By Brent Kendall 

WASHINGTON--A merger between rivals Staples Inc. and Office Depot Inc. could test how far U.S. antitrust enforcers views of competition in the office-supply market have evolved.

The Wall Street Journal reported late on Monday that the companies were in advanced merger talks. A deal to combine the top two office-superstore chains would serve as a sequel to the companies' ill-fated merger effort from nearly 20 years ago, which was derailed by a Federal Trade Commission lawsuit. A federal judge in 1997 sided with the FTC in a notable ruling that prevented the competitors from joining forces.

The new merger talks come at a time when competitive dynamics in the industry have shifted dramatically, a fact the FTC acknowledged in 2013 when it allowed Office Depot to merge with OfficeMax, then the number-three office superstore chain.

The FTC, after a seven-month investigation, issued a detailed statement on why it allowed that deal to proceed, and many of the commission's comments are sure to be cited by Staples and Office Depot if they agree to merge.

The FTC said it found overwhelming evidence to support the conclusion that office-supply superstores faced significant competition from big-box retailers like Wal-Mart and Target, as well as from online retailers, especially from Amazon.com.

"Everything the commission talked about in 2013 could carry over into this deal," said antitrust lawyer Robert Davis of Venable LLP, a former FTC staffer.

Mr. Davis said the FTC would want to make sure that its recent competitive analysis was correct, while also examining any changes in industry practices since Office Depot and OfficeMax combined. The FTC's staff likely will want to take a close look at the companies' business documents and may want to conduct another detailed economic analysis, he said.

When looking at everyday consumers, the FTC in 2013 found that fewer shoppers sought out office-supply chains as a retail destination, preferring instead the convenience of buying pens, notebooks and other office supplies at stores that offered many other kinds of products as well. The commission also said the office superstores were losing substantial in-store sales to online competitors.

The FTC's 1997 case against a Staples-Office Depot merger relied heavily on evidence that the two retailers set their prices according to the number of other office superstores competing in a local area. Fewer superstores battling head-to-head in a local market meant higher prices.

But the FTC's 2013 statement said pricing practices no longer followed the same pattern. The commission said its investigation of Office Depot and OfficeMax showed office superstores now price many of their products on a national basis, and they respond to competition from other retailers that don't specialize in office supplies.

Steven Cernak, an antitrust lawyer with Schiff Hardin LLP, said one area of FTC focus could be on whether a Staples-Office Depot merger would impact large business customers that buy office supplies on a contract basis.

The FTC in 2013 said the Office Depot-OfficeMax merger wouldn't harm those customers because big national businesses used a variety of tools to ensure they receive competitive prices. The FTC's statement, however, also cited competition from Staples as one of several reasons why the 2013 merger wasn't a problem.

"I wonder if those buyers will now complain," Mr. Cernak said.

Allen Grunes, an antitrust lawyer with the Konkurrenz Group, said several factors fell into place perfectly for the FTC when it prevailed in the 1997 Staples-Office Depot case, from what the internal documents revealed to which judge was assigned to rule on the lawsuit. "It was like the miracle case," Mr. Grunes said. "The odds of that happening again are low."

Write to Brent Kendall at brent.kendall@wsj.com

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