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Commerce Commission finds rebates paid to merchants to sell building supplies like GIB are hampering competition

Business / news
Commerce Commission finds rebates paid to merchants to sell building supplies like GIB are hampering competition
[updated]
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Source: 123rf.com. Copyright: scusi

The Commerce Commission has launched an investigation into the rebates paid by Fletcher Building’s plasterboard arm, Winstone Wallboards, to building supplies retailers.

The rebates paid by building firms like Fletchers to retailers for selling their products is one of two main factors the Commerce Commission says is hampering competition in the building suppliers sector and makes it difficult to introduce new competing products.

But Fletcher's GIB maker has already gotten ahead of the Commission's news, announcing just after the Commission started its press conference that Winstone Wallboards "has already informed its merchant customers that it will discontinue use of that type of rebate and will move to a tailored, flat pricing model based on volume".

The competition watchdog Commerce Commission released its final market study into the residential building supplies market on Tuesday morning, and found, like the supermarket industry, competition was not working as well as it could.

Government pledges action

Commerce Minister David Clark and Building Minister Megan Woods say the Government will take action to increase competition in the residential building supplies sector.

"We welcome these findings and will consider the recommendations, to understand what changes are necessary to help increase competition, and ultimately bring down costs for consumers, which is hugely important in these challenging global cost of living times."

The Commission released nine recommendations to improve competition for building supplies including introducing competition as an objective to be promoted in the building regulatory system, to create more clear compliance pathways for a broader range of key building supplies, to explore ways to remove impediments to product substitution and variations, and to establish a national system to share information about building products and consenting.

It says it needs to address “strategic business conduct” including the “quantity” forcing rebates paid by suppliers to merchants, which appear to be making it difficult for new or competitive products to access distribution channels and increase sales.

“Quantity-forcing rebates reward merchants for purchasing greater volumes through a single supplier, by offering higher percentage rebates that apply across all of a merchant’s purchases with that supplier. Under certain conditions they can deter merchants from stocking competing products in their stores, making it more difficult for new or smaller suppliers to get established,” the report says.

But the Commission didn’t recommend legislative change to prohibit rebates, saying rebates can provide benefits, and whether rebates are affecting competition depends on specific circumstances.

It also took aim at the building regulatory system, which it says incentivises designers, builders and consenting authorities to favour familiar building products.

Building consenting authorities are the councils which handle consent applications, and many submitters to the Commission’s market study said there were too many consenting authorities to deal with, who had differing ways of dealing with consents and in particular product substitution.

The councils have been left the last man standing over the years for leaky building cases and this is considered to have significantly contributed to a conservative approach to substituting or changing what is used in a build from branded products like Winstone Wallboard’s GIB plasterboard product.

There is a current review underway of the consenting system.

Woods says the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) had released updated guidance on Tuesday on the building consent process, and a new standardised checklist for residential building consent applications.

"This will help lift the quality and consistency of building consent applications."

Woods also introduced a plasterboard taskforce to look at how the supply of plasterboard could be improved, and allowed the use of four plasterboard products to satisfy Building Code requirements for structural bracing. MBIE has also published guidance on which products can be used as a substitute to make it easier to work out what can be used instead of GIB.

The Commission report says plasterboard is commonly specified by brand in building plans, and this has made it difficult for builders to substitute competing products to Winstone Wallboards’ GIB-branded plasterboard. 

“BCAs [building consent authorities] throughout New Zealand can take different approaches to consenting decisions, adding to the difficulties in substituting alternative plasterboard (and other) products. Quantity-forcing rebates for plasterboard may also be contributing to difficulties for competing suppliers.”

Winstone has been investigated by the Commission before, without any action being taken. It holds an estimated 90% of the plasterboard market in New Zealand and this over-reliance was exposed when there was a GIB shortage which saw  work on building sites grind to a halt.

Winstone Wallboards 'surprised'

Winstone says it was surprised by the Commission’s conclusion that it needs a third investigation to collect information about Winstone Wallboards and its rebates.

"We note the Commission has made no adverse comment about Winstone Wallboards - just that it needs more time to collect more information."

It says rebates are a volume incentive, where a customer receives a better rebate, measured over all their purchases if they buy pre-agreed volumes of a product over a period of time and they are very common, not just across the building supplies industry but other parts of the economy as well.

The Commission also found familiar ground again with the supermarket market study and the fuel market study, saying that land covenants and exclusive use clauses - controlling how a piece of land can be used - is also at play for the building supplies industry.

It says widespread use of land covenants, exclusive leases and contractual arrangements with similar effect could adversely affect competition.

Anyone holding out hope that vertical integration, those businesses that both make and supply, would see changes would be disappointed.

The Commission says vertical integration can provide a competitive advantage and potentially creates opportunities for certain conduct that can reduce competition. 

“However, it does not appear that this industry structure normally has a material adverse effect on competition for key building supplies at either the supplier level or the merchant level.”

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26 Comments

Nothing will ever meaningfully change in NZ’s building sector.

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17

Nothing will change in NZ with the CC being the regulator.

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5

I agree. Regulatory thinking here is underpinned by the extreme neoliberal framework (ideology) that is still so persuasive in NZ government agencies,  particularly in the Commerce Commission. Sadly, they are still emeshed in that type of thinking which results in “nothing to see here, everything is fine” outcomes. 

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3

extreme neoliberal framework (ideology) that is still so persuasive in NZ government agencies

The market framework at play in NZ can't be described as neoliberal either. Neoliberals accepts markets aren't naturally free and competition has to be "enabled" by market watchdogs. Even Milton Friedman implied in his works that the role of government is to set an appropriate structure of rules and enforcing them. You would struggle to find rules, an appropriate structure around them and proper enforcement from the responsible agencies across most markets in NZ.

The closest term that defines the framework adopted by successive governments in NZ is libertarian - a complete (and insane) hands-off approach allowing players to be in full control of every aspect of the market.

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5

In a free market, Winstones sell Gibboard at whatever price they feel like, and give whatever rebates they feel like. The foreign made board can't compete, so things have to be changed. This has happened to practically all NZ product markets. We are flooded with foreign made products, with circumstances altered to stop NZ made stuff competing.

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0

TLDR. Im ranting - so if you are short of time, don't waste it here.

 

I'm a Scot. I don't think Scotland is better than NZ. Let me be clear, I really don't. But I do think it is greedier and I am trying to work out why.

The story above is an example of greed that wouldn't be tolerated in Scotland. Monopolies and duopolies don't obviously exist there. Lots of reasons but I wonder if the problem is more than economic. I wonder if it is cultural.

Could it be a colonial mindset passed down where you have to scrap for land, resources, food.  Where shaky ground and wooden buildings makes things feel more temporary, so you cling harder to protect yours.

My latest wtf example of this is the realisation that Wellingtonians in Kelburn, Karori, etc would rather send their kids to a 'prestigious' school across town than have one built in their own neighbourhood.

They literally vote to keep traffic horrific and force their offspring to do an hour round trip in a vehicle rather than walk 10 minutes. All just to protect that school status and keep their suburb equity up.

Greed and status insecurity feels everywhere. Maybe it is just Wellington.

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11

I don't think Scotland is better than NZ. Let me be clear, I really don't. But I do think it is greedier and I am trying to work out why.

I'm unsure from your statement if you think Scotland is greedier or NZ, could you clarify?

The status insecurity is universal though, It comes from historical experiences as we are a product of this and the settlers came from a strict and class-tiered society. Everyone wants the best for themselves and their kids, a new school wouldn't haver the history and therefore reputation to be used after their kids finish up, or perhaps the parents went there and want the same for their kids. Either way it is parents holding onto the known as opposed to the unknown for both reputation sake for the kids and because they aren't willing to take a chance on a new school with new teachers where the kids may not be as well off at the other end. This is the same argument as the housing sector, things need to be changed to make people change their behaviour, but nobody likes to lose and politicians live and die on popularity in todays day and age. Then again not everyone is the same, many like myself really aren't worries wherever the future kids wind up at school because we don't subscribe to such a view of life.
Either way, Scotland is a beautiful place, I look forward to going back someday soon for a visit.

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I'm saying I see and feel the greed more obviously here in NZ. Even down to the Trade Me obsession. Half of NZ seems to be on it every day, looking for that deal that doesn't exist.  The other half are on it trying to price second hand tat at 75% of the new price. It may just be my age rather than geography. Maybe if I was in Scotland, I'd see it more than I used to.

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3

Ripping each other off is a famous Kiwi favorite pastime.

 

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Interesting point of view.  Could it though, perhaps be that the whole world has gotten greedier over the last few decades? And that if you were to go back to Scotland to live you'd find it had gotten greedier there too?

I think the greediest country in the world, by far, is the USA.  Just look at how they crashed the financial system in '08.  And how there's financial scam after financial scam after financial scam there.  Right now it's in the crypto space, but previously it's been banking, the stock market (insider trading etc.) and rorting the system on every product/index including LIBOR, gold prices.  Not to mention that their 'defense' industry requires constant war - something both the red and blue teams are eager to support.
 

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The US is definitely a mindset I struggle with.  'We give you freedom and resource, the rest is up to you' seems to have warped into 'get yours, screw the other guy.' 

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  • B-b-b-b-b-b-but there's no way house prices can fall due to the cost of building materials.  
  • Margins are so small on building materials such as GIB, see look Placemaker's margin on GIB is only 5% (before annual rebate).  
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6

I would suggest many trade accounts with Placemakers are just for the GIB discounting.

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2

Petrol pricing reviewed - nothing to see. Supermarket pricing reviewed - nothing to see. 3 reviews with Fletcher and what an absolute waste of public money that was. Fletcher is way too cute for government departments so nothing to see here. Every last one of them take kiwis as fools and continue with the great rip off. Kiwis need to bring in some French farmers to help reset the rules.

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14

The Commerce Commission is a big part of the problem 

How did Fletchers get to buy Winstone Wallboards in the first place 

Same issue with concrete supply, timber, roading aggregate etc etc

As a country we have way to many monopoly/duopoly operations and the CC should have been much firmer prohibiting these arrangements - its never to late to start

and no this is not a neoliberal argument - good market policy needs effective regulation to manage monopoly providers  - this is well recognised world wide even if not well done

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1

Nothing a bit of Co-Governance would not fix, after all Maori and Pacifica are the most impacted by high building materials costs, due to the persistence of lower economic outcomes since colonisation. 

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4

My builder's been saying this to me for years. Nobody will speak out for fear of being blacklisted, product delayed, trade pricing reviewed. 

Are comcom funded by the cartels they are supposed to regulate?

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7

The comcom allowed Woolworths to buy countdown and big fresh and turn 4 major supermarket chains into 2. How did they ever think that was a good idea? Absolutely useless. 

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6

The only time they ever showed spine was when a bunch of nerds were complaining that a 125kbit internet connection with a 10 gig cap wasn't adequate for their """"""Linux Distros"""""", so they forced Telecom to give competitors access to their network exchanges.    

Imagine if the CC forced Pak N Save to give Fresh Choice shelf space in all their supermarkets.  

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0

These are the same anecdotal comments we hear about suppliers into the supermarket duopoly.   This is just not meant to happen in a regulated market....

Labour Soft on Monopolies

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1

Yeah, vote National - tough on crime and monopolies!

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1

Well the simple answer is price control and open boarders on plasterboard

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Winstone says it was surprised by the Commission’s conclusion that it needs a third investigation to collect information about Winstone Wallboards and its rebates.

Surprised, that is a bit naive of Winstone. Considering the volume rebates are circa 60+% to the builders.

One invoice with full retail pricing the customer sees on delivery of product to site and the monthly statement to the builder less the volume rebate.

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1

The builders don't get the rebate, its the hardware/building supply retailer who gets the rebate.

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0

Whoever gets the rebate; we paid gst and an 18% margin on top of the price for materials on our last renovation. The building sector is just so out of control. We had planned to build and have now cancelled any plans that involve building work; small jobs we have had quoted on current house seem about 3 times the true labour and material cost - we are undertaking these jobs ourselves with the help of family.….. no one will want to go anywhere near the building sector for quite some time after what has happened the last few years.

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I have an intention to build a double garage with a family room on top. Its been in my planning for the last three years. Its a want not a need so it if for whatever reason and  there are quite a few, it may not go ahead. High on the list is a builder who needs the job and that's not the case in New Plymouth yet.

My suggestion  is if you have any technical ability is to do as much leg work yourself as possible. That includes drawing your own bare bones house plan with dimensions. There are simple free 2D drawing apps available. Having soil tests (engineering report/geotech) as its commonly called done by a civil engineer directly. This will could potentially save you  $000's as no builder will cover the cost of an unknown and constructing foundations on unknown soil conditions is one of them. Learn what a prime cost PC and provisional sum PS are. There's a much longer list and there is a website Home Builders Reviews with plenty of horror stories. It makes me glad that I've been in Engineering project management as well and having been exposed to Contractual Conditions.

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