By Brent Kendall 

During nearly two weeks of court proceedings last month, the legal battle between U.S. antitrust enforcers and would-be merger partners Sysco Corp. and US Foods Inc. appeared to be a close decision. Turns out it wasn't close at all.

U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta in Washington issued a preliminary injunction on Tuesday blocking the planned merger of the nation's two largest distributors of food and related supplies to restaurants and other foodservice establishments. On Friday evening, he released a public version of his opinion, revealing he sided decisively with the Federal Trade Commission, which had sued to block the deal.

Judge Mehta's 128-page ruling said the Sysco-US Foods tie-up, announced in December 2013, was the type of large combination that lawmakers were concerned about long ago when they gave the government the power to halt mergers.

"The proposed merger of the country's first and second largest broadline foodservice distributors is likely to cause the type of industry concentration that Congress sought to curb at the outset before it harmed competition," the judge wrote.

Judge Mehta said the would-be merger was of considerable national importance, citing statistics showing Americans now spend more money per month in restaurants and bars than in grocery stores.

The judge sided with the FTC on the crucial point in the case: how to define the food distribution market for the purposes of deciding whether the merger could harm competition and lead to higher prices for consumers.

He agreed with the FTC that there was a separate market for distributors like Sysco and US Foods that offered comprehensive products and services to restaurants and other businesses. He rejected arguments from the companies that their size and power should be considered against the backdrop of the entire $231 billion foodservice distribution industry, which includes thousands of competing regional, local and specialty food distributors.

When viewed from that perspective, Sysco and US Foods had only about a quarter of the market, the companies argued.

The judge said smaller distributors may compete with Sysco and US Foods in some circumstances, but they didn't have the capabilities to serve customers in the same full-service manner with a broad range of product offerings.

Judge Mehta said large national customers rely particularly heavily on the top food distributors. Food service management companies like Sodexo and Aramark and hospitality companies like the Hilton and Interstate hotel chains do a significant amount of their purchases through Sysco and US Foods, he said.

The judge said the FTC's claim that the merger would harm local markets in many cities wasn't as strong as its arguments about the merger's effect on the national market. Nevertheless, the judge said the FTC's case was good enough to prevail on that issue, too.

Sysco and US Foods also fell short in their arguments that their proposed sale of assets to the No. 3 distributor, Performance Food Group Inc., would boost the smaller firm enough for it to replace any competition being eliminated by the merger.

The judge said Performance's five-year business plan "shows that post-merger PFG will not be nearly as competitive as [US Foods] is today."

Judge Mehta rejected another key argument by the companies, related to the cost-savings the merger would create. Sysco and US Foods said their combination would produce $500 million or more in annual efficiencies, savings that could be passed along to customers through better prices and service. The judge suggested a significant chunk of those cost-savings could be achieved independent of the deal.

The judge made statements during last month's court proceedings that indicated he believed there were some flaws with the economic data and analysis compiled by the FTC in support of its case. Judge Mehta reiterated that sentiment in his written opinion, but said the agency's analysis still better reflected real-world business conditions than the economic analysis offered by the companies in rebuttal.

Sysco and US Foods haven't yet said whether they plan to terminate their merger or try to continue to litigate to save it. That announcement could come any day. A US Foods executive testified during last month's proceedings that his company planned to walk away from the deal if Judge Mehta ruled against the merger.

Sysco expressed disappointment with the ruling after the judge issued the injunction Tuesday. A company spokesman declined further comment on Saturday. US Foods and the FTC couldn't immediately be reached.

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

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