the able district judge, we affirm the
    judgment below.
    I. Background
    A. The Health Care Market in Nampa, Idaho
    Nampa, the second-largest city in Idaho, is some twenty
    miles west of Boise and has a population of approximately
    85,000. Before the merger at issue, St. Luke’s Health
    Systems, Ltd. (“St. Luke’s”), an Idaho-based, not-for-profit
    health care system, operated an emergency clinic in the city.
    Saltzer Medical Group, P.A. (“Saltzer”), the largest
    independent multi-specialty physician group in Idaho, had
    thirty-four physicians practicing at its offices in Nampa. The
    only hospital in Nampa was operated by Saint Alphonsus
    8       ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    Health System, Inc. (“Saint Alphonsus”), a part of the
    multistate Trinity Health system. Saint Alphonsus and
    Treasure Valley Hospital Limited Partnership (“TVH”)
    jointly operated an outpatient surgery center.1
    The largest adult primary care physician (“PCP”) provider
    in the Nampa market was Saltzer, which had sixteen PCPs.2
    St. Luke’s had eight PCPs and Saint Alphonsus nine. Several
    other PCPs had solo or small practices.
    B. The Challenged Acquisition
    Saltzer had long had the goal of moving toward integrated
    patient care and risk-based reimbursement.              After
    unsuccessfully attempting several informal affiliations,
    including one with St. Luke’s, Saltzer sought a formal
    partnership with a large health care system.
    In 2012, St. Luke’s acquired Saltzer’s assets and entered
    into a five-year professional service agreement (“PSA”) with
    the Saltzer physicians (the “merger” or the “acquisition”).3
    Saltzer received a $9 million payment for goodwill. The
    initial PSA contained hortatory language about the parties’
    1
    For simplicity, this opinion sometimes refers to St. Luke’s and Saltzer
    collectively as “St. Luke’s,” and Saint Alphonsus and TVH collectively
    as the “Private Hospitals.”
    2
    The district court found that “[a]dult PCP services include physician
    services provided to commercially insured patients aged 18 and over by
    physicians practicing internal medicine, family practice, and general
    practice.”
    3
    The parties and the district court regarded the PSA as the functional
    equivalent of an employment agreement, and we assume the same.
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.                 9
    desire to move away from fee-for-service reimbursement, but
    included no provisions implementing that goal. An amended
    PSA, however, contained some quality-based incentives. The
    merger did not require Saltzer doctors to refer patients to the
    St. Luke’s Boise hospital, nor did it require that Saltzer
    physicians use St. Luke’s facilities for ancillary services.
    C. Procedural History
    In November 2012, the Private Hospitals filed a
    complaint in the District of Idaho seeking to enjoin the
    merger under Clayton Act § 7.4 The complaint alleged
    anticompetitive effects in the relevant markets for “primary
    care physician services,” “general acute-care inpatient
    services,” “general pediatric physician services,” and
    “outpatient surgery services.” The district court denied a
    preliminary injunction, noting that: (1) the PSA did not
    require referrals to St. Luke’s, minimizing any immediate
    harm to the Private Hospitals; (2) implementation of the PSA
    was to take place over time; and (3) the PSA provided a
    process for unwinding the transaction if it were declared
    illegal.
    In March 2013, the FTC and the State of Idaho filed a
    complaint in the district court seeking to enjoin the merger
    pursuant to the Federal Trade Commission Act (“FTC Act”),
    the Clayton Act, and Idaho law.5 This complaint alleged
    4
    The Private Hospitals filed an amended complaint in January 2013.
    5
    The Idaho Competition Act is “construed in harmony” with federal
    antitrust law, Idaho Code §§ 48-102(3), -106, and the district court held
    that the antitrust analysis is the same for each. The parties do not contend
    otherwise.
    10 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    anticompetitive effects only in the adult PCP market. The
    district court consolidated this case with the one filed by the
    Private Hospitals, and after a nineteen-day bench trial, found
    the merger prohibited by the Clayton Act and the Idaho
    Competition Act because of its anticompetitive effects on the
    Nampa adult PCP market.6
    The district court expressly noted the troubled state of the
    U.S. health care system, found that St. Luke’s and Saltzer
    genuinely intended to move toward a better health care
    system, and expressed its belief that the merger would
    “improve patient outcomes” if left intact. Nonetheless, the
    court found that the “huge market share” of the post-merger
    entity “creates a substantial risk of anticompetitive price
    increases” in the Nampa adult PCP market. Rejecting an
    argument by St. Luke’s that anticipated post-merger
    efficiencies excused the potential anticompetitive price
    effects, the district court ordered divestiture. This appeal
    followed.
    II. Standard of Review
    We review the district court’s findings of fact for clear
    error and its conclusions of law de novo. Husain v. Olympic
    Airways, 
    316 F.3d 829
    , 835 (9th Cir. 2002), aff’d, 
    540 U.S. 644
    (2004). The question is whether a finding of fact is
    “clearly erroneous,” not whether there is a “compelling case”
    for an alternative finding. California v. Am. Stores Co.,
    
    872 F.2d 837
    , 842 (9th Cir. 1989), rev’d on other grounds,
    
    495 U.S. 271
    (1990). The district court’s choice of remedy
    is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Theme Promotions, Inc.
    6
    The court therefore did not address the Private Hospitals’ contentions
    with respect to the other product markets.
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 11
    v. News Am. Mktg. FSI, 
    546 F.3d 991
    , 1000 (9th Cir. 2008)
    (citing United States v. Alisal Water Corp., 
    431 F.3d 643
    , 654
    (9th Cir. 2005)).
    III. The Clayton Act § 7 Analysis
    A. Overview of the Clayton Act
    The great Yankee catcher Yogi Berra is reputed (likely
    apocryphally) to have said that it’s “tough to make
    predictions, especially about the future.” The Perils of
    Prediction, Economist, June 2, 2007, at 96.7 Yet that is
    precisely what this case requires. Because § 7 of the Clayton
    Act bars mergers whose effect “may be substantially to lessen
    competition, or to tend to create a monopoly,” 15 U.S.C.
    § 18, judicial analysis necessarily focuses on “probabilities,
    not certainties,” Brown Shoe Co. v. United States, 
    370 U.S. 294
    , 323 (1962). This “requires not merely an appraisal of
    the immediate impact of the merger upon competition, but a
    prediction of its impact upon competitive conditions in the
    future; this is what is meant when it is said that the amended
    § 7 was intended to arrest anticompetitive tendencies in their
    incipiency.” United States v. Phila. Nat’l Bank, 
    374 U.S. 321
    , 362 (1963) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Section 7 claims are typically assessed under a “burden-
    shifting framework.” Chi. Bridge & Iron Co. v. FTC,
    
    534 F.3d 410
    , 423 (5th Cir. 2008). The plaintiff must first
    7
    This quotation is not included in the definitive book of Berra
    quotations, see Yogi Berra, The Yogi Book: “I Really Didn’t Say
    Everything I Said!” (1998), and its provenance is at best unclear, see, e.g.,
    The Yale Book of Quotations 92 (Fred R. Shapiro ed., 2006) (attributing
    a variant to Niels Bohr, but noting that the exact authorship is disputed).
    12 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    establish a prima facie case that a merger is anticompetitive.
    See Olin Corp. v. FTC, 
    986 F.2d 1295
    , 1305 (9th Cir. 1993)
    (discussing how plaintiff’s establishment of a prima facie
    case on statistical evidence was the first step in the analysis).
    The burden then shifts to the defendant to rebut the prima
    facie case. See id.; Am. 
    Stores, 872 F.2d at 842
    (citing United
    States v. Marine Bancorporation, Inc., 
    418 U.S. 602
    , 631
    (1974)). “[I]f the [defendant] successfully rebuts the prima
    facie case, the burden of production shifts back to the
    Government and merges with the ultimate burden of
    persuasion, which is incumbent on the Government at all
    times.” Chi. Bridge & 
    Iron, 534 F.3d at 423
    .8
    B. The Relevant Market
    “Determination of the relevant product and geographic
    markets is a necessary predicate to deciding whether a merger
    contravenes the Clayton Act.” Marine 
    Bancorporation, 418 U.S. at 618
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Definition of the relevant market is a factual question
    “dependent upon the special characteristics of the industry
    involved and we will not disturb such findings unless clearly
    erroneous.” Twin City Sportservice, Inc. v. Charles O. Finley
    & Co., 
    676 F.2d 1291
    , 1299 (9th Cir. 1982). Although the
    8
    The application of this framework in the Ninth Circuit is not rigid.
    Thus, in determining whether the prima facie case has been rebutted, a
    district court may consider evidence submitted by the plaintiff in the case-
    in-chief. See 
    Olin, 986 F.3d at 1305
    (finding no burden-shifting error
    because the FTC had determined that the rebuttal evidence was
    insufficient to overcome the prima facie showing); see also Chi. Bridge
    & 
    Iron, 534 F.3d at 424
    –25 (stating that Olin “allows [a court] to preserve
    the prima facie presumption if the [defendant] . . . fails to satisfy the
    burden of production in light of contrary evidence in the prima facie
    case”).
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 13
    parties agree that the relevant product market in this case is
    adult PCPs, St. Luke’s vigorously disputes the district court’s
    determination that Nampa is the relevant geographic market.
    We find no clear error in that factual finding.
    The relevant geographic market is the “area of effective
    competition where buyers can turn for alternate sources of
    supply.” Morgan, Strand, Wheeler & Biggs v. Radiology,
    Ltd., 
    924 F.2d 1484
    , 1490 (9th Cir. 1991) (alteration omitted)
    (quoting Oltz v. St. Peter’s Cmty. Hosp., 
    861 F.2d 1440
    , 1446
    (9th Cir. 1988)) (internal quotation marks omitted). Put
    differently, “a market is the group of sellers or producers who
    have the actual or potential ability to deprive each other of
    significant levels of business.” Rebel Oil Co. v. Atl. Richfield
    Co., 
    51 F.3d 1421
    , 1434 (9th Cir. 1995) (quoting Thurman
    Indus., Inc. v. Pay ‘N Pak Stores, Inc., 
    875 F.2d 1369
    , 1374
    (9th Cir. 1989)) (internal quotation marks omitted). The
    plaintiff has the burden of establishing the relevant
    geographic market. See United States v. Conn. Nat’l Bank,
    
    418 U.S. 656
    , 669–70 (1974).
    A common method to determine the relevant geographic
    market, and the one used by the district court, is to find
    whether a hypothetical monopolist could impose a “small but
    significant nontransitory increase in price” (“SSNIP”) in the
    proposed market. See Theme 
    Promotions, 546 F.3d at 1002
    ;
    see also In re Se. Milk Antitrust Litig., 
    739 F.3d 262
    , 277–78
    (6th Cir. 2014) (describing the relevant geographic market as
    one in which “buyers . . . respond to a SSNIP by purchasing
    regardless of the increase”); U.S. Dep’t of Justice & FTC,
    Horizontal Merger Guidelines (“Merger Guidelines”) § 4
    14 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    (2010).9 If enough consumers would respond to a SSNIP by
    purchasing the product from outside the proposed geographic
    market, making the SSNIP unprofitable, the proposed market
    definition is too narrow. See Theme 
    Promotions, 546 F.3d at 1002
    .
    Market definition thus perforce focuses on the anticipated
    behavior of buyers and sellers. See, e.g., Rebel 
    Oil, 51 F.3d at 1430
    , 1434–35. In the health care industry, insurance
    companies effectively act both as buyers and sellers. See
    FTC v. Freeman Hosp., 
    69 F.3d 260
    , 270 n.14 (8th Cir.
    1995); Gregory Vistnes, Hospitals, Mergers, and Two-Stage
    Competition, 67 Antitrust L.J. 671, 672 (2000). Noting that
    “the vast majority of health care consumers are not direct
    purchasers of health care—the consumers purchase health
    insurance and the insurance companies negotiate directly with
    the providers,” the district court correctly focused on the
    “likely response of insurers to a hypothetical demand by all
    the PCPs in a particular market for a [SSNIP].”10
    The district court found that a hypothetical Nampa PCP
    monopolist could profitably impose a SSNIP on insurers.
    9
    Although the Merger Guidelines are “not binding on the courts,” 
    Olin, 986 F.2d at 1300
    , they “are often used as persuasive authority,” Chi.
    Bridge & 
    Iron, 534 F.3d at 431
    n.11.
    10
    This “two-stage model” of health care competition is “the accepted
    model.” John J. Miles, 1 Health Care & Antitrust L. § 1:5 (2014). In the
    first stage, providers compete for inclusion in insurance plans. See
    
    Vistnes, supra, at 674
    . In the second stage, providers seek to attract
    patients enrolled in the plans. See 
    id. at 681–82.
    Because patients are
    “largely insensitive” to price, the second stage “takes place primarily over
    non-price dimensions.” 
    Id. at 682.
    Thus, antitrust analysis focuses on the
    first stage. 
    Id. at 692.
        ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 15
    Citing testimony that Nampa residents “strongly prefer access
    to local PCPs,” the court found that “commercial health plans
    need to include Nampa PCPs in their networks to offer a
    competitive product.” “Given this dynamic—that health
    plans must offer Nampa Adult PCP services to Nampa
    residents to effectively compete—Nampa PCPs could band
    together and successfully demand a [SSNIP] (or
    reimbursement increase) from health plans.”
    St. Luke’s argues that the district court erred by
    considering only the current behavior of Nampa consumers,
    not their likely response to a SSNIP. St. Luke’s is of course
    correct that geographic market definition involves
    prospective analysis—it predicts consumer response to a
    hypothetical price increase. See FTC v. Tenet Health Care
    Corp., 
    186 F.3d 1045
    , 1053–54 (8th Cir. 1999). But that is
    precisely what the district court did. The court not only
    examined present Nampa consumer behavior, but also
    concluded that it would not change in the event of a SSNIP.
    This determination was supported by the record.
    Evidence was presented that insurers generally need local
    PCPs to market a health care plan, and that this is true in
    particular in the Nampa market. For example, Blue Cross of
    Idaho has PCPs in every zip code in which it has customers,
    and the executive director of the Idaho Physicians Network
    testified that it could not market a health care network in
    Nampa that did not include Nampa PCPs. Evidence also
    indicated that consumers would not change their behavior in
    the event of a SSNIP. Experts testified that because health
    care consumers only pay a small percentage of health care
    costs out of pocket, the impact of a SSNIP likely would not
    register. Similarly, there was testimony that consumers
    choose physicians on factors other than price. The court was
    16 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    unconvinced by evidence that insurers could defend against
    a SSNIP by steering consumers to non-Nampa PCPs.11
    For similar reasons, there also was no clear error in the
    district court’s determination that evidence that one-third of
    Nampa residents travel to Boise for PCPs did not prove that
    a significant number of other residents would so travel in the
    event of a SSNIP. Those who traveled generally went to
    PCPs near their Boise places of employment. Thus, the court
    reasonably found this statistic not determinative of whether
    other Nampa residents would be willing to travel.
    C. The Plaintiffs’ Case
    Once the relevant geographic market is determined, a
    prima facie case is established if the plaintiff proves that the
    merger will probably lead to anticompetitive effects in that
    market. See 
    Olin, 986 F.2d at 1305
    ; see also Chi. Bridge &
    
    Iron, 534 F.3d at 423
    . A prima facie case can be established
    simply by showing high market share. United States v. Syufy
    Enters., 
    903 F.2d 659
    , 664 n.6 (9th Cir. 1990); see also FTC
    v. H.J. Heinz Co., 
    246 F.3d 708
    , 716 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
    However, “statistics concerning market share and
    concentration, while of great significance, [a]re not
    11
    Extensive evidence was offered about Micron, a Boise employer that
    created a health care plan including financial incentives for employees to
    use certain providers; the plan caused a substantial portion of Micron
    employees residing in Nampa to switch to non-Nampa PCPs. St. Luke’s
    argues that this evidence proved that Nampa consumers would respond to
    a SSNIP. But the district court did not clearly err in finding the Micron
    example unpersuasive. Micron’s cost differentials were much higher than
    a SSNIP, Boise PCPs were close to work for Micron’s employees, and it
    was unclear whether other employers would be willing or able to replicate
    Micron’s program.
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 17
    conclusive indicators of anticompetitive effects . . . .” United
    States v. Gen. Dynamics Corp., 
    415 U.S. 486
    , 498 (1974); see
    also FTC v. Warner Commc’ns Inc., 
    742 F.2d 1156
    , 1163 n.1
    (9th Cir. 1984). Thus, plaintiffs in § 7 cases generally present
    other evidence as part of the prima facie case. See Gen.
    
    Dynamics, 415 U.S. at 498
    (“[O]nly a further examination of
    the particular market—its structure, history and probable
    future—can provide the appropriate setting for judging the
    probable anticompetitive effect of the merger.” (quoting
    Brown 
    Shoe, 370 U.S. at 322
    n.38)); see also Chi. Bridge &
    
    Iron, 534 F.3d at 431
    (noting that market share data was “just
    one element in the Government’s strong prima facie case”);
    Carl Shapiro, The 2010 Horizontal Merger Guidelines: From
    Hedgehog to Fox in Forty Years, 77 Antitrust L.J. 49, 50–60
    (2010) (noting the trend in merger enforcement to consider
    factors in addition to market share).
    The district court held that the plaintiffs established a
    prima facie case because of the post-merger entity’s:
    (1) market share; (2) ability to negotiate higher PCP
    reimbursement rates with insurers; and (3) ability to “charge
    more [ancillary] services at the higher hospital billing rates.”
    The court also found that “entry into the market has been very
    difficult and would not be timely to counteract the
    anticompetitive effects of the Acquisition.” St. Luke’s does
    not challenge the barriers-to-entry finding; we review the
    others in turn for clear error.
    1. Market Share
    A commonly used metric for determining market share is
    the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (“HHI”). See ProMedica
    Health Sys., Inc. v. FTC, 
    749 F.3d 559
    , 568 (6th Cir. 2014);
    H.J. 
    Heinz, 246 F.3d at 716
    . HHI is “calculated by summing
    18 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    the squares of the individual firms’ market shares,” which
    “gives proportionately greater weight to the larger market
    shares.” Merger Guidelines § 5.3. The analysis “consider[s]
    both the post-merger level of the HHI and the increase in the
    HHI resulting from the merger.” 
    Id. The Merger
    Guidelines
    classify markets as (1) unconcentrated (HHI below 1500);
    (2) moderately concentrated (HHI between 1500 and 2500);
    or (3) highly concentrated (HHI above 2500). 
    Id. Mergers that
    increase the HHI more than 200 points and result in
    highly concentrated markets are “presumed to be likely to
    enhance market power.” 
    Id. “Sufficiently large
    HHI figures
    establish the FTC’s prima facie case that a merger is anti-
    competitive.” H.J. 
    Heinz, 246 F.3d at 716
    .
    The district court calculated the post-merger HHI in the
    Nampa PCP market as 6,219, and the increase as 1,607. St.
    Luke’s does not challenge these findings. As the district
    court correctly noted, these HHI numbers “are well above the
    thresholds for a presumptively anticompetitive merger (more
    than double and seven times their respective thresholds,
    respectively).” See 
    ProMedica, 749 F.3d at 568
    (noting that
    a merger with similar HHI numbers “blew through those
    barriers in spectacular fashion”).
    2. PCP Reimbursements
    The district court also found that St. Luke’s would likely
    use its post-merger power to negotiate higher reimbursement
    rates from insurers for PCP services. Recognizing that the
    § 7 inquiry is based on a prediction of future actions, see
    Phila. Nat’l 
    Bank, 374 U.S. at 362
    , this finding was not
    clearly erroneous.
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 19
    Because St. Luke’s and Saltzer had been each other’s
    closest substitutes in Nampa, the district court found the
    acquisition limited the ability of insurers to negotiate with the
    merged entity. Pre-acquisition internal correspondence
    indicated that the merged companies would use this increased
    bargaining power to raise prices. An email between St.
    Luke’s executives discussed “pressur[ing] payors for new
    directed agreements,” and an exchange between Saltzer
    executives stated that “[i]f our negotiations w/ Luke’s go to
    fruition,” then “the clout of the entire network” could be used
    to negotiate favorable terms with insurers. The court also
    examined a previous acquisition by St. Luke’s in Twin Falls,
    Idaho, and found that St. Luke’s used its leverage in that
    instance to force insurers to “concede to their pricing
    proposal.”
    3. Ancillary Services
    The district court’s finding that St. Luke’s would raise
    prices in the hospital-based ancillary services market12 is
    more problematic. The court found that St. Luke’s would
    “exercise its enhanced bargaining leverage from the
    Acquisition to charge more services at the higher hospital-
    based billing rates.” Because insurers and providers typically
    negotiate for all services as part of the same contract, the
    district court found that St. Luke’s increased leverage with
    12
    Ancillary services, such as x-rays and diagnostic testing, are
    sometimes performed by doctors in conjunction with PCP examinations.
    Before the merger, Saltzer provided many ancillary services at its
    physicians’ offices. Insurance companies and Medicare often offer higher
    reimbursements for ancillary services performed at a hospital-based
    outpatient facility.
    20 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    respect to PCP services would allow it to demand higher fees
    for ancillary services.
    The problem with this conclusion is that the district court
    made no findings about St. Luke’s’ market power in the
    ancillary services market. Absent such a finding, it is
    difficult to conclude that the merged entity could easily
    demand anticompetitive prices for such services. Perhaps the
    court was suggesting that St. Luke’s would engage in tying,
    “a device used by a seller with market power in one product
    market to extend its market power to a distinct product
    market.” Cascade Health Solutions v. PeaceHealth, 
    515 F.3d 883
    , 912 (9th Cir. 2008). Although various antitrust statutes,
    including Sherman Act §§ 1 and 2, Clayton Act § 3, and FTC
    Act § 5, address tying, Clayton Act § 7 does not expressly
    prohibit the practice. A leading antitrust treatise cautions
    against condemning a merger for potential tying effects as
    “superfluous and overdeterrent.” Phillip Areeda & Herbert
    Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law: An Analysis of Antitrust
    Principles and Their Application (“Areeda”) ¶ 1144a (2010).
    Wholly aside from these conceptual difficulties, the
    factual underpinnings of the district court’s conclusion are
    suspect. The documents cited by the district court merely
    state that St. Luke’s hopes to increase revenue from ancillary
    services, not that it plans to charge higher prices. An increase
    in revenue could occur in a variety of ways not involving
    increased prices, such as increased Medicare payments or
    increased volume from Saltzer referrals. The district court
    did not find that Saltzer physicians would inappropriately
    label in-house services as hospital-based, or that they would
    force patients to travel to the St. Luke’s hospital in Boise for
    services that could be provided in-house in Nampa. And the
    court did not identify any past actions that would allow it to
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 21
    predict that St. Luke’s would act anticompetitively in the
    future in the ancillary services market. Indeed, in post-
    merger negotiations with Blue Shield, St. Luke’s did not do
    so. We thus find that the ancillary services finding is not
    supported by the record.
    4. The Prima Facie Case
    But absent the ancillary services finding, the district
    court’s conclusion that a prima facie case was established is
    amply supported by the record. “Section 7 does not require
    proof that a merger or other acquisition has caused higher
    prices in the affected market. All that is necessary is that the
    merger create an appreciable danger of such consequences in
    the future.” Hosp. Corp. of Am. v. FTC, 
    807 F.2d 1381
    , 1389
    (7th Cir. 1986).
    The extremely high HHI on its own establishes the prima
    facie case. See H.J. 
    Heinz, 246 F.3d at 716
    ; United States v.
    Baker Hughes, Inc., 
    908 F.2d 981
    , 982–83 & n.3 (D.C. Cir.
    1990). In addition, the court found that statements and past
    actions by the merging parties made it likely that St. Luke’s
    would raise reimbursement rates in a highly concentrated
    market. See Hosp. 
    Corp., 807 F.2d at 1388
    –89 (expressing
    concern that a history of cooperation among hospitals could
    lead to collusion when a merger caused the market to become
    more concentrated). And, the court’s uncontested finding of
    high entry barriers “eliminates the possibility that the reduced
    competition caused by the merger will be ameliorated by new
    competition from outsiders and further strengthens the FTC’s
    case.” H.J. 
    Heinz, 246 F.3d at 717
    .
    The facts found by the district court are similar to those
    in other cases in which a prima facie violation of § 7 was
    22 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    established. See, e.g., Chi. Bridge & 
    Iron, 534 F.3d at 431
    –32 (high HHI, limited rivals, high entry barriers, and
    customer perception); Lucas Auto. Eng’g, Inc. v.
    Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc., 
    140 F.3d 1228
    , 1236–37 (9th
    Cir. 1998) (reversing summary judgment for defendant
    because undisputed facts showed high market share and
    “insurmountable barriers to entry”); FTC v. Univ. Health,
    Inc., 
    938 F.2d 1206
    , 1219–20 & n.27 (11th Cir. 1991) (high
    market concentration, high entry barriers, and evidence that
    defendants intended to eliminate competition with the
    merger); Am. 
    Stores, 872 F.2d at 841
    –43 (high market share,
    and insufficient evidence of low entry barriers to rebut the
    prima facie case). The district court did not clearly err in its
    factual findings, which adequately support its ultimate
    conclusion that the plaintiffs established “a prima facie case
    that the Acquisition is anti-competitive.”
    D. The Rebuttal Case
    Because the plaintiffs established a prima facie case, the
    burden shifted to St. Luke’s to “cast doubt on the accuracy of
    the Government’s evidence as predictive of future anti-
    competitive effects.” Chi. Bridge & 
    Iron, 534 F.3d at 423
    .
    The rebuttal evidence focused on the alleged procompetitive
    effects of the merger, particularly the contention that the
    merger would allow St. Luke’s to move toward integrated
    care and risk-based reimbursement.13
    13
    The district court found that a core reason for high health care costs
    is the prevalent fee-for-service reimbursement model, based on the
    apparently uncontested opinions of expert witnesses. Experts have
    recommended moving toward integrated care and risk-based
    reimbursement. “In an integrated delivery system, [PCPs] and specialty
    physicians work as a team, with PCPs managing patient care and specialty
    physicians consulting and providing care as needed.” Risk-based
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 23
    1. The Post-Merger Efficiencies Defense
    The Supreme Court has never expressly approved an
    efficiencies defense to a § 7 claim. See H.J. 
    Heinz, 246 F.3d at 720
    . Indeed, Brown Shoe cast doubt on the defense:
    Of course, some of the results of large
    integrated or chain operations are beneficial to
    consumers. Their expansion is not rendered
    unlawful by the mere fact that small
    independent stores may be adversely affected.
    It is competition, not competitors, which the
    Act protects. But we cannot fail to recognize
    Congress’ desire to promote competition
    through the protection of viable, small, locally
    owned business. Congress appreciated that
    occasional higher costs and prices might
    result from the maintenance of fragmented
    industries and markets. It resolved these
    competing considerations in favor of
    decentralization. We must give effect to that
    
    decision. 370 U.S. at 344
    . Similarly, in FTC v. Procter & Gamble Co.,
    the Court stated that “[p]ossible economies cannot be used as
    a defense to illegality. Congress was aware that some
    mergers which lessen competition may also result in
    reimbursement (also known as capitation) means that “providers receive
    reimbursement from insurers in the form of a set amount for each patient
    rather than a payment for each service rendered. The set amount is based
    on the average expected health care utilization for the patients given such
    factors as their age and medical history.” “Capitation motivates providers
    to consider the costs of treatment as they will share in the savings if they
    can keep actual costs below the set amount they receive.”
    24 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    economies but it struck the balance in favor of protecting
    competition.” 
    386 U.S. 568
    , 580 (1967).
    Notwithstanding the Supreme Court’s statements, four of
    our sister circuits (the Sixth, D.C., Eighth, and Eleventh) have
    suggested that proof of post-merger efficiencies could rebut
    a Clayton Act § 7 prima facie case. See 
    ProMedica, 749 F.3d at 571
    ; H.J. 
    Heinz, 246 F.3d at 720
    –22; 
    Tenet, 186 F.3d at 1054
    –55; Univ. 
    Health, 938 F.2d at 1222
    –24.14 The FTC has
    also cautiously recognized the defense, noting that although
    competition ordinarily spurs firms to achieve efficiencies
    internally, “a primary benefit of mergers to the economy is
    their potential to generate significant efficiencies and thus
    enhance the merged firm’s ability and incentive to compete,
    which may result in lower prices, improved quality, enhanced
    service, or new products.” Merger Guidelines § 10; see also
    Oliver E. Williamson, Economies as an Antitrust Defense
    Revisited, 125 U. Pa. L. Rev. 699, 699 (1977)
    (“Sometimes . . . a merger will . . . result in real increases in
    efficiency that reduce the average cost of production of the
    combined entity below that of the two merging firms.”).
    However, none of the reported appellate decisions have
    actually held that a § 7 defendant has rebutted a prima facie
    case with an efficiencies defense; thus, even in those circuits
    that recognize it, the parameters of the defense remain
    imprecise.
    14
    Some courts have attempted to explain why the Supreme Court cases
    do not recognize an efficiencies defense, see, e.g., H.J. 
    Heinz, 246 F.3d at 720
    n.18 (arguing that the “possible economies” language in Proctor &
    Gamble does not ban an actual efficiencies defense), but others have
    simply stated that the defense exists without addressing the language in
    Brown Shoe and its progeny, see, e.g., 
    ProMedica, 749 F.3d at 571
    .
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 25
    The status of the defense in this circuit remains uncertain.
    A quarter of a century ago, we rejected an efficiencies
    defense in RSR Corp. v. FTC, 
    602 F.2d 1317
    , 1325 (9th Cir.
    1979). RSR, however, involved an argument that the merger
    would allow the defendant to compete more efficiently
    outside the relevant market. 
    Id. More recent
    cases focus on
    whether efficiencies in the relevant market negate the
    anticompetitive effect of the merger in that market. See Univ.
    
    Health, 938 F.2d at 1222
    . Even after RSR, several district
    courts in this circuit have suggested that there could be such
    a defense. See, e.g., United States v. Bazaarvoice, Inc., No.
    13-cv-00133-WHO, 
    2014 WL 203966
    , at *64, *72–73 (N.D.
    Cal. Jan. 8, 2014); United States v. Oracle Corp., 331 F.
    Supp. 2d 1098, 1174–75 (N.D. Cal. 2004); but see California
    v. Am. Stores Co., 
    697 F. Supp. 1125
    , 1132–33 (C.D. Cal.
    1988) (finding that RSR barred an efficiencies defense), rev’d
    on other grounds, 
    872 F.2d 837
    , rev’d on other grounds,
    
    495 U.S. 271
    .
    We remain skeptical about the efficiencies defense in
    general and about its scope in particular. It is difficult
    enough in § 7 cases to predict whether a merger will have
    future anticompetitive effects without also adding to the
    judicial balance a prediction of future efficiencies. Indeed,
    even then-Professor Bork, a sharp critic of Clayton Act
    enforcement actions, see, e.g., Robert H. Bork and Wade S.
    Bowman, Jr., The Crisis in Antitrust, 65 Colum. L. Rev. 363,
    373 (1965), rejected the efficiencies defense, calling it
    “spurious” because it “cannot measure the factors relevant to
    consumer welfare, so that after the economic extravaganza
    was completed we would know no more than before it
    began,” Robert H. Bork, The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at
    War with Itself 124 (1978). Judge Richard Posner has
    regularly expressed similar views. See Richard A. Posner,
    26 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    Antitrust Law 133 (2d ed. 2001) (“I said back then that there
    should be no general defense of efficiency. I still think this
    is right. It is rarely feasible to determine by the methods of
    litigation the effect of a merger on the costs of the firm
    created by the merger.”); Richard A. Posner, Antitrust Law:
    An Economic Perspective 112 (1976) (“I would not allow a
    generalized defense of efficiency.”); cf. Frank H.
    Easterbrook, The Limits of Antitrust, 
    63 Tex. L. Rev. 1
    , 39
    (1984) (“[N]either judges nor juries are particularly good at
    handling complex economic arguments . . . .”).
    Nonetheless, we assume, as did the district court, that
    because § 7 of the Clayton Act only prohibits those mergers
    whose effect “may be substantially to lessen competition,”
    15 U.S.C. § 18, a defendant can rebut a prima facie case with
    evidence that the proposed merger will create a more efficient
    combined entity and thus increase competition. For example,
    if two small firms were unable to match the prices of a larger
    competitor, but could do so after a merger because of
    decreased production costs, a court recognizing the
    efficiencies defense might reasonably conclude that the
    transaction likely would not lessen competition. See Merger
    Guidelines § 10 (“Merger-generated efficiencies may enhance
    competition by permitting two ineffective competitors to
    form a more effective competitor, e.g., by combining
    complementary assets. . . . [I]ncremental cost reductions may
    reduce or reverse any increases in the merged firm’s incentive
    to elevate price.”).
    Because we deal with statutory enforcement, the language
    of the Clayton Act must be the linchpin of any efficiencies
    defense. The Act focuses on “competition,” so any defense
    must demonstrate that the prima facie case “portray[s]
    inaccurately the merger’s probable effects on competition.”
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 27
    Am. 
    Stores, 872 F.2d at 842
    . In other words, a successful
    efficiencies defense requires proof that a merger is not,
    despite the existence of a prima facie case, anticompetitive.
    Courts recognizing the defense have made clear that a
    Clayton Act defendant must “clearly demonstrate” that “the
    proposed merger enhances rather than hinders competition
    because of the increased efficiencies.” United States v. Long
    Island Jewish Med. Ctr., 
    983 F. Supp. 121
    , 137 (E.D.N.Y.
    1997). Because § 7 seeks to avert monopolies, proof of
    “extraordinary efficiencies” is required to offset the
    anticompetitive concerns in highly concentrated markets. See
    H.J. 
    Heinz, 246 F.3d at 720
    –22; see also Merger Guidelines
    § 10 (“Efficiencies almost never justify a merger to monopoly
    or near-monopoly.”). The defendant must also demonstrate
    that the claimed efficiencies are “merger-specific,” see
    United States v. H & R Block, Inc., 
    833 F. Supp. 2d 36
    , 89–90
    (D.D.C. 2011), which is to say that the efficiencies cannot
    readily “be achieved without the concomitant loss of a
    competitor,” H.J. 
    Heinz, 246 F.3d at 722
    ; see also Merger
    Guidelines § 10 & n.13. Claimed efficiencies must be
    verifiable, not merely speculative. See, e.g., FTC v. CCC
    Holdings Inc., 
    605 F. Supp. 2d 26
    , 74–75 (D.D.C. 2009);
    
    Oracle, 331 F. Supp. 2d at 1175
    ; see also Merger Guidelines
    § 10.
    2. The St. Luke’s Efficiencies Defense
    St. Luke’s argues that the merger would benefit patients
    by creating a team of employed physicians with access to
    Epic, the electronic medical records system used by St.
    Luke’s. The district court found that, even if true, these
    predicted efficiencies were insufficient to carry St. Luke’s’
    burden of rebutting the prima facie case. We agree.
    28 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    It is not enough to show that the merger would allow St.
    Luke’s to better serve patients. The Clayton Act focuses on
    competition, and the claimed efficiencies therefore must
    show that the prediction of anticompetitive effects from the
    prima facie case is inaccurate. See Univ. 
    Health, 938 F.2d at 1222
    (finding efficiencies relevant to the prediction of
    “whether the acquisition would substantially lessen
    competition”). Although the district court believed that the
    merger would eventually “improve the delivery of health
    care” in the Nampa market, the judge did not find that the
    merger would increase competition or decrease prices. Quite
    to the contrary, the court, even while noting the likely
    beneficial effect of the merger on patient care, held that
    reimbursement rates for PCP services likely would increase.
    Nor did the court find that the merger would likely lead to
    integrated health care or a new reimbursement system; the
    judge merely noted the desire of St. Luke’s to move in that
    direction.
    The district court expressly did conclude, however, that
    the claimed efficiencies were not merger-specific.15 The
    court found “no empirical evidence to support the theory that
    15
    St. Luke’s argues that once a defendant comes forward with proof of
    efficiencies, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to show that there are ways
    of achieving those efficiencies without the merger. This tracks the
    Sherman Act analysis. See, e.g., Bhan v. NME Hosps., Inc., 
    929 F.2d 1404
    , 1412–14 (9th Cir. 1991). But, in Clayton Act § 7 cases, after a
    plaintiff has made a prima facie case that a merger is anticompetitive, the
    burden of showing that the claimed efficiencies cannot be “attained by
    practical alternatives,” Merger Guidelines § 10 n.13, is properly part of the
    defense, see 
    Olin, 986 F.2d at 1305
    (explaining that it is the defendant’s
    “burden to rebut a prima facie case of illegality”). That burden, moreover,
    is not unduly onerous, as the defendant need not disprove alternatives that
    are “merely theoretical.” Merger Guidelines § 10.
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 29
    St Luke’s needs a core group of employed primary care
    physicians beyond the number it had before the Acquisition
    to successfully make the transition to integrated care,” and
    that “a committed team can be assembled without employing
    physicians.” The court also found that the shared electronic
    record was not a merger-specific benefit because data
    analytics tools are available to independent physicians.
    These factual findings were not clearly erroneous.
    Testimony highlighted examples of independent physicians
    who had adopted risk-based reimbursement, even though they
    were not employed by a major health system. The record also
    revealed that independent physicians had access to a number
    of analytic tools, including the St. Luke’s Epic system.
    But even if we assume that the claimed efficiencies were
    merger-specific, the defense would nonetheless fail. At most,
    the district court concluded that St. Luke’s might provide
    better service to patients after the merger. That is a laudable
    goal, but the Clayton Act does not excuse mergers that lessen
    competition or create monopolies simply because the merged
    entity can improve its operations. See Proctor & 
    Gamble, 386 U.S. at 580
    . The district court did not clearly err in
    concluding that whatever else St. Luke’s proved, it did not
    demonstrate that efficiencies resulting from the merger would
    have a positive effect on competition.
    IV. Remedy
    “The key to the whole question of an antitrust remedy is
    of course the discovery of measures effective to restore
    competition.” United States v. E. I. du Pont de Nemours &
    Co., 
    366 U.S. 316
    , 326 (1961). “[T]he relief must be directed
    to that which is necessary and appropriate . . . to eliminate the
    30 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    effects of the acquisition offensive to the statute . . . and
    assure the public freedom from its continuance.” Ford Motor
    Co. v. United States, 
    405 U.S. 562
    , 573 n.8 (1972) (internal
    citation and quotation marks omitted). Section 7 remedies
    should not be punitive, but “courts are authorized, indeed
    required, to decree relief effective to redress the violations,
    whatever the adverse effect of such a decree on private
    interests.” E. I. du 
    Pont, 366 U.S. at 326
    .
    The customary form of relief in § 7 cases is divestiture.
    See 
    id. at 330
    (noting that most litigated Clayton Act § 7
    cases “decreed divestiture as a matter of course”); see also
    
    ProMedica, 749 F.3d at 573
    ; 
    RSR, 602 F.2d at 1325
    –26; Ash
    Grove Cement Co. v. FTC, 
    577 F.2d 1368
    , 1379–80 (9th Cir.
    1978). Divestiture is the “most important of antitrust
    remedies,” and “should always be in the forefront of a court’s
    mind when a violation of § 7 has been found.” E. I. du 
    Pont, 366 U.S. at 330
    –31; see also 
    id. at 329
    (“The very words of
    § 7 suggest that an undoing of the acquisition is a natural
    remedy.”). This is especially true when the government is the
    plaintiff. See Am. 
    Stores, 495 U.S. at 280
    –81 (“[I]n
    Government actions divestiture is the preferred remedy for an
    illegal merger or acquisition.”).
    St. Luke’s nonetheless argues that the district court erred
    in ordering divestiture because (1) divestiture will not
    actually restore competition; (2) divestiture eliminates the
    transaction’s procompetitive benefits; and (3) a proposed
    conduct remedy was preferable. We find no abuse of
    discretion in the district court’s choice of remedy.
    Although divestiture may generally be the most
    straightforward way to restore competition, E. I. du 
    Pont, 366 U.S. at 331
    , a district court must consider whether it will
    ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS. 31
    effectively do so under the facts of each case. “A primary
    concern is whether the offending line of commerce, if
    disassociated from the merged entities, can survive as a
    viable, independent entity.” FTC v. PepsiCo, Inc., 
    477 F.2d 24
    , 29 n.8 (2d Cir. 1973). St. Luke’s argues that Saltzer
    would no longer be able to compete post-divestiture, and that
    divestiture therefore would not restore competition in the
    Nampa PCP market.
    The district court had ample basis, however, for rejecting
    that contention. Indeed, in opposing a preliminary injunction,
    St. Luke’s assured the court that divestiture was feasible.
    Moreover, Saltzer’s employees were assured by management
    that they would have their jobs no matter the result of the
    litigation, and a number of them testified that Saltzer would
    be viable as an independent entity. The district court also
    noted that “any financial hardship to Saltzer will be mitigated
    by St. Luke’s payment of $9 million for goodwill and
    intangibles as part of the Acquisition . . . .”
    Nor did the district court abuse its discretion in its
    consideration of the costs and benefits of divestiture. The
    court expressly determined that divestiture was appropriate
    because any benefits of the merger were outweighed by the
    anticompetitive concerns. See Am. 
    Stores, 872 F.2d at 843
    .
    The Supreme Court has specifically stated that “it is well
    settled that once the Government has successfully borne the
    considerable burden of establishing a violation of law, all
    doubts as to the remedy are to be resolved in its favor.” E. I.
    du 
    Pont, 366 U.S. at 334
    .
    Finally, the district court did not abuse its discretion in
    choosing divestiture over St. Luke’s’ proposed “conduct
    remedy”—the establishment of separate bargaining groups to
    32 ST. ALPHONSUS MED. CTR. V. ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYS.
    negotiate with insurers.16 Divestiture is “simple, relatively
    easy to administer, and sure,” E. I. du 
    Pont, 366 U.S. at 331
    ,
    while conduct remedies risk excessive government
    entanglement in the market, see U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
    Antitrust Division Policy Guide to Merger Remedies § II n.12
    (2011) (noting that conduct remedies need to be “tailored as
    precisely as possible to the competitive harms associated with
    the merger to avoid unnecessary entanglements with the
    competitive process”). The district court, moreover, found
    persuasive the rejection of a similar proposal in In re
    ProMedica Health System, Inc., No. 9346, 
    2012 WL 1155392
    , at *48–50 (FTC March 28, 2012), adopted as
    modified, 
    2012 WL 2450574
    (FTC June 25, 2012). Even
    assuming that the district court might have been within its
    discretion in opting for a conduct remedy, we find no abuse
    of discretion in its declining to do so. See 
    ProMedica, 749 F.3d at 572
    –73 (holding that the FTC did not abuse its
    discretion in choosing divestiture over a proposed conduct
    remedy).
    V. Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, we AFFIRM the judgment
    of the district court.
    16
    Conduct remedies include “firewall, non-discrimination, mandatory
    licensing, transparency, and anti-retaliation provisions, as well as
    prohibitions on certain contracting practices.” U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
    Antitrust Division Policy Guide to Merger Remedies § II.B (2011); see
    also Areeda ¶ 990d.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-35173

Citation Numbers: 778 F.3d 775

Filed Date: 2/10/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

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