Title: MARKET DEFINITION IN ANTITRUST/COMPETITION CASES
1MARKET DEFINITION IN ANTITRUST/COMPETITION CASES
- Presentation to
- Commissioners Malaysia Competition Commission
- by
- Rughvir (Shyam) Khemani, PhD (LSE)
- Microeconomic Consulting and Research Associates
- (www. micradc.com)
- and
- Former Advisor, Competition Policy
- The World Bank Group, Washington D.C., USA
- Kuala Lampur, Malaysia, 8-9 June 2013
2The Purpose of Defining the Relevant Market
- The purpose of defining the relevant market in
competition cases is - Assess the nature and degree of competition
prevailing in the delineated relevant market - Evaluate whether the firm(s) against which a
complaint has been registered possess market
power - And gauge whether or not the firm(s) has/have/not
exercised or are in a position to exercise
market power in the relevant market - Market power refers to the firm(s) ability to
profitably charge prices above the competitive
level for a sustainable period of time and/or
affect other competitive conditions to the
detriment of consumers
3The Concept of the Relevant Market-1
- The concept of the relevant market applied in
competition/antitrust analysis is not the same
conventionally used by business, and broadly in
economics and marketing - Both demand and supply factors are
considered. From demand side only the market (or
sub-market) is delineated where the customers are
able and willing to substitute away from one
product in response to an actual or potential
increase in price or a corresponding non-price
change e.g., reduction in product quality or
service. The delineated market will include the
product/service being examined as well as the
substitutable products/service which customers
may switch to.
4The Concept of the Relevant Market-2
- From a supply side, firms/suppliers are included
in the delineated market if they are already
supplying the product/service that customers can
switch to. -
- Competition Agencies give greater
weight/consideration to demand side
substitution than to the supply side
substitution, which may none the less bear
importantly on gauging market power. - In many court cases both demand and supply side
responses to defining the relevant product market
have been utilized.
5Case Example Alleged Cartel in Steel Rods
- Complaint registered by Builders Association
alleging Steel Rod Wire Mesh producers have
cartelized the market and are charging
identical/or very similar excessively high
prices. The Association presents the following
facts - There are three major steel rod manufacturers
with guess-estimated market
sharesPSM35,FJ25,AF20 and 3 smaller firms
combined 15 plus some imports - In past 4-5 years prices of 3 largest firms
tended to vary between 5-7 but in last year
they have been virtually identical. - Firms supply on a contract basis but also in
the open market, but recently only on a contract
basis 6-12 months with required purchase of
minimum quantities at negotiated
prices. (continued)
6Steel Rod Case Complaint--continued
- There is little variation in market shares or
rank of the leading 3 firms. - Steel rods and wire mesh products of firms are
almost identical except for different strengths
and cannot be substituted with other materials. - Steel rods and wire mesh are essential in
construction of multi-story apartment and office
buildings. - There is a construction boom and the builders
cannot meet demand due to difficulties in
obtaining steel rod-wire mesh supplies. - Some of the largest firms as well as
medium-smaller firms are refusing supply to new
customers. - It is alleged that the cartel is aimed at price
gouging of builders to their detriment and
downstream customers
7Steel Rod Case Example Investigation-1
- The Commission decided their was a prima facie
case and directed the Investigation Branch to
investigate. The Director of the Investigation
Branch reported back that - The relevant market was analyzed taking into
demand and supply factors. It was determined that
steel rods and wire mesh each constituted
separate product markets with no alternative
substitutes. In terms of supply the relevant
product market comprised of all producers in the
greater metropolitan area. Two smaller producers
were located at some geographic distance and
were deemed not part of the relevant market due
to transportation costs. Imports were mainly in
the coastal towns. Market share of the three
largest firms was therefore higher than the
complainant indicated.
8Steel Rod Case Example Investigation-2
- In delineating the relevant market the Director
had examined availability of other products that
could be interchanged with steel rods and wire
mesh and found none that could be considered
significant. Small number/percentage of builders
had used nylon/synthetic mesh and/or
non-steel/iron/ferrous metal rodsbut for low
rise buildings. - Prices of the products had indeed varied in the
past but recently were stable/almost identical.
There was a high correlation between prices of
different firms in the metropolitan and regional
areas though prices in the latter were much
higher.
9Steel Rod Case Example Investigation-3
- There did not seem to be a relationship between
prices and costs, and prices and price cost
margins had increased significantly in recent
years. Price changes were uncorrelated with cost
changes. - There was Steel Products Manufacturers
Suppliers Association that met quarterly. - Minutes of Association meetings discussed high
costs of energy and raw materials, investment
plans, expansion of capacity, lobbying government
for favorable tax treatment on earnings and
wages, concerns of dumping by China in coastal
markets areas, etc. No evidence, even anecdotal
referred to prices, output, and/or sales.
10Steel Rod Case Example Investigation-4
- The Director indicated that to determine the
relevant market the SSNIP test and the
Elzinga-Hogerty (E-H) test had been applied. - The SSNIP Test entailed assuming that if any two
of the three largest firms decided to merge,
would the merged firm be able to impose
profitably a Small but Significant
Non-transitory Increase in Price without losing
customers to other existing or new competitors? - The E-H test was applied to delineate the
geographic market. Product inflows and
outflows were examined to determine that 90 of
steel rods and wire mesh purchased in the
metropolitan area came from manufacturers in that
area.
11Steel Rod Case Example Investigation-5 The
Directors Conclusion
- Based on the analysis outlined above, it was
concluded that the steel rod and wire mesh
producers had exercised market power to
cartelized the metropolitan market to earn excess
profits. - The Director estimated that compared with past
years, on average the prices were 10 higher and
the profit margins were 10-15 higher. - The Director recommended that a appropriate fine
be levied by the Commission, taking into account
the higher prices and profit margins, based on
the past years sales revenue when the firms
started to charge similar/identical prices.
12The Commissions Deliberations
- Internally two of the five members of the
Commission had some reservations about the
Directors Investigation Report, analysis,
findings and conclusions. Before deciding on the
matter, hearings were held. The various firms
were presented confidential versions of the
report, and requested to respond in writing and
appear in camera hearings. - Each firm individually presented
counter-arguments by senior executives,
marketing-sales staff, production managers,
economic experts and legal representatives - A brief synthesis of the main counter arguments
were
13The Counter-Arguments-1
- The Relevant Market has not been properly
defined. Steel rods are substitutable with other
ferrous metal rods and wire mesh is substitutable
with nylon/plastic/resin based mesh. - Q. How to validate this counter-claim?
- The SSNIP test is only applicable in assessing
the actual or potential effects on competition of
a merger and not in alleged existing cartel
cases. - Q. If this is the case then why have SSNIP tests
in Market Definition Guidelines? - High price correlations do not indicate firms are
necessarily colluding or even in the same market.
All firms have common cost elements(energy, iron)
the changes in which result in high correlations. - Q. Are the correlations spurious?
14The Counter-Arguments-2
- High prices, high profit margins are not illegal.
Nor do prices necessarily correlate with costs
during boom periods where demand exceeds
supply. - Q. How should these and what other factors be
weighed? - Prices previously varied due to low levels of
demand, firm(s) excess capacity, weak bargaining
power vis-à-vis builders. - Q. How should excess capacity and relative
bargaining power be considered in relevant
market definition and gauging market power?
15The Counter-Arguments-3
- Firm(s) are currently operating at full capacity.
Contract sales has always been a usual feature of
the market and given high demand very little
production can be supplied in the outside market. - Q. How are captive and contract outputs to
be treated in defining the relevant market? - There is oligopolistic inter-dependence between
the leading three producers, and prices tend to
converge as price-output changes by one are
countered/followed by the other large
firms.other smaller firms follow in their
pricing policies. The Director is using
conscious parallelism/ circumstantial
evidence to infer cartelized behavior - Q. Is this sufficient? What plus factors
could be considered?
16The Counter-Arguments-4
- If the firm(s) has/have indeed cartelized the
market, the maximum price that the
customers/market can bear are already being
charged. Any market power the firm(s) has/have
is already being exercised. - Q. Is the Directors case falling into the
cellophane trap in defining the relevant
market and exercise of market power? - The Directors Investigation relates only to one
yearwhich is too short a period to conduct
competition analysis. - Q. What should be the period of competition
analysis especially re alleged cartel?
17The Case Decision
- The Commission was divided in its deliberations.
No direct evidence of written or oral/tacit or
overt information on alleged cartel behavior was
presented in the Investigation Report. - Many of the counter-arguments made sense but at
the same time the builders complaint that there
was little change in market shares, rank of
firms, the fact that there had been no new entry
and other such factors weighed heavily in the
Commissions discussion. - The Commission decided to take a recess before
concluding. - What should be its conclusion re the relevant
product market, market power and alleged
cartelized behavior?