Chillin'Competition

Relaxing whilst doing Competition Law is not an Oxymoron

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Upcoming competition law seminars in Madrid

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The level of the Annual EU and Spanish Competition Law course directed by Luis Ortiz in Madrid keeps getting better each year (and it´s now on its 14th edition..). It really is hard to find a program with so many excellent speakers participating on it.  Let me give you an example:

The seminar which took place last week was coordinated by Cecilio Madero (Director General at DG COMP), and focused on novelties in the areas of mergers and abusive conduct. Amongst the speakers were Per Helmström (Head of Unit at DG COMP), Nicholas Banasevic (Deputy Head of Unit), Milan Kristof (Référendaire at the ECJ), Ainhoa Veiga (Partner, Araoz y Rueda), Antonio Guerra (Counsel, Uría Menéndez), Juan Jiménez-Laiglesia (Partner, DLA Piper) and Miguel Odriozola (Partner, Clifford Chance).

Yesterday and today another bunch of top-notch speakers such as José Luis Buendía (Partner, Garrigues), Piet Jan Slot (Professor, Leiden University), Jerónimo Maillo (San Pablo CEU University), Carlos Urraca (Legal Service, European Commission), Joaquín Fernández (Head of Unit, DG COMP) or Jorge Piernas (EUI), amongst others, have been dealing with state aids and other public interventions.

Here comes the advertising: If you´re sorry you missed those, and fancy the idea of spending a spring weekend in Madrid you can still register for the last two seminars:

– On the 18th of March I will be coordinating a seminar on the application of competition law to network industries. It will feature:

Jarleth Burke (Partner at Jones Day, London) who will be speaking about the regulation and competition law in the telecoms sector;

Júlia Samsó (Latham&Watkins, London), who will deal with the specificities of the energy sector;

Jasper Sluijs (Tilburg Law and Economics Centre), an expert on network neutrality issues;

Myself, for an overview of the challenges posed by network effects and network industries.

– On the 25th of March there will be another seminar on IP and Competition law coordinated by Alvaro Ramos (Senior corporate counsel at Cisco).  Its three sessions will deal with

Excessive pricing and copyrights” with Daniel Escoda (Telefónica), and Pablo Hernández (SGAE);

“Standards and Competition Law” with Jennifer Vasta (Senior Legal Counsel, Qualcomm); Miguel Rato (Partner, Shearman&Sterling) and Álvaro Ramos;

Competition Law in Cloud Computing“, with Jean Yves Art (General Counsel EMEA Microsoft), Tero Louko (Antitrust Counsel, Google), and Luis Ortiz Blanco (Partner, Garrigues).

There are very few seats left, but if anyone´s interested in registering (half prize for those coming outside of Spain) or obtaining more info, you can write here  competencia@ieb.es

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

4 March 2011 at 6:00 pm

Slides of GCLC Conference on Horizontal Cooperation Agreements

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Written by Nicolas Petit

17 February 2011 at 7:15 pm

GCLC Event on Horizontal Cooperation Agreements

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On 16 February, the GCLC will hold a half-day conference on the new framework for horizontal cooperation agreements.

The mastermind behind the programme is the esteemed José Rivas. Besides his carreer as a top notch competition practitioner, José teaches at the College in Natolin and joined the GCLC executive committee 6 months ago.

The programme and registration form can be downloaded here.

Written by Nicolas Petit

31 January 2011 at 7:00 am

Zombie Law?

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Remember §3 of the Guidance Communication on exclusionary abuses under Article 102 TFEU  (“This document is not intended to constitute a statement of the law”)?

For a while now, I had been fearing that the Communication was a born dead document.

In reading last week the GC’s ruling in Tomra v. Commission, I got even more troubled. Would the Guidance Communication be the first “zombie” legal instrument ever released by the Commission? A zombie legal instrument is a document that is dead (i.e. overruled), but that does not know it’s dead (i.e. still presented as the law as it stands). For more on zombies in the field of economics, see here.

Clearly, there are a slew of killing statements in the GC’s judgment. Look closely:

  • §206 suggests – at least implicitly – that consumer harm is one of the several goals pursued by Article 102 TFEU in parallel to the protection of competitors. According to the GC, protecting competitors would constitute a sufficient ground to enforce Article 102 TFEU. This is at odds with the Guidance Communication which suggests that protecting competitors is not, in and of itself, a stand-alone goal of Article 102 TFEU. In the Guidance Communication, Article 102 only protects competitors to the extent that consumers might be harmed;
  • §241 says that there can be an abuse as long as a rival is deprived of the ability to compete “for the entire market and not just for part of it”. In other words, even de minimis foreclosure is arguably caught under the concept of abuse. No matter what, a dominant company cannot tie a single customer on the market. This not only inconsistent with the Guidance effects-based ethos, but also with the Discussion paper of 2005 which had elevated the concept of the “tied market share” as a key decisional criterion. It is also at odds with the Commission’s decisional practice notably in Distrigas;
  • §258 weakens the relevance of the so-called “suction effect” test, in saying that “the fact that the retroactive rebate schemes oblige competitors to ask negative prices from the applicants’ customers benefiting from rebates cannot be regarded as one of the fundamental bases of the contested decision in showing that retroactive rebate schemes are capable of having anti-competitive effects“.

With this in mind, I was a little reassured by Miguel de la Mano‘s (DG COMP) presentation at our last GCLC lunch talk on Friday. In essence, Miguel considers that the GC’s ruling is fully congruent with the Guidance Communication. In contrast, Alan Ryan (Freshfields) finds a number of flaws in the judgment (and has appealed it before the ECJ). See slides below for more.

My take: a dominant firm does not necessarily foreclose the entire market through loyalty-inducing practices. It all boils down to assessing the share of the dominant firm’s customers that is subject to the impugned practice (e.g., a dominant firm may apply a single branding commitment to only 10% of the relevant market). Against this background, foreclosure should only be presumed when the dominant firm applies the loyalty-inducing practice to its entire customer base.

And a proposal: not unlike under Article 101 TFEU, the Court and the Commission should recognize that dominant firms can benefit from safe harbours. In light of the rules on vertical agreements, as long as the tied market share < 30%, Article 102 TFEU should be deemed inapplicable.

01 Miguel de la Mano

Case T 155 06 Tomra v Commission

(Image possibly subject to copyrights: source here)

Written by Nicolas Petit

25 January 2011 at 10:12 pm

GCLC Lunch Talk this Friday – Rebates after Tomra v. Commission

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We still have a few seats available for our upcoming lunch talk on Michelin III Tomra v. Commission.

This lunch talk features Alan Ryan (Freshfields) and Miguel de la Mano (DG COMP) as speakers.

Registration form can be found below.

50th GCLC Lunch Talk – Tomra – 21 January 2011

Written by Nicolas Petit

17 January 2011 at 12:42 am

GCLC Lunch Talk on Tomra – 21 January

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The GCLC’s 50th Lunch Talk will take place on 21 January and will be devoted to the General Court Judgment in Michelin III Tomra v. Commission.

The registration form can be downloaded below.

50th GCLC Lunch Talk – Tomra – 21 January 2011

Written by Nicolas Petit

23 December 2010 at 7:57 pm

Posted in GCLC

GCLC Lunch Talk on EU-Korea FTA

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Not much to report today.

I attach the slides presented at last week’s GCLC lunch talk. Thanks again to Dirk Van der Wee (EU Commission) and Peter Camesasca (Covington).

20101210_Korea_FTA_-_Public

Camesasca_on_EUKOR

Written by Nicolas Petit

15 December 2010 at 7:14 pm

Four Years as the Chief Competition Economist

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Feel like having a beer  with attending an evening talk of the Chief Competition Economist?

The GCLC will have its third evening policy talk on 23 November 2010 (Marriott Brussels). See hyperlink below for registration form. Tickets will be granted on a 1st come/1st served basis.

GCLC – 3rd Evening Policy Talk – Damien Neven – Four Years As The Chief Competition Economist

 

Written by Nicolas Petit

9 November 2010 at 12:31 pm

Yet another interesting conference announcement

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In addition to Nico´s recommendation yesterday, here is another interesting conference:

The Centre for Competition Policy at San Pablo CEU´s  Institute of European Studies and the Spanish Competition Authority will be holding an international conference under the title Reviewing Vertical Restraints in Europe: Reform, Key Issues and National Enforcement.  The conference will take place on November 11th and 12th at San Pablo CEU University in Madrid. Amongst the speakers there will be many distinguished scholars and practitioners, and the program looks certainly well (nothing to do with the fact that this is actually the University where I got my law degree).

Btw, only today I´ve received 6 emails advertising conferences and competition law courses (in addition to those, you´ve also read a blog post doing the same). Some of them look great and others don´t. Now,  isn´t there an excess of offer on the “market” for conferences? Should output be somehow restricted?

This excess of offer may be at the origin of an opinion I´ve heard from various people: the traditional Fordham conference, which was held a couple of weeks ago, seems not to be at its best moment in terms of attendance. A real pity for an event which is always amongst the yearly highlights in our small world. Let´s hope it rises back up.

Written by Alfonso Lamadrid

7 October 2010 at 8:30 am

Chillin’Competition on the Conference Market?

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EVENING POLICY TALK

DR. ALEXANDER ITALIANER, DIRECTOR-GENERAL, DG COMPETITION

EUROPEAN COMPETITION POLICY ON THE ROAD TO 2020

12 October 2010 – Marriott Hotel, 3-7 Rue August Orts, 1000 Brussels

See link below for more.

And a question :): with the lunch talk last week, the annual conference next week, and this EPT on 12 October, aren’t we chilling competition?

Evening Policy Talk by Dr. ITALIANER – EUROPEAN COMPETITION POLICY ON THE ROAD TO 2020

Written by Nicolas Petit

28 September 2010 at 10:25 pm

Posted in GCLC