Chillin'Competition

Relaxing whilst doing Competition Law is not an Oxymoron

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Sixth Junior Competition Conference

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In a somewhat risky bid to compete with the first ever Chillin’competition conference (just kiddin’ here), our UK friends (and possily readers) Kit Brown, David Bailey and Sarah Long are trying to put together what looks like a promising conference.

They have asked us to post an ad on this website. As soon to be “essential facility” operators in the competition law blogosphere, we want to avoid trouble. We thus had no other choice but to accept.

More seriously, this looks again like a great initiative. See below for more.

SIXTH JUNIOR COMPETITION CONFERENCE – CALL FOR SPEAKERS

The editors of the Competition Law Journal would like to draw your attention to the Sixth Junior Competition Conference. It will take place on Friday 27 January 2012 and will be dedicated to the issue of reform of the UK competition regime; for further details please go to the following web page:

http://www.jordanpublishing.co.uk/publications/commercial/competition-law-journal
If you would like to speak at the conference, please contact Vian Quitaz – vjquitaz@hotmail.com – with an expression of interest and a short outline of your proposed topic.

A separate announcement will be made in due course for those interested in attending the Conference.

The editors of the Journal look forward to hearing from you.

Written by Nicolas Petit

19 October 2011 at 5:47 am

Posted in Events

Chillin´Competition: The Conference

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As our usual readers know by now, this blog was born out of the conviction that it was possible to do and say some things differently within our small competition law world. We have intended to do that on the blog, and now we want to extend this attitude to a conference  -the 1st Chillin´Competition conference- which will be somehow different from what you may be used to. We can´t say much more for now (except that it will be held in Brussels), but details will follow soon.

We want you to be involved to the greatest extent possible, and therefore we would like you to please send us your ideas on possible topics and speakers: we´re looking for excellent and open minded practitioners, officials or academics who might give brilliant, fresh and even humorous views on competition law issues. We already have ideas on a number of people who fit that description, and some of them have already expressed their willingness to participate in this initiative. Please send us your suggestions either publicly by commenting on this post or in private at nicolas.petit@ulg.ac.be and alfonso.lamadrid@garrigues.com

Thanks!

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

11 October 2011 at 8:12 pm

On Cartels and Beers

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Yesterday´s post was about Services of General Economic Interest and Sausages. Today´s deals with cartels and beers.

Some days ago we anticipated that we would comment on the latest cartel Judgment issued by the General Court in Case T-235/07, Koninklijke Grolsch v Commission in relation to the Dutch Beer Cartel, which was sanctioned by the Commission back in 2007. When we announced that we would comment on it we hadn´t yet read the Judgment but rather the Court´s press release about it, but the notice about the annulment of a Commission´s decision is something that always turns us on attracts our interest).

Those interested in an objective summary of the relevant facts and of the GC´s reasoning can read the Court´s Press Release. Those interested on some not objective opinions can keep on reading:

In our opinion, the annulment of the decision as regards Grolsch is, in a sense, quite logical: that is what happens when you conflate distinct legal entities into one (a temptation too often seen in EU competiton law) and distinct infringements into one single and continuous infringement (also quite usual) and then mix it all together.  But there are two interesting aspects of the case that are worth commenting.

One is the manner in which the GC dismisses the validity of the evidence concerning the parent´s company possible participation in the infringement: After noting that the majority of the evidence put forward by the Commission related in reality to the participation of Grolsch´s subsidiary, the Court was left with a couple of evidentiary items that could be used to support the accusation against the parent company (see recital 61 of the Judgment). The GC however dismisses those elements in an interesting manner (in recitals 62-71 of the Judgment). In essence, the GC decomposes the elements of the single and continuous infringement into three, and, departing from the Commission´s summary description of each of those components, it attempts to check whether the evidence can fit into any of them (this is an interesting, and welcome, deconstruction exercise that I´d never seen before regarding “single and continuous infringements). The GC then underlines that some of the evidence (documents found at Heineken relating to telephone conversations with one of the parent company´s employees) did not fit into the description provided by the Commission and therefore dismissed it.  The Court was then left with one piece of evidence (notes taken at a meeting by that same employee of the parent company), but this evidence was also considered insufficient on the basis of another interesting  reasoning (see recitals 65-66). In essence, the GC´s stance is that a complex concertation necessarily involves regular contacts throughout a long period of time, and that a single element cannot prove the participation of one company over the whole of this period. Does this imply a raise in the evidentiary standard for complex and long infringements?

The other aspect worth mentioning is the Commission´s lapsus (probably due to a certain overconfidence) , that has cost the EU budget 31.66 million euros. As it is clear from the Judgment, the participation of Grolsch´s subsidiary in the infringement was clear and there was enough evidence to prove it. If the Commission had addressed the decision to both the parent company and the subsidiary (as it normally does, and as it did in this case with regard to all other groups of companies involved)  the sanction would´ve been upheld. Ooops.

According to one of our favorite sources: beveragedaily.com, the Commission is pondering whether to appeal the Judgment before the ECJ.

More on cartels and beers:

On 10-13 October the International Competition Network will be holding a Cartel Workshop in Bruges (Nicolas is attending, and I wouldn´t mind accompanying him if someone at DG COMP considers me -when I wear my blogger hat- as a stakeholder and kindly sends an invitation…).  If any of our readers is attending the conference, I will now disclose one of Bruge´s most precious secrets: the most amazing beer that I´ve ever had can only be found in Bruges at a place called DeGarre

This is a traditional place for students of the College of Europe (because, you know, there are so many other things to do in Bruges…). Luis Ortiz Blanco also traditionally invites the students attending his seminar at the College  for some beers at the end of the academic year. You really shouldn´t miss it.

PS. And speaking about the ICN´s Workshop, we very much recommend you to check out their blog at www.icnblog.org . It really is a great source of information on  international antitrust.

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

23 September 2011 at 7:25 pm

Back to School

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The GCLC is back to school with a very busy agenda.

  • On 30 September 2011 there will be a high level conference on the Reform of State Aid Rules on Services of General Economic Interest (SGEI) in Bruges;
  • On 17 October, it will hold a lunch talk in Brussels on “The Rights, Powers and Duties of NCAs following the ECJ’s rulings in VEBIC and Tele2 Polska” (invitation to be posted soon on our website);
  • On 27 and 28 October, we will have our Seventh Annual Conference. The 2011 edition will be devoted to the Effects-Based Approach in EU Competition Law;
  • On 2 December, there will be an Evening Policy Talk with B. Kovacic (TBC)  (invitation to be posted soon on our website).

Written by Nicolas Petit

21 September 2011 at 7:35 am

Brussels School of Competition – Materials of Conference on Information Exchange

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Yesterday, the Brussels School of Competition held its first conference. This inaugural event was devoted to information exchange agreements.

Unlike other events, we tried to avoid having another Horizontal Guidelines’ bashing conference.

Rather, and in line with the BSC’s second mission (compliance), the conference sought to improve awareness of the key principles applicable to information exchanges.

To this end, we designed a very comprehensive programme, which covered horizontal as well as vertical exchange of information. We also included a presentation on information exchanges promoted by public institutions.

I am certainly biased, but the conference was really good. Loads of questions, great presentations, good timing, nice turnout (approximately 80 participants).

So you can judge by yourself, I attach below the speakers’ slides.

Slides – Frank Wijckmans – Information Exchange through Intermediaries

Slides – Frederic Puel – Government Sponsored Exchange of Information

Slides – Lars Kjolbye – Information Exchange – Dos and Donts

Slides – Cormac O’Daly – Information Exchange through Competitor Contacts

Written by Nicolas Petit

23 June 2011 at 8:38 pm

Posted in Events

Reminder – First BSC Conference on Information Exchanges

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Our first BSC conference will take place on weds.

We still have a few available places.

Programme can be downloaded here. Register online here.

Written by Nicolas Petit

20 June 2011 at 1:01 pm

Posted in Events

Fordham Brainstorming Room (I)

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As we announced last Friday, and thanks to Barry Hawk and Luis Ortiz Blanco, in the upcoming weeks we will be using this blog as a “brainstorming room” to come up with issues related to “European Competition Enforcement” that could be worth discussing at the 2011 edition of Fordham´s 38th Annual Conference on International Antitrust Law and Policy.

In addition to having your suggestions appear on the blog, once in a while we will devote a post to setting out our own ideas on possible topics.

Here go a handful of them. We look forward to hearing your views!

1. Positive v. Negative Enforcement of Competition Law

a. “Negative” decisions (decisions concluding to the absence of infringement). If we follow Tele2 Polska, NCAs cannot adopt such decisions under Regulation 1/2003. Importantly, this ruling may have an impact on how a number of NCAs run their decisional business, and in particular the French CA which occasionally adopted negative decisions.

b. Inapplicability decisions and guidance letters. Under Regulation 1/2003, the Commission can adopt several types of negative decision. To date, the Commission has never used such powers. In light of (a) stakeholders face now a competition enforcement system that looks very prohibitive. Query: could this lead to over-fixing/type I errors (with firms being excessively risk averse)?

c. Guidance on firm behavior through non-decisional instruments. As we reported on a previous post, the French CA adopted earlier this year a report (avis) on Google and more generally on search advertising. The French CA has an important track record in relation to such reports. Those documents are somehow akin to positive decisions in the making: they contain only provisional findings and do not prescribe remedies. Yet, they are a considerable source of concern for the companies targeted in such reports. They make individualized statements on market definition, dominance, abuse and so on. In practice, they may trigger follow-on complaints from third parties, litigation, etc.  By contrast to positive decisions adopted as a result of formal proceedings, the companies targeted by such reports have little procedural rights.

2. Priority setting, “opportunité des poursuites”. On which sectors/practices should Commission/NCAs focus, both in abstract terms (e.g. sectors where consumer welfare improvements can be large?) and concrete ones (e.g. financial services?) ? Should there be coordination EU/NCAs and NCAs/NCAs in relation to the definition of enforcement priorities?

3. Impact assessment. How to quantify the contribution of competition policy to economic growth and other macro-economic indicators (investment, productivity, employment, etc.)?

4. Alrosa-like case law. A question on the state of play at the national level (Can commitments go further than conventional remedies? Can they escape a strict proportionality assessment?)

5. Appeals. NCAs ability/duty to stand in review courts to defend their decisions (see the VEBIC ruling, also commented on previous posts).

6. Integrated v. bifurcated agency model. Think of the ongoing discussions over the merger of the OFT and the CC in the UK.

7. Competition within agencies. It is somehow of a “secret de polichinelle” that there are diverging views on the effects-based approach between the Legal Service and DG COMP. Are such situations beneficial or counterproductive? In the latter case, could they be avoided?

8. Private enforcement. The elephant in the room?  What are NCAs doing and what can they do to foster private interaction? How do they feel about the Judgment issued yesterday by the ECJ which states that it is a matter for national courts to discern whether access to leniency documents can be granted to parties seeking evidence to substantiate claims for damages?

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

15 June 2011 at 9:18 pm

Next GCLC Lunch Talk on Restructuring Aid in the Financial Sector – 27 June

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What price did banks pay for restructuring aid amidst the financial crisis?

Get a chance to know more on this by attending our next GCLC lunch talk on 27 June (see programme below and registration form here).

This event is entitled “Restructuring Aid in the Financial Sector: An Overview of Compensatory Measures and other Innovative Remedies“. Speakers are Nicola Pesaresi (DG Comp) and Hans Gilliams (Eubelius).  Time and place as usual.

53rd GCLC Lunch Talk – 27 June 2011

Written by Nicolas Petit

8 June 2011 at 11:05 pm

Competition Video

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The video footage of the 2011 ICN conference was just posted online. It confirms several “on-the-spot”  impressions:

  • Our dutch friends still use human navigation systems, 0’52
  • White walls and black doors make a “boombastic“, “unique” architecture, 1’03
  • Museums can be funny places, 1’57 (I will not disclose identities)
  • Live performance piracy was pervasive,   3’11
  • Some people were very hungry when they reached The Hague, 3’50
  • John Turturro  Fingleton attended the event, 4’05
  • Speeches during black-tie dinners can actually be hilarious, 7’16
  • Excellent officials also have terrific dancing skills (check the video on the left, in the back), 7’40-7’42

More seriously, the conference was a great event.

Written by Nicolas Petit

7 June 2011 at 5:10 pm

Information Exchange in EU Competition Law – Conference 22 June

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I attach the programme and registration form of a forthcoming half day conference on information exchange agreements. It will be organized under the auspices of the BSC, and held at the premises of the FEB.

Do not wait to register (with the online form here or by following the link below).

Programme Conf. Exch. Info. BSC 22 JUNE 2011 version 24052011

registration form – Conf. Info. Exch. 22 June 2011

Written by Nicolas Petit

24 May 2011 at 7:34 pm

Posted in Events