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How can market power be quantified? The conventional method followed by competition authorities —although not the only one— consists of estimating market power indirectly through indicators of market share and market concentration.
These proxies are used to describe market structure and are considered a prima facie indicator of market power or the level of competition between companies. In general terms, market concentration reflects the number of participants and the relative market position achieved by each of them.
The Herfindahl Hirschman Index (HHI) is a measure used to determine market concentration levels and changes in it, based on models of competition in quantity with homogeneous products.
It is commonly used to analyze mergers and the changes they generate in market structure. Analysis through HHI generally goes along the following line of thought: (i) the greater the share achieved by a concentrated economic agent, (ii) the higher the concentration in the market, and (iii) the greater the variations resulting from the merger, (iv) the greater the probability of anti-competitive effects being generated (FNE, 2021).
This indicator consists of the sum of the squared market shares of all companies in the market (N companies).
HHI= \sum_{i=1}^{N}s_{i}^{2}
HHI varies between a lower limit of 0 and an upper limit of 10,000. As shown in Table 1, at one extreme, when there is a monopoly, the indicator takes the value of 10,000. On the contrary, when there are an infinite number of companies of equal size, the indicator takes a value very close to 0. Thus, the closer the HHI value is to 10,000, the more concentrated the industry is.
Table 1: Herfindahl-Hirschman Index
Market shares (%)
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F)
Company 1 100 75 50 50 25 20
Company 2 25 50 25 25 20
Company 3 25 25 20
Company 4 25 20
Company 5 20
HHI 10.000 6.250 5.000 3.750 2.500 2.000
An advantage of the HHI is that it considers the relative size of companies in the market. Thus, it is not the same for two companies to have the same market share (HHI = 5,000) than for one company to have a 75% market share and another to have a 25% market share (HHI = 6,250).
In short, the HHI increases both as the number of companies in the market decreases and as the disparity in size between those companies increases (DOJ, 2018).
For cases of partial acquisitions and/or joint ventures, the Modified Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (MHHI) is commonly used. In general terms, the MHHI considers the possibility that interdependence links may exist between companies, either through financial interest and the ability to exercise control or decisive influence. Thus, it quantifies the additional variation in the HHI resulting from cross-shareholdings.
On the one hand, financial interest refers to the acquiring company’s right to obtain a proportion of the acquired company’s profits. On the other hand, corporate control implies that the acquiring company could control or influence the competitive decision-making of the company (Salop & O’Brien, 2000).
The formula proposed by Salop and O’Brien (2000) is as follows:
MHHI=\sum_{k} \sum_{j} (\sum_{i} \gamma_{i j} \beta_{i k}/\sum_{i} \gamma_{i j} \beta_{i j}) s_{k} s_{j}
Or, alternatively:
MHHI=HHI+\sum_{j} \sum_{k \neq j}(\frac{\sum_{i} \gamma_{i j} \beta_{i k}}{\sum_{i} \gamma_{i j} \cdot \beta_{i j}}) s_{k} \cdot s_{j}
Where j y k and are company subscripts and i is a shareholder subscript, s_j and s_k are the market shares of companies, \gamma_{ij} is the degree of influence that shareholder i has over company j, and \beta_{ij} and \beta_{ik} correspond to the financial interest or equity participation of shareholder i in companies j and k, respectively (FNE Approval Report F219-2019).
Furthermore, the authors identify five situations associated with partial acquisitions and, for each of them, derive the formulas for the variation of the MHHI (FNE, 2013):
\Delta=\beta S_{a} S_{b}
\Delta=(\beta+1 / \beta) S_{a} S_{b}
\Delta=2 S_{a} S_{b}
\Delta=(1+\beta) S_{a} S_{b}
\Delta=(\beta+\beta /((1-\beta)^{2}+\beta^{2}))S_{a} S_{b}
When comparing the competitive effects in each of the scenarios, the authors conclude that the greater the financial interest, the greater the reduction in the company’s competitive incentives.
European Commission (2004) – Directrices sobre la evaluación de las concentraciones horizontales
DOJ, EE.UU. (2010) – Horizontal Merger Guidelines
DOJ, EE.UU. (2018) – Herfindahl Hirschman Index
FNE (2013) – Participaciones minoritarias y directores comunes entre empresas competidoras
FNE (2021) – Guía para el Análisis de Operaciones de Concentración Horizontales
Salop, S. & O´Brien, D. (2000) – Competitive Effects of Partial Ownership: Financial Interest and Corporate Control