Title: Luc Peeperkorn*
1Post Danmark a big step towards a consistent
application of a consumer oriented effects-based
approach to exclusionary pricing practices
- Luc Peeperkorn
- Principal Expert in Antitrust Policy
- DG Competition, Unit A 1 Antitrust case support
and policy - Danish Competition Law Society, Copenhagen
December 2012 - The views expressed are those of the speaker and
do not necessarily reflect those of DG
Competition or the European Commission
2The ECJ Post Danmark judgment
- Ruling of ECJ of 27 March 2012, Case C-209/10
Post Danmark A/S v Konkurrencerådet - Preliminary ruling on questions referred by the
Danish Højesteret - Will give you my views why this judgment is very
important
2
3Why is this judgment so important?
- Firstly, ECJ was sitting as a Grand Chamber, i.e.
15 instead of the usual 3-5 judges - Secondly, it affirms the application of a
consumer oriented effects-based approach to
exclusionary pricing conduct and thereby confirms
many aspects of the approach set out in the
Commissions Article 102 Guidance Paper (Guidance
on the Commissions enforcement priorities in
applying Article 82 of the Treaty to abusive
exclusionary conduct by dominant undertakings
adopted by the Commission in 2009)
3
4Why is this judgment so important?
- Thirdly, it renders certain of the enforcement
priorities law and thereby provides for a more
consistent application of Art. 102 throughout the
EU - Fourthly, the effects-based approach leads to a
more consistent application of Articles 101 and
102, important because of the concurrent
application - Lastly, it is good for international convergence,
which takes place along effects-based standards
for most practices (see ICN work)
4
5Some facts of the case
- Post Danmark dominant on the liberalised market
for distribution of unaddressed mail and a legal
monopoly for addressed mail - Forbruger-Kontakt main competitor on liberalised
market - 2003/4 PD wins 3 major supermarkets as customers
from FK by offering targeted extra low prices - The price offered to COOP is below ATC but above
AIC, the prices offered to SuperBest and Spar
remain above ATC
5
6Some facts of the case
- September 2004 Konkurrencerådet holds that PD
abused its dominant position its targeted price
reductions are not justified by cost differences
and (may) lead to (1) primary line
discrimination, i.e. foreclosure of rivals of PD,
and (2) secondary line discrimination to the
detriment of PDs other customers - November 2004 Konkurrencerådet holds that PD had
not intentionally sought to eliminate competition
and that there was therefore no predatory pricing
abuse - July 2005 both decisions upheld by the
competition appeals tribunal (Konkurrenceankenævne
t)
6
7Some facts of the case
- No appeal as to the finding of no predation or to
the finding of secondary line discrimination - However, PD appealed before the eastern regional
court (Østre Landsret) the finding of primary
line discrimination - December 2007 finding upheld
- PD appealed before the Højesteret, claiming that
its prices could only be abusive if found to be
predatory, while the Konkurrencerådet maintained
that prices below ATC but above AIC could be
abusive also without the intention to foreclose
8The referred questions
- April 2010 the Højesteret referred the following
questions to the ECJ - Do selective price reductions, on the part of a
dominant postal undertaking that has a universal
service obligation, to a level lower than the
postal undertakings average total cost, but
higher than its average incremental costs,
constitute an exclusionary abuse, if it is
established that the price was not set at that
level for the purpose of driving out a
competitor? - If such pricing may be abusive, what are the
circumstances that the national court must take
into account?
9What the ECJ could have done and what it did
- The ECJ could have simply referred to the test
contained in its AKZO judgment pricing above AVC
but below ATC can be found abusive only if a
strategy/intention to foreclose can be
established - But instead it came with a concise but elaborate
judgment expressing general points on the aim of
Article 102, on the role of an efficiency
defence, on how in general to assess pricing
conduct and the pivotal role of the as efficient
competitor test in that assessment
10The aim of Article 102 and the notion of
exclusionary abuse
- 20 Article 102 covers not only those practices
that directly cause harm to consumers but also
practices that cause consumers harm through their
impact on competition. It is in the latter sense
that the expression exclusionary abuse
appearing in the questions referred is to be
understood. - 24 Article 102 applies, in particular, to the
conduct of a dominant undertaking that, through
recourse to methods different from those
governing normal competition on the basis of the
performance of commercial operators, has the
effect, to the detriment of consumers, of
hindering the maintenance of the degree of
competition existing in the market or the growth
of that competition.
10
11The aim of Article 102 and the notion of
exclusionary abuse
- These two quotes are more than just repeating
what already had been said in Continental Can and
Hoffmann La Roche - The Hoffmann La Roche quote is amended by adding
the underlined to the detriment of consumers - Together it confirms the choice in the Guidance
Paper for a consumer welfare oriented
effects-based approach - This is important in the debate of a more
form-based versus a more effects-based approach
and of protecting the competitive process in
itself versus protecting consumers - More than just semantics differentiates between
protecting competitors and protecting competition
11
12Clarification of competition on the merits
- 22 Competition on the merits may, by
definition, lead to the departure from the market
or the marginalisation of competitors that are
less efficient and so less attractive to
consumers from the point of view of, among other
things, price, choice, quality or innovation - Language similar to Guidance Paper (5-6)
- Competition on the merits competition that does
not harm consumers - Special responsibility responsibility not to
harm consumers
12
13Effective introduction of Article 102(3)
- Already clear in BA/Microsoft/TeliaSonera
judgments that also under Art 102 efficiency
arguments can be used - In PD 40-42, ECJ completely follows the Guidance
Paper in its distinction between an objective
justification and efficiency defence and to
structure the latter as Art 101(3) - Objective justification only a narrow escape,
based on arguments of general validity regarding
health, safety etc - Efficiency defence, based on same conditions as
Art 101(3), may provide a justification based on
positive effects resulting from that particular
firms conduct - Important also for consistent application of Art
101 and 102
13
14As efficient competitor test as basis for
assessing pricing conduct
- Throughout the judgment the Court clarifies that,
as a general rule, Art 102 prohibits pricing
conduct only if the conduct is able to have an
exclusionary effect on competitors as efficient
as the dominant firm, and that this provision
does not aim to shield inefficient competitors
from competitive pressure (see in particular
paragraphs 21, 22, 28, 36, 38 of the judgment) - 38 Indeed, to the extent that a dominant
undertaking sets its prices at a level covering
the bulk of the costs attributable to the supply
of the goods or services in question, it will, as
a general rule, be possible for a competitor as
efficient as that undertaking to compete with
those prices without suffering losses that are
unsustainable in the long term
14
15As efficient competitor test as basis for
assessing pricing conduct
- ECJ understands very well that only low pricing
can exclude and that it is only likely to harm
consumers if the price is below cost - ECJ did not mention Compagnie Maritime Belge and
Irish Sugar, two cases where exceptionally abuse
was found while P gt C - In line with Guidance Paper if reliable data are
available, Commission will apply the as efficient
competitor test as part of the assessment. In
general harm to consumers only possible if P lt
LRAIC (or ATC where significant common costs).
Only exceptionally harm possible if P gt C
15
16Some clarification on use of cost benchmarks
- Caution ECJ had to work with cost estimates and
definitions as provided by Højesteret not clear
what exactly was included in AIC all short and
long term incremental costs? Apparently also part
of common costs - No strong conclusions but clear that ECJ is
willing to consider other cost benchmarks than
AVC and ATC - Guidance Paper stresses LRAIC and AAC
- In this case important common costs (shared
infrastructure), which makes that ATC benchmark
may be more relevant than LRAIC, as also
described in Guidance Paper 26 footnote 18
16
17PltATC not sufficient to find abuse need to show
anticompetitive foreclosure
- The referred question was when is pricing below
ATC but above AIC abusive? Answer by ECJ in
order to assess the existence of anti-competitive
effects in circumstances such as those of that
case, it is necessary to consider whether that
pricing policy produces an actual or likely
exclusionary effect, to the detriment of
competition and, thereby, of consumers interests - Almost literally the description of
anticompetitive foreclosure in 19 of Guidance
Paper - Shows again acceptance of effects-based approach
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18PltATC not sufficient to find abuse need to show
anticompetitive foreclosure
- Seems ECJ amended the AKZO test
- Akzo test
- P lt AVC can presume strategy to foreclose as no
economic rationale to incur avoidable loss - AVC gt P lt ATC need to show strategy to foreclose
(based on intent documents/duration/selectivity
etc) - PD if AIC gt P lt ATC need to show likely
anti-competitive foreclosure effect - Logically also sufficient if P lt AIC
- No major change strategy to foreclose and
anticompetitive foreclosure partly based on same
factors
18
19Effectively reduces application of Art 102(c)
- ECJ could have referred to older rebate case law
in which rather mechanically it was concluded
that (secondary line) price discrimination leads
to an abuse under Art 102(c) - In this case COOP received better price than
SuperBest and Spar and these three received
better prices than other supermarkets - 30 this cannot of itself suggest that there
exists an exclusionary abuse - General answer of the ECJ need to show
anticompetitive foreclosure - Effectively reduces application of Art 102(c)
19
20Conclusion
- PD ruling strongly reminds us that aim of EU
competition law is to protect competition for the
benefit of consumers - PD ruling shows a strong support for an
effects-based approach for the assessment of
exclusionary pricing conduct - General acceptance of the as efficient competitor
test for pricing conduct (predation, margin
squeeze, selective price cuts) as part of the
analysis to show anticompetitive foreclosure - Supports a more consistent application of EU
competition law - Question will the General Court follow in the
Intel case?
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21Thank you