On 23 April 2021, the Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) published notice of an abuse of dominance claim brought
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The Commission Fines Three Railway Companies for Their Participation in a Customer Allocation Cartels
On April 20, 2021, the Commission fined Österreichische Bundesbahnen (“ÖBB”), Deutsche Bahn (“DB”) and Société Nationale des Chemins de fer belges/Nationale Maatschappij der Belgische Spoorwegen (“SNCB”) for their participation in a customer allocation cartel in the market for cross-border rail cargo transport services on blocktrains. The fine imposed amounts to a total of approximately €48 million and includes reductions following the leniency application of all three companies and their settlement with the Commission.[1]
Joint Statement by the CMA, ACCC and Bundeskartellamt on the Need for Rigorous Merger Enforcement
In recent years, the CMA has been strengthening its approach to merger control as it prepares for its new status as a global enforcer with expanded jurisdiction following the UK’s exit from the EU. Since 1 January 2021, the CMA has been able to investigate the UK aspects of mergers that also qualify for review by the EU Commission (EC). Many transactions, including major global deals, are therefore now subject to parallel review by the EC and CMA.
CAT Publishes CPO in Justin Le Patourel v BT Group PLC
On 19 October 2021, the CAT published its judgment on the strike-out and CPO applications in the claim brought by…
The French Competition Authority Releases Its Opinion on New Payment Technologies
On April 29, 2021, the French Competition Authority (“FCA”) issued its opinion on the competitive situation in the payment sector (the “Opinion”).[1] Although the Opinion concludes that recent developments—including the introduction of new technologies in payment activities and the proliferation of FinTech companies—are “overall procompetitive”,[2] it raises a number of areas of potential concern on which the FCA pledges to keep a close eye. The Opinion particularly stresses the risks stemming from the expansion of BigTech in the sector.
First Article 22 EUMR ‘Below Threshold’ Upward Referral After Commission’s Recent Policy Change
On April 19, 2021, the Commission accepted a referral request by the French competition authority of genomic sequencing company Illumina’s planned acquisition of biotech company Grail under Article 22 EUMR.[1] This marks the first effective upward referral of a ‘below threshold’ transaction, i.e., a transaction that neither meets national nor EU merger control thresholds.[2]
Roland (U.K.) Limited and another v Competition and Markets Authority
On 19 April 2021, the CAT dismissed Roland’s appeal against a £4 million fine imposed by the CMA (see UK Competition Newsletter, August – September 2020). Roland appealed, alleging that the CMA’s fine overstated the seriousness of the infringement and that the CMA’s leniency discount had been too low.
The UK’s Proposed New National Security Regime: A Sledgehammer to Crack a Nut
Cleary Gottlieb partner Nicholas Levy, senior attorney John Messent, and associates Edward Dean and Chloe Hassard co-authored the article, “The UK’s Proposed New National Security Regime: A Sledgehammer to Crack a Nut,” which was published in the Competition Law Journal by Edward Elgar Publishing.
Commission Sends Apple a Statement of Objections Alleging Apple Abused Its Dominant Position to Advantage Its Music Streaming Service
On April 30, 2021, the European Commission issued a Statement of Objections to Apple alleging it abused its dominant position in the market for the distribution of music streaming apps.[1] The Commission’s investigation follows Spotify’s complaint filed in March 2019,[2] and marks the first major procedural development in the four investigations opened against Apple in June 2020.[3]