Cartel Enforcement
Subscribe to Cartel Enforcement's Posts

Release of Confidential Cartel Information by European Commission to English High Court Suspended

by Philip Bentley and Philipp Werner

On 29 November 2012, the EU General Court (GC) issued a provisional order suspending the European Commission’s decision to communicate to the High Court of England and Wales a copy of Alstom’s reply to the statement of objections in the gas insulated switchgear cartel.  The statement of objections, which contained confidential business secrets, had been requested by the High Court in the context of a follow-on damages claim brought by National Grid, one of Alstom’s former customers.

For defendants, it will be reassuring to know that the GC will not allow the Commission to disclose contentious documents until the matter has been debated fully in court.  Plaintiffs will be relieved that they are not completely shut out of court on the issue of access to Commission documents that might support their claim for damages.  The matter does have to be debated at length, however, and the result is likely to be a set of nuanced and finely balanced rules that turn on the circumstances of each individual case.

This order is, therefore, another piece in the increasingly complex puzzle of procedures on access to documents in the European Union for the purposes of follow-on damages actions.  There are also wider issues surrounding document protection that must be considered carefully.

To read the full White Paper, click here.




read more

China’s Antitrust Authority Imposes Fines on Foreign Corporations for the First Time

by Henry L.T. Chen, Frank Schoneveld, Jared Nelson and Sean Pan

Recently China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) imposed an RMB 353 million (USD 56.7 million) penalty against an international price-fixing cartel of LCD manufacturers, the largest the NDRC has ever imposed for antitrust infringement.  The penalty is China’s first enforcement action against an international cartel and sends a strong signal to multinational corporations operating in China that enforcement actions against cartels will not be limited to Chinese entities.

To read the full article, click here.




read more

European Competition Network Revises the Model Leniency Programme

by Veronica Pinotti, Philipp Werner, Robert Bäuerle and Lionel Lesur

The network of European antitrust regulators, the European Competition Network, has revised its model leniency programme for cartels.  Major changes include a broader scope for summary applications when applying for leniency in more than three EU Member States, the application of leniency programmes to cartels with vertical elements, clarifications on the non-disclosure obligation, and unification of the level of protection for oral and written statements by leniency applicants. The changes will take effect once the individual competition authorities have  implemented them in their individual leniency programmes.

To read the full article, click here.




read more

Energy Sector A Target – China’s Antitrust Enforcement Agencies to Take Action Against International Cartels

by Frank Schoneveld

In the last six months, China’s antitrust enforcement agencies have signed five Memorandums of Cooperation with antitrust authorities in the United States, European Union, South Korea, Australia and Brazil. During this same period, Chinese antitrust enforcement agencies have substantially increased their personnel resources.  So far, in 2012 more than 10 cartel investigations have been opened by China’s antitrust enforcement agencies, resulting in fines of millions of dollars in four cases in the last four months alone.  (In the previous three years there had been only three cartel cases with total reported fines of less than US$1 million).

Why all of this activity?  The implications seem clear, and it is not just a matter of reading the tea leaves (so to speak): the Chinese antitrust enforcement agencies are clearly gearing up to implement an even more aggressive enforcement agenda that will now include international cartels that affect China. As a Director of China’s antitrust enforcement agency – the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) – stated in a speech on November 2, 2012: "We will increase our anti-price monopoly enforcement capability and strive to investigate and penalize a number of large cases that are influential domestically and internationally". Senior Chinese antitrust officials have privately confirmed that they were planning to execute on this agenda as soon as the new Politburo was in place.  Now that this has occurred, we can expect to see a significant uptick in the number of cartel investigations and prosecutions in China, which can subject offenders to fines of up to 10 percent of their annual revenues and confiscation of illegal gains. The "priority" industries reportedly targeted for scrutiny include energy, insurance, motor vehicles, travel and the internet.

The risks associated with the enforcement agencies more aggressive enforcement agenda are compounded by the fact that companies will now be subjected to heightened risk of follow-on private class actions in China.  In particular, the Court rules now make it easier for private plaintiffs to commence class actions in Chinese courts and the Supreme People’s Court recently held that once a cartel agreement has been found to exist, the burden of proof shifts to the defendant to prove that the agreement did not result in any restriction of competition.

These developments demonstrate that corporations active in China need to ramp up their antitrust compliance efforts without delay to reduce the risk of being targeted for investigation and serious financial exposure. As a first step, conducting an antitrust compliance audit is advisable to assess potential risk areas and, where appropriate, to position the company to take advantage of the Chinese enforcement agencies’ leniency application procedures.  




read more

EU Commission Can Bring Follow-On Actions for Damages on Behalf of the European Union in Cartel Cases

by Louise Aberg,  Lionel Lesur and  Philipp Werner

On November 6, 2012, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ruled that the European Commission was entitled to represent the European Union in an action for damages before national courts.  The CJEU ruled that the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union did not prevent the Commission from taking an action for damages against the cartel participants for harm suffered by the European Union as a result of anti-competitive behavior that the Commission had already sanctioned by rendering an infringement decision.  Companies should therefore bear in mind that the Commission is no longer just the investigator, prosecutor and judge of a cartel, but also a potential damages claimant.

To read the full article, click here.




read more

Price-Fixing Cartels: China Crackdown Continues

by Henry L.T. Chen, Frank Schoneveld, Jared Nelson and Sean Pan

Several major actions taken against price-fixing cartels by China’s enforcement authorities in the last year have sent a clear message that this is not a temporary campaign.  It is a new reality.

To read the full article, click here.




read more

Germany Amends Competition Law: Key Changes

by Martina Maier, Philipp Werner and Robert Bäuerle

On 18 October, the German Federal Parliament (Bundestag) adopted several changes to German competition law.  The new legislation still has to be passed by the second chamber of the German parliament (Bundesrat) but the changes are expected to come into force on 1 January 2013.  Overall, the changes are less far-reaching than many of the proposals discussed during the preparatory phase of the reform.  The changes, however, are significant and will have to be taken into account by companies doing business in Germany. The article summarizes the main points of the reform.

To read the full article, click here.




read more

EU General Court Rules European Commission Wrong to Reject Summarily Claimants’ Requests for Access to Investigation Files

by Andrea Hamilton, David Henry and Philipp Werner

EU Court rules that European Commission must undertake an individual and specific review of requested cartel documents before it can deny a damages claimant access thereto.

To read the full article, click here




read more

European Commission Considers Taking Over Cartel Investigations to Prevent Exploitation of German Law Loophole

by Martina Maier and Philipp Werner

Under German law, companies may escape cartel fines by undertaking an internal restructuring.  The German competition authority has indicated a willingness to reallocate such cases to the European Commission, which can impose a fine on the corporate group regardless of any internal restructuring.  Commission officials speaking at a conference have suggested recently that the Commission would be willing to take over cartel cases from EU Member States, even at a late stage in the proceedings, in order to fine undertakings for their anti-competitive behaviour.

To read the full article, click here.




read more

BLOG EDITORS

STAY CONNECTED

TOPICS

ARCHIVES

Ranked In Chambers USA 2022
US Leading Firm 2022