Chillin'Competition

Relaxing whilst doing Competition Law is not an Oxymoron

Archive for 2011

Patent wars (+ Faull&Nikpay)

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It has been reported today that the European Commission is concerned about the use that is being made of patents essential to the 3G  mobile communications standard in the context of the ongoing legal battles surrounding the smartphone technology markets.

The Commision has confirmed that it has addressed requests for information to both Samsung and Apple, but it has not yet provided any further details. A legal filing by Apple in the U.S. nevertheless reveals that this preliminary investigation on the part of the Commission may be targetting a possible abuse of FRAND (Fair Reasonable And Non Discriminatory) licensing agreements on the part of Samsung, which in the recent past has initiated a large number of proceedings against Apple in several jurisdictions.

This is not the first antitrust investigation regarding anticompetitive behavior related to enforcement, use and misuse of patents undertaken by the EU Commission (think, for instance, about the Qualcomm or Astra Zeneca cases), and it certainly won´t be the last. Patent wars may be a newcomer in the antitrust world, but they´re here to stay.

By the way, I´m very fortunate to be  -together with Miguel de la Mano (Deputy Chief Economist at DG Comp and currently Acting Chief Economist at the UK´s Competition Commission), Hans Zenger (CRA), and Renato Nazzini (LMS and Southampton University)- part of the team that is currently should be drafting the chapter on Article 102 for the next edition of the Faull&Nikpay (which, as you know, is one of our favorite books), and given the rise of IP-related abuse of dominance cases we´re planning to devote a specific section to these issues.

Have a nice weekend!

(Image possibly subject to copyright)

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

4 November 2011 at 11:58 pm

The language of competition law

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In a comment to a recent post we recently engaged in a discussion about the meaning of words and the importance of the proper use of terminology in light of the crucial meanings, nuances and attitudes that words often implicitly or explicitly convey. Words often “carry dynamite”, we said.  A few days earlier, we had also written another post which -perhaps in a manifestation of wishful thinking- highlighted the fact that the Court had used the term “objective justification” in an area (Art. 101 TFEU) where it had never resorted to it before. In our view, words matter. A lot.

All this sprung a reflection about the importance of words and of languages when it comes to understanding, teaching or applying law in general, and competition law in particular:

The crucial influence of the use of certain words, metaphors or narratives has already been noted in the past by some of the most prominent antitrust scholars. Excellent examples of this can be found, amongst others, in the influential piece by late Prof. Areeda on “Essential Facilities: An Epithet in Need of Limiting Principles“; in “Antitrust Doctrine and the Sway of Metaphor” by Michael Boudin (who, btw, was my antitrust professor at HLS); or in Newberg´s “A Narrative Construction of Antitrust“.

One of our blogosphere colleages (Prof. Sokol) also wrote a post some time ago about The Language of Sex and Antitrust (if cheap advice on how to increase online readers is right, this is the link that most of you will be clicking…).

But beyond words, the language in which the law is conceived, drafted, learnt, taught, and interpreted or applied also makes a huge difference. I am not aware of the existence of any study on whether and how languages compete to shape the law, but it is undeniable that they do shape it, and that their influence can be much greater than that of words, because languages (i) are also vehicles for the diffusion of certain values; and (ii) because they are subject to very strong network externalities (if any enforcer is reading this, then languages -as beneficiaries of network externalities- may have just become a new antitrust suspect…).

Many of you may have first-hand experience of the fact that law is very often learnt, taught and understood differently depending on the language used. Nicolas and I, for instance, are currently working on competition law textbooks in our own languages, and it is not always easy to transform the input we normally receive (typycally in English) to our output. Mere translation is not always enough because the language strongly influences the way in which the information is rationalized. Examples abound:

Some posts ago we wrote about the future reform of the General Court and noted that more than 40% of référendaires (clerks) at the GC are of French nationality. This is obviously due to the fact that the official language at the Court is French, but, as we noted in that post, those numbers have implications far beyond the merely linguistic. In that case there are also cultural elements involved (in as much as the language may be associated to the values of a country), but the influence of the French values through the French language can be traced in many of the Courts attitudes and Judgments.

Now English has become the lingua franca (a fact of which this blog stands as evidence). This may have had some disadvantages for the English language (because being used by non-natives it risks deteriorating, as this blog also illustrates..), but overall it offers many advantages to anglosaxon values and ideas which enjoy an “unparalleled competitive advantage” (to use the words of the CFI´s Judgment in Microsoft). Ask the Financial Times or The Economist

But competitive advantages arising from the use of language in competition law are not merely enjoyed by ideas and policies, but also by firms. One example of this could be the legal market, where anglosaxon firms enjoy a competitive advantage on the worldwide market just because they´re anglosaxon firms.  I´m not necessarily criticizing this; my firm, for instance, also benefits from a competitive advantage derived from huge brand recognition in its main market. I do nevertheless have a problem with the legal market becoming a “luxury” market where brands matter more than quality and outcomes (and I know many examples where this is true in the EU competition law world), but this is another matter that perhaps we´ll deal with in another future post.

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

3 November 2011 at 9:13 pm

General Interest

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A few weeks ago, I have been asked to make conclusive remarks at a conference on “Competition law and the general interest” (BTW, the picture above shows Paris Hilton serving “general interest” works after having been found guilty of unlawful drug possession).

I attach my text below. This is far from ground-breaking, and if anyone has suggestions on how to improve the text, I’ll surely take them on board.

That said, it was the first time I was asked to do this, and it was a lot of fun.

The proceedings of the conference (in French), will soon be published by Larcier.

Droit de la concurrence et intérêt général – Final (03 11 11) NP

Written by Nicolas Petit

2 November 2011 at 10:25 pm

Help

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Apologies for the self-promotion – it is actually not the purpose of this post – but next week, I have to give a speech on standardization a this conference.

To prepare for the conference, I have read a LOT of stuff including complex books on the ISO, patent law, etc.

Yet, there’s one little piece of information that I am still missing. I heard last week from a secret informant that there is currently a Dupont case in COMP’s pipeline, but I cannot find any trace of it. Any information on this case would be most helpful.

More generally, I welcome any input, remark, comments, sources on standardization. As usual, your help will be acknowledged in the first footnote of my paper.

Written by Nicolas Petit

1 November 2011 at 6:49 pm

The slow death of Article 101(3)

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Yesterday we attended the first session of the annual conference of the Global Competition Law Center (of which, btw, Nicolas is the director). As expected, the conference was extremely interesting, and gave us plenty of ideas for future posts. Here´s one.

Our friend Damien Gerard made a very good presentation in which, following a historical approach, he presented several paradoxes of the modernisation of EU competition law. After he concluded, I posed a question to the panel, asking whether the interplay of the three dimensions of modernisation that Damien mentioned (substantive, procedural and institutional) may have had the effect -or perhaps the object..- of killing Art. 101(3).  The comments that followed showed that this is a widespread concern.

Let me now explain to you how I view this, and why the usual question (who did it?) has no clear answer. My take is that all the usual suspects bear some responsibility:

In the early days of the classic case law, EU Courts paid great attention to Art. 101(3) because they were conscious of the crucial role that the drafters of the Treaty had attributed to this provision. But it wasn´t their task to apply it. They saw it as something too complex and abstract, so they washed their hands off: they left  its application up to the Commission and decided to apply a light standard of review. That is, in fact, where the “manifest error of appraisal”  test of judicial review was born for EU competition law.

For many years, the Commission exercised its monopoly over the application of 101(3). Those were, in a way, the “golden days” of this provision (even though there were some obvious disfunctionalities as a consequence of the centralized system). With the entry into force of Regulation 1/2003 this whole situation changed. The Commission shifted its priorities to focus on the “most serious infringements” which, as a matter of fact, are also the “most obvious” ones. It therefore also washed its hands and left the cases where Art. 101(3) would be relevant to national competition authorities (NCAs) and national courts.

But NCAs and national courts also regard the application of 101(3) as something which is too complex, and, let´s face it, the Commission´s Guidelines on Art. 101(3) are far from being decisively helpful. Couple that with the feeling that undertaking an effects analysis under 101(1) is also too burdensome, as well as with the fact that NCAs have, logically, their own priorities, and what you get is a situation where at the national level there are essentially only “object cases” where 101(3) assessments are reduced to an absolute minimum under the argument that “object restrictions” are hardly redeemable (which, btw, is at odds with all case law departing from European Night Services) There are no available stats on this, but I bet they would be mindblowing.

The Commission hasn´t done much to solve this situation. It has failed to provide case by case guidance, and has instead focused on sanctioning cartels, abuses of dominance (mostly in network industries) and in releasing general guidance; moreover, where an issue appears as uncertain, the usual solution is to adopt a commitment decision. Not really helpful. Furthermore, the Commission has contributed to fostering the confusion by enlarging (with the help of EU Courts) the “object” category (e.g. with regard to information exchanges).

EU Courts, on their part, could also be charged as accomplices. Three pieces of incriminating evidence are (i) the enlargement of the “object” category in T-Mobile; (ii) the ruling in Tele 2 Polska precluding NCAs from adopting negative decisions; (iii) the adoption of distinct standards for the review of 101(3) assessments: would the overly simplistic Premier League Judgement, where the Court says, without providing much support for its assertion, that the exclusivity arrangements at issue do not meet the conditions of Art 101(3) (see para 145 of the Judgment) comply with the Court´s tough stance against the Commission in Glaxo Spain?

What does this imply for competition law:

In my view, this situation is dramatic for EU competition law (well, as dramatic as a legal matter in the competition law field can get, which, to be frank…).  The interplay of all the factors above has led to an overly simplistic view of competition law, to a shifting of the burden of prove, and to even more arbitrariness and uncertainty.

 PS. The painting illustrating the post is “Prometheus bound” by Rubens. As Art. 101(3) in the world of competition law, Prometheus was “credited with -or blamed for- playing a pivotal role in the early history of mankind“. As you know, immortal Prometheus was punished by Zeus to a -quite nasty- eternal punishment: he was bound to a rock where his liver was eaten daily by an eagle,  only to regenerate and be eaten again the following day. Mithology has it that Hercules finally slayed the eagle and freed Prometheus. Will anyone eventually free Art.101(3)?

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

28 October 2011 at 12:31 pm

JD

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Jones Day Paris announced recently that they had hired Eric Barbier de la Serre (formerly Latham & Watkins, Brussels).

He will join there Eric Morgan de Rivery, who is the resident partner in charge of competition cases.

I knew, as many, that Jones Day applied strict standards when it comes to appointing new partners. But that strict???

I mean, unless you are (i) a superstar antitrust lawyer; and (ii) you’re called  “Eric ___ de____”, the odds that you’ll make partner in Paris seem pretty low.

The bottom line: when it comes to HR, Jones Day clearly is no joker.

Written by Nicolas Petit

27 October 2011 at 7:00 am

Posted in Life at Law Firms

XV edition of the EU & Spanish Competition Law Course

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Some of you may recall from previous posts that both Nicolas and I are heavily involved (although in this case I clearly beat him..) in the organization of an excellent competition law course that Luis Ortiz Blanco has been directing for 15 years in Madrid. Actually, that´s where we met four or five years ago. 

We are of course biased, but we must say that the line-up of more than 70 guest speakers who come every year from all over Europe to lecture in Madrid is a true Who´s Who of EU competition law experts. Moreover, the 115 hours of scheduled classes allow for a more detailed coverage than that offered by many other competition law courses on the market. About half of the course is lectured in English.

The final program for each module and seminar has not yet been decided, but the overall structure and dates have been set, so I´ve included the info below. Anyone interested can register both for the full program or just for specific module/s or seminar/s.  If any of you would like more information you can contact me at alfonso.lamadrid@garrigues.com

The 2012 program will be structured as follows:

– An introductory session -in which Nicolas will play a very prominent role- will take place on January 13.

– A module on cartels (coordinated by Jerónimo Maíllo; San Pablo CEU University) will be held on January 16-18.

– A module on other restrictive agreements and practices (coordinated by Juan Andrés García Alonso; Peugeot) will take place on January 23-25.

– On February 3 there will be a seminar on recent developments in relation to Art. 101 (coordinated by Fernando Castillo de la Torre and Eric Gippini Fournier, both from Legal Service of the European Commission).

– A module on abuse of dominance coordinated by myself will be held on February 6-8.

A seminar on recent developments in abuse of dominance and merger control (8 hours)  jointly coordinated by  Cecilio Madero (Deputy Director General at DG COMP) and by myself will be held on February 24.

A module on merger control coordinated by Jerónimo Maíllo will be held on February 13-15.

– A module on the application of competition and state aid rules to public entities coordinated by José Luis Buendía (Garrigues) and Jorge Piernas (EUI) will take place on March 1-2.

– A seminar on competition law in regulated markets coordinated by myself will be held on March 12-14; and

– A seminar on competition law and IP  coordinated by Álvaro Ramos (Legal Director at Cisco) will take place on March 23.

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

26 October 2011 at 4:50 pm

Posted in Our Organizations

“Canada Dry” Decisions

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The ECJ ruling in Tele2 Polska is a joke (actually a bad one).

I’ve already blogged on the nefarious effects of this ruling. Today, I’d like to make a few more points.

Remember: the judgment states that National Competition Authorities (“NCAs”) cannot, under Regulation 1/2003, adopt declaratory decisions stating that there has been no breach of Article 101 and/or 102 TFEU (on the merits).

This judgment is likely to have far reaching consequences. As written in a paper below, and confirmed by a number of colleagues at the GCLC lunch talk yesterday, it means that NCAs cannot adopt individual exemption decisions under Article 101(3) TFEU.

Since the inception of Regulation 1/2003, however, many – including me – have repeatedly stated that decentralisation was all about empowering NCAs to take Article 101(3) TFEU decisions. More importantly, several NCAs have taken exemption decisions over the past 7 years. Is this decisional practice now unlawful?

The Commission’s response to this is that the ruling does not change much. Rather than taking a negative decision under 101(3) TFEU, the NCAs can still adopt decisions that “there are no grounds for action on their part” pursuant to Article 5 of Regulation 1/2003.

Now, is this really true? As noted by F. Zivy yesterday, could a NCA conceivably write in a decision:  « The impugned practice infringes Article 101(1) TFEU. There is strong evidence that it is nonetheless justified under Article 101(3). But we are sorry, the only thing we can do is to say there are no grounds of action against this infringement”?

Or to be even more extreme:  “The impugned practice constitutes an infringement of Article 101(1) TFEU. Hence, there are no grounds of action on our part“? Come on..

To me, decisions that there are no grounds of action are like Canada Dry to “negative decisions”: they look like negative decisions, they taste like them, but they are not like them.

In practice, rather than making such paradoxical statements, NCAs willing to exonerate anticompetitive agreements are likely to reason within Article 101(1) TFEU, under a “rule of reason“-like approach (which BTW has been consistently held alien to EU law by the ECJ).

A last remark: the judgment is primarily based on a litteral reading of Article 5 of Regulation 1/2003 which sets the powers of NCAs, and is supposed to be exhaustive. Article 5 says  nothing of inapplicability decisions. hence, NCAs cannot take them.

Now, has the ECJ really read Article 5 of Regulation 1/2003?

I mean had it done so, it would have realised that this provision is all about the decisions taken for the application of Article 101 and 102 TFEU (“The competition authorities of the Member States shall have the power to apply Articles 81 and 82 of the Treaty in individual cases“). Hence, it is somewhat unavoidable that this provision is silent on negative decisions, that DO NOT apply Articles 101 and 102 TFEU.

Hereafter a paper that I have written with my assistant (in French) + the slides presented at the GCLC lunch talk yesterday.

Commentaire Tele 2 Polska – Petit et Lousberg – Final

24October2011_GCLC_Vebic&Tele2Polska

GCLC 24-10-2011 amended

GCLC_Tele2 and VEBIC_slides only

Written by Nicolas Petit

25 October 2011 at 9:56 am

Perfect competition

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At university, I teach a course entitled “basic economics of competition law“.

Last week, I told my LL.M. students that there are only few real life examples of the perfect competition model.

I also told them that  the “perfect competition” entry in Wikipedia only mentioned street food in Asia.

If I had to think personnally of additional illustrations, the only examples that sprung to my mind were:

  • Le Carré in Liège => the city centre area where students get d***k on the WE
  • The Kebab street close to the Grand Place in Brussels => the city centre area where people rush at night after they got d***k

Since then, one of my LL.M. students has apparently updated the Wikipedia entry :).

Written by Nicolas Petit

24 October 2011 at 9:30 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Our second birthday!

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On 20 October 2009,  Chillin´Competition opened for business.

In the two years that have gone by since then, this blog has taken up a considerable part of our “free time”, but it has taught us a lot and it has rewarded us with a great deal of  satisfaction as it has introduced us to many new  friends and opportunities.  As we replied in an email to one of you last week, as most parents we´re very proud of our baby, but we are ambitious parents and we want it to get better and better in every possible way.

One year ago, we confessed to be “frankly surprised by the reach of this tool” because we´d had nearly 70.000 visits and an average of 350 visits a day.    As of today, we´ve had 177.000 visits and our daily average has constantly increased to the extent that this week we´ve had over 1 , 000 visits a day. Over 450 of you receive our daily posts via subscriptions or via our LinkedIn group.  

Over the lifetime of the blog, we have been lucky enough to receive some really excellent input, from both guest contributors and from you in the form of your comments.  

W hen we stated out, we couldn’t have imagined the interest that Chillin’ Competition would generate. Thanks so much!!  

Nicolas & Alfonso

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

21 October 2011 at 1:29 pm

Posted in Uncategorized