Chillin'Competition

Relaxing whilst doing Competition Law is not an Oxymoron

Archive for July 13th, 2023

Case‑376/20 P, CK Telecoms: Tetra Laval survives, but the legal test for non-coordinated effects will have to wait

with 2 comments

There will be no revolution in EU merger control after all. Today’s judgment in CK Telecoms sets aside the first instance ruling. However, it does so in a way that does not depart from Tetra Laval and the prevailing understanding of, inter alia, the principles governing the review of Commission decisions and the applicable standard of proof.

A close reading of the judgment shows that much of the appeal is about the specifics of the decision. The idea that the General Court ‘distorted‘ the Comission’s analysis pervades the ruling, and comes across as an element that must have been central to the outcome of the case. This post, as usual, will not focus on these specifics, but on the issues of principle addressed by the Court.

The most salient aspects of the judgment, which I examine in detail, can be summarised as follows:

  • First, the General Court erred in law when setting the applicable standard of proof. ‘Strong probability’ sets the bar too high, the ECJ holds.
  • Second, the ‘marginal review’ doctrine only applies to the legal characterisation of facts and only in relation economic assessments (para 124).
  • Third, the General Court erred in law when laying down the conditions under which non-coordinated effects can arise absent dominance (and, similarly, by failing to take into account the full range of factors).
  • Fourth, the General Court erred in law when defining the notion of ‘closeness of competiton’ and ‘important competitive force’.

Standard of review in EU merger control

As explained back in October, Advocate General Kokott had proposed in her Opinion a major departure from the Tetra Laval case law. If the Court had followed her approach, the review of merger decisions would have been confined to manifest errors of assessment.

The Court judgment makes it clear, first, that it is not for the Commission to interpret Article 2 of the Merger Regulation, including the concepts enshrined therein (para 129). In the same vein, the EU courts are not bound or constrained by the soft law instruments issued by the administrative authority.

Second, deference is only warranted, according to the judgment in relation to (i) the legal characterisation of facts and (ii) only insofar as economic matters are concerned.

The formula is repeated in several passages, but para 124 (with emphasis added) is perhaps the most explicit: ‘[…] the Commission has a margin of discretion with regard to economic matters for the purpose of applying the substantive rules of Regulation No 139/2004, in particular Article 2 thereof […]’).

Third, the fact that a particular concept requires the use of economic analysis when implemented does not mean that the Commission enjoys a margin of discretion when defining its scope and meaning. Para 127 gives several examples, including that of ‘dominant position’, ‘relevant market’ and ‘margin squeeze’.

Standard of proof

The standard of proof was one of the big bones of contention in the case (if not the biggest). The Commission took issue with the standard of proof (administered and/or declared) by the General Court in the first-instance ruling.

On this point, the Court makes a number of observations. First (para 74), it declares that the standard of proof does not change based on the type of decision (in other words, a decision declaring the compatibility of a transaction with the internal market is subject to the same standard as one declaring its incompatibility).

Second, the standard of proof does not change, either, based on the type of transaction. In other words, it would not be higher or lower depending on whether the transaction raises conglomerate, vertical and/or horizontal concerns (para 79).

Third, the Court seems to define the standard of proof in probabilistic terms (‘more likely than not‘), which is suggestive of a balance of probabilities standard (para 87). This point is to be welcome, if only because Advocate General Kokott’s Opinion had equated likelihood and plausibility. The judgment avoids the confusion that might have resulted from the conflation of these two concepts.

The legal test applied

The central substantive point of law at stake in the case is as exciting as it is unprecedented. When, absent dominance (individual or collective), is a impediment to effective competition significant? The General Court had tried to define a legal test inspired by the Preamble to Regulation 139/2004.

In accordance with this test, the Commission would need to show that the transaction would lead to ‘(i) the elimination of the important competitive constraints that the merging parties had exerted upon each other and (ii) a reduction of competitive pressure on the remaining competitors‘ (para 98).

The Court does not embrace this test, which it finds to be too restrictive (para 113). In this regard, the judgment appears to suggest that the first of these conditions would, alone, justify intervention. As explained in para 112, establishing such a condition is sufficient to prove a significant impediment to effective competition.

One should point out, in this regard, that, from an economic perspective, the two conditions defined by the General Court are one and the same (and therefore the test would not be as restrictive as one may assume). Pascale Déchamps and Maurice de Valois Turk explained in a piece for JECLAP (see here) that, if the first condition is fulfilled, one can safely presume that the second is, and vice versa.

Against this background, the change brought about by the ruling is more apparent than real.

The meaning of ‘closeness of competition’ and ‘important competitive force’

More significant and consequential than the legal test, in fact, are the passages devoted to the definition of the key concepts around which the decision revolved, namely ‘closeness of competition’ and ‘important competitive force’.

The General Court had construed both concepts with a seemingly clear rationale: require the Commission to show that there is something distinctive about the competitive relationship that would be lost as a result of the transaction.

The Court of Justice, by contrast, interprets them more expansively. As far as the closeness of competition is concerned, for instance, it holds that it is not necessary for the Commission to show that rivals were ‘particularly close‘ (para 191). It is sufficient that they are close.

How close? Reassuringly, the Commission is echoed in the judgment making it clear that not every firm within an oligopolistic market qualifies as a close competitor (para 173). Therefore, closeness of competition cannot be automatically assumed to exist in a tight oligopoly and would have to be established case-by-case.

The same is true of the concept of ‘important competitive force’. Contrary to what the General Court held, it would be sufficient to show that a firm is a maverick, that is, one that ‘has more of an influence on the competitive process than its market share or similar measures would suggest‘ (para 167).

The redefinition of these two concepts allows for more frequent intervention. The central challenge remains unchanged: how can they be construed so that judicial review remains meaningful, effective and faithful to the Tetra Laval principles?

Written by Pablo Ibanez Colomo

13 July 2023 at 5:12 pm

Posted in Uncategorized