Title: GLOBAL ANTITRUST
1 GLOBAL ANTITRUST GLOBAL TRADE.
Price-Fixing, Global
Mergers Extraterritoriality.
- Stuart S. Malawer J.D., Ph.D.
-
2I. Antitrust in Global Context. .... Global
Price-Fixing.
COURT ACCEPTS BRITISH AIRWAYS/KOREAN AIR LINES
PLEA The U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia today accepted the Department of
Justice's plea agreements with British Airways
Plc and Korean Air Lines Co. Ltd. that had been
announced on August 1, 2007. In court today, the
companies pleaded guilty and were sentenced to
pay separate 300 million criminal fines for
their roles in conspiracies to fix the prices of
passenger and cargo flights. "Today's
sentencing demonstrates that those who violate
the antitrust laws and seek to deny American
consumers and businesses the benefits of
competition will be held accountable for their
actions," said Scott D. Hammond, Deputy Assistant
Attorney General for Criminal Enforcement of the
Department's Antitrust Division. "The Antitrust
Division is actively continuing its investigation
into the air transportation industry."
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4Global Mergers
Dubai Ports World National Security.
New York Times 3.18.06.
5.. National Security Global Mergers.
- CNOOC Unocal (2005).
- DP World PO Steam Navigation (2006)
- Lucent Alcatel (2006).
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7.. U.S. Foreign Antitrust as a Global Trade
Issue.
8.. Recycling Capital by Buyers from Developing
Countries (20052006).
- Lenovo IBM (PC business). Chinese U.S.
- Mittal Arcelor (2006). India EU.
- DP World P O Steam Navigation. UAE U.K.
.. Greater Domestic Mergers in Foreign Markets
(2005-2006).
- Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ (Japan).
9.. Price-Fixing, Mergers Dumping.
Antitrust.
Price-Fixing
Mergers
Dumping.
Antitrust.
Higher Prices
Lower Prices
10. Global Trade Aspects.
- WTO .
- Competition is a Singapore issue, but dropped
from Doha Agenda. - Competition was in ITO. The Havana Charter was
never ratified nor adopted.
Antitrust.
Trade.
Private / corporate restrictions.
Govt Restrictions.
11Foreign Branch Foreign Subsidiary
Extraterritorial Application of U.S. Law.
U.S. Law.
U.S. Law.
U.S. Corporation
U.S. Parent Corporation
Yes.
Maybe.
Part of corporation. No separate ownership or
entity.
Equity Ownership.
Separate corporate entity. Incorporated in
foreign country.
Foreign Branch
Foreign Subsidiary
12.. Global Corporate Activities
Extraterritorial Regulation ..
- The nationality of corporations is determined by
its state of incorporation. The nationality of
the shareholders (equity ownership) is
irrelevant. - The application of antitrust laws apply generally
to mergers and price-fixing. Price-fixing is one
of various unlawful predatory practices, for
example, division of markets. - The issue of extraterritorial application of
national law involves the application of national
law to outside of a nations territory. - Often to foreign actors, foreign transactions
that are lawful under foreign law. - Applies domestic law to the wrongful act that
takes place outside of the countrys territory,
but where the injury is within that territory.
(For example, higher import prices.) - Above is known as effects principle. This is
limited by the international obligation of
reasonableness. - Under U.S. law there is a presumption of
territoriality. Congress can do anything it
wants as to this. Problem is when the statute is
silent. The courts need to determine the laws
foreign reach. - The U.S. is the primary user of extraterritorial
application of antitrust law, but the EU is
doing somewhat the same thing but under different
theories. - The U.S. applies the notion of extraterritoriality
to other forms of international economic
legislation. - The potential trade disputes, because of
inconsistent application of these laws to the
same transactions, is significant. - The global response has been primarily diplomacy,
the creation of informal bodies to address the
issue and bilateral agreements to limit
international friction.
13II. Extraterritorial Application --- U.S.
Antitrust Law.
Case Study Alcoa Case.
Swiss Corp.
U.S. LAW
Conspiracy to Restrict Imports into U.S.
U.S.
Effect (on U.S. Imports)
Canadian Corp (defendant)
Civil action by U.S. against Canadian corporation
as to price-fixing w/in context of monopolization
of U.S. group.
Intent Effect
14 .. Facts (global price-fixing
conspiracy)
Alliance (Swiss Corp)
Various Corporate Members
Not a Member
Alcoa (U.S.)
Member / Shareholder
Limited (Canadian Corp)
- 1931 Production Quotas
- 1936 U.S. Import Restrictions via Royalties
Civil action by U.S. against Canadian corporation
as to price-fixing w/in context of monopolization
of U.S. group.
One of the Defendants in action by U.S. (DOJ).
15General Legal Issue Violation of Sherman Act
Section 1 ? Specific Issue Does U.S. antitrust
law apply extraterritorially so as to give to
U.S. courts jurisdiction over a foreign
corporate conspiracy (outside of the U.S.) that
is intended and does restrict imports into the
U.S. ?
16Holding U.S. antitrust law (Section One of the
Sherman Act) applies to a foreign conspiracy to
restrict imports into the U.S. (between two
foreign corporations) when there is both an
intention to do so and an effect within the
United States (that is an impact on imports into
the U.S.).
17- General U.S. Jurisprudence
- As a matter of U.S. law there is a presumption
of territoriality. That legislation is intended
to apply only to acts done within the U.S. unless
the Congress otherwise provides. - General International Law
- Recognizes the Effects Principle of
jurisdiction as long as it is reasonable
(Principle of Reasonableness / Balancing Test).
18- BASIC POLITICAL PROBLEMS.
- Actors are foreign and the transaction is
outside of the U.S. - Most important, the actions are lawful under
foreign law. - Raises the issue of judicial imperialism as
well as the clash of competing national laws in
a horizontal legal system.
19- Antitrust is one of the major fields of U.S.
economic legislation and regulation that has been
applied extraterritorially for the longest time
(since 1945). - Other fields have now been applied
extraterritorially, for example, securities
legislation, pretrial discovery, export control
regulations, corporate governance (Sarbanes
Oxley).
20- Extraterritoriality has generally caused fierce
resistance by other countries as violations of
their national sovereignty. Such actions impact
on companies and transactions located within the
jurisdiction of foreign states. - Most of these countries have been our closest
political allies (but strongest global
competitors). - Yet, the European Union is also applying its
competition laws extraterritorially or at least
to foreign actions by U.S. firms. For example,
MCI / WorldCom merger (1998) MCI - World Com -
Sprint merger (2000) AOL Time Warner (2000)
Oracle People Soft (2004/5) Microsoft
practices (Windows 2004-2006).
21- Most recently, this can be seen in the area of
global mergers (transborder mergers), even
domestic mergers with global implications (by
U.S. firms having assets or transactions within
the EU or effect within the EU), and U.S. firms
business practices with implications within the
EU. - In 2006 a Japanese firm has agreed to plead
guilty for obstruction of justice in a merger
case. - An example of the U.S. Justice Dept. activity in
the area of global price-fixing is its
settlements of criminal antitrust cases,
starting in 1999, against foreign pharmaceuticals
involving a global conspiracy for price-fixing
and setting production quotas in the global
vitamin market impacting. - This has resulted in the largest fines ever
imposed in guilty please for price-fixing - -
about 850 m. in fines. The subsequent civil
litigation has one settlement of 1.17 b. (2000).
22- Other examples of global price-fixing
- A Japanese executive was sentenced to jail for
international antitrust violation (2004). - In 2004, De Beers agreed to plead guilty to a
criminal global price-fixing (for a conspiracy
with GE) in a ten-year old case. - Two criminal pleas in global price-fixing cases,
in 2004, involved Infineon Technologies and
Bayer AG. - In 2005, Samsung, one of the largest criminal
global price-fixing cases (involving foreign chip
makers) was settled for 300 million. This is
the largest antitrust fine during the Bush
administration and the second largest ever. This
opens the way for multi-billion civil
litigation. - In 2006, Samsung executives plead guilty to
serve jail time in U.S.
23.. Extraterritoriality Basic Dilemma.
- Potential Regulation by Two Governments Often
Unlawful under U.S. Law lawful under foreign
Law.
Can the U.S. EU regulate the foreign branch or
subsidiary?
When does U.S. law apply?
EU Law.
U.S.
Branch / Subsidiary
Corporate Group
EU
U.S. Parent
Clash of competing legislation as to foreign
actors and foreign actions and foreign legality.
24 . Dual Principles Effects Principle
Principle of Reasonableness
U.S.
Effect w/in U.S.
Extraterritorial Application of U.S. Law (e.g.
antitrust, mergers, alliances and contracts)
Effects Principle
World
Act outside of U.S. (by foreign actor)
Effects Principle now qualified by
Reasonableness Principle (both international
U.S. law)
S. malawer _at_ 2002
25 U.S. Antitrust Guidelines for International
Operations (1995).
- Issued jointly by the Dept. of Justice and
Federal Trade Commission as guidance only.
Discusses basic antitrust legislation,
extraterritoriality and presents a set of
hypotheticals concerning international antitrust
(foreign commerce / jurisdiction, cartels,
mergers and trade related issues).
http//www.usdoj.gov/atr/public/guidelines/interna
t.txt
26- Some discussion of foreign merger laws (and
their extraterritoriality) and international
efforts at cooperation. - Merger laws of EU, Canada, Germany, France and
Australia and their extraterritorial application. - Bilateral Antitrust Cooperation Agreements.
(Germany, Australia and Canada). (Similar
agreement with the EU was invalidated by the
Court of Justice for the European Union.) - General Mutual Legal Assistance Agreements
(MLATs). - OECD Recommendation Concerning Cooperation as
to Restrictive Business Practices Affecting
International Trade. (1986).
27IV. BASIC U.S. ANTITRUST LEGISLATION.
- Sherman Act (1890)
- Section 1 -- Prohibits conspiracies in restrain
of trade. - Section 2 -- Prohibits monopolization or attempts
at monopolization. - Both sections apply to foreign commerce
(import and non-import foreign commerce) - Applies to unreasonable restraints
28- Per se violation those subject to a rule of
reason. Newer notion of economic efficiency
in applying rule of reason. - Some per se violations horizontal price fixing
or market division certain tying arrangements. - Criminal actions by the Dept. of Justice as well
as civil actions by either DOJ or the FTC. - Typically private civil litigation occurs after
the criminal actions. Different standards of
evidence. - Will often involve class actions contingency
fee arrangements. - Treble damages in civil actions.
29- Section 2 of Sherman Act (Monopolies)
- Relates primarily to single firm market power.
- Dual analysis Definition of market (product
geography) and exclusionary practices (in
obtaining or retaining monopoly). - Government enforcement and private party
litigation. - Criminal and civil sanctions (treble damages).
- Contingency fee arrangements in private
litigation.
30- Clayton Act (1914)
- Section 7 applies to mergers and acquisitions
and joint ventures.. - Pre-merger Notifications (Hart-Scott-Rodino
Notifications) - Only for largest mergers (about 1) (100million
threshold). - General guidelines have also been issued
concerning horizontal mergers, vertical mergers
and conglomerate mergers. - The FTC Justice have responsibility in
reviewing merger proposals. (Under the Clayton
Act -- HSR.)
31- Federal Trade Commission Act (FTC)
- Section 5 declares unlawful unfair methods of
Competition and unfair or deceptive acts. - Administrative action against actions falling
within the Sherman Act and Clayton Act as well as
those outside of those acts. - Enforcement concerning international deceptive
practices has become increasingly important.
32VI. U.S. Global Efforts as to Antitrust
Governance.
- Have bilateral agreements on antitrust
enforcement, for example, the agreement with the
U.S. and the EC on enforcement of competition
laws. - For example, a new one signed this October 2004
with Canada. - This is in addition to the International
Competition Network (ICN), loose consultation,
that has been developed since 2002. - The issue of competition policy is on the Doha
Agenda. But no clear vision of what might emerge.
(At the most some international disciplines as a
minimum standard for national action and the
subject to review by the DSU.) Dropped from
Doha Agenda after Cancun Ministerial.
33 International Competition Network
--Principles (2002).
- The International Competition Network (ICN)
provides antitrust agencies from developed and
developing countries with a more focused network
for addressing practical antitrust enforcement
and policy issues of common concern. It
facilitates procedural and substantive
convergence in antitrust enforcement through a
results-oriented agenda and informal, project
driven organization. - First annual meeting September 2002.
- An initial ICN project concerns the merger
control process in the multi-jurisdictional
context. - Website http//www.internationalcompetitionnetwor
k.org
34VII. Information (U.S. Foreign International).
-
United States Websites. - U.S. Dept. of Justice Antitrust website
http//www.usdoj.gov/atr/overview.html - For foreign and international Web sites
concerning antitrust, see http//www.usdoj.gov/atr
/contact/otheratr.htm - For the International Competition Advisory Policy
Committee to the Antitrust Division see,
http//www.usdoj.gov/atr/icpac/icpac.htm - ICPAC Final Antirust Trade Report (2000) at
http//www.usdoj.gov/atr/icpac/icpac/execsummary.h
tm - The International Competition Network Guiding
Principles for Merger Control. (2002).
http//www.usdoj.gov/atr/public/speeches/200234.ht
m - Synopsis of Antitrust Enforcement, at
http//www.ftc.gov/ogc/brfovrvw.htm -
Foreign National Websites. - Competition Policy WTO. (Click here).
- Link to International Documents from the
Antitrust Division of the U.S. Dept. of Justice.
(Click here). - Links to national antitrust offices worldwide.
(Click here). - International Competition Network. (ICN)
- Database of national competition laws. (Click
here). - OECD Competition. (Click here).
- UNCTAD Competition Policy. (Click here).