Antitrust Compliance: Price Information Sharing And Transparency Issues

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Antitrust Compliance: Price Information Sharing And Transparency Issues

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Some legal communications are appropriate. Serve valid business purposes ... Communications can be evidence of an illegal cartel agreement, when they ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Antitrust Compliance: Price Information Sharing And Transparency Issues


1
Antitrust Compliance Price Information Sharing
And Transparency Issues
  • Presentation to the
  • Association of Bermuda Compliance Officers
  • Cameron Findlay Aon
  • Thomas F. Bush Lovells June 4, 2007

2
Where antitrust issues arise
  • Direct communications between competitors
  • Established channels of communication
  • Informal conversations between employees
  • Indirect communications between competitors
  • Using intermediaries as a channel
  • Third-party publishers
  • Web pages and B2B electronic exchanges
  • Public disclosures of sensitive information

3
The challenge to compliance officers
  • Legality of communications often uncertain
  • Penalties for illegal communications harsh
  • Prison sentences
  • Fines
  • Treble damages
  • Some legal communications are appropriate
  • Serve valid business purposes
  • Especially in finance and insurance sectors

4
Is the communication illegal?
  • Sherman Antitrust Act 1
  • Any contract, combination or conspiracy . . .
    in restraint of trade is illegal.
  • Communications can violate the Sherman Act if
  • They facilitate a cartel agreement or
  • In the absence of cartel agreement, they lead to
    price coordination.

5
Cartels
  • Any agreement among competitors to
  • Set the prices that they charge
  • Divide customers or markets
  • Reduce output
  • Restrict terms of sale
  • Reduce price competition between themselves or
  • The equivalent
  • Is per se illegal

6
Facilitate a cartel agreement
  • Cartel members use communications to
  • Reach agreements
  • Signal timing and amounts of price moves
  • Police compliance with agreements
  • Communications can be evidence of an illegal
    cartel agreement, when they
  • Are closely associated with price changes
  • Lack legitimate business purposes
  • Expose discounters and/or
  • Are contrary to independent business interests.

7
Lead to price coordination
  • Circumstances that make price coordination likely
    -
  • Companies have market power
  • High market shares
  • Barriers to entry into market
  • Market is susceptible to price coordination
  • Highly concentrated
  • Fungible product
  • Inelastic demand
  • Type of information assists coordination
  • Current or future versus past data
  • Transactions versus aggregates or averages

8
Overseas application of the antitrust laws
  • Sherman Act applies to foreign commerce that
    has a direct, substantial and reasonably
    foreseeable effect on domestic sales or imports
  • Price-fixing and information sharing cases did
    the activities have a foreseeable effect on
    prices in the United States?
  • Irrelevant factors
  • Nationality of the defendants
  • Place of the price-fixing agreement
  • Place of the information sharing

9
Overseas enforcement
  • Criminal enforcement (US Dept of Justice)
  • Extradition
  • Border watches
  • Interpol notices
  • Cooperation with foreign enforcement agencies
  • Civil enforcement (treble damages class actions)
  • Jurisdiction over any company that transacts
    business in the United States
  • Worldwide service of process
  • Joint and several liability

10
What compliance officers must do
  • Learn all communications with competitors
  • Direct contacts with competitors by any employee
  • Indirect communications
  • Public disclosures of sensitive information
  • Manage all legal communications
  • Identify clearly
  • Establish strict procedures and limitations
  • Maintain necessary records
  • Prohibit all other communications
  • Reporting process for questionable practices

11
Hypothetical 1
  • You are the chief compliance officer for a
    Bermuda property and casualty insurer. Bill, one
    of your underwriters, calls you in a panic from a
    bar, where he is having a drink with a good
    friend from another insurer, Joe. Bill says that
    they had begun talking generally about the market
    for U.S. property coverage, but as the
    conversation progressed, Joe asked, For
    instance, have you been asked by Brokerco to
    quote on the Transco placement? It sure seems to
    me like Brokerco is trying to hammer us
    underwriters. Bill asks what he can tell Joe
    about your companys quote.

12
Hypothetical 2
  • You are the compliance counsel for a large
    Bermuda insurance broker. One of your brokers
    comes to you and shows you a quote from an
    underwriter with a notation that the quote is
    offered expressly subject to underwriter
    receiving best terms, including best price.
    Your broker asks you how to respond.

13
Hypothetical 3
  • Your company sells a specialized financial
    product in the United States. Only three other
    companies compete. One proposes that all
    companies submit sales price and volume
    information to a publisher, who will compile the
    data and post it on the web. The following
    alternatives are under consideration
  • A posting on the web of individual transactions
    up to the present, disclosing parties, volumes
    and prices.
  • Same as (a), except hiding the names of the
    parties
  • The web page would disclose only average weekly
    prices.
  • Same as (c), but sales would be at least three
    months old.
  • Same as (c), but customers would not have access.

14
Hypothetical 4
  • You work for a bank that belongs to the
    Association of Bermuda Banks (ABB). At an ABB
    conference, during a breakout session, one of the
    discussion leaders proposes that to reduce
    liability costs, banks should all consider
    adopting as a best practice a standard
    limitation of liability clause limiting a banks
    liability in certain common situations. Your CEO
    comes back from the conference and says that this
    is a great idea. What do you do?

15
Hypothetical 5
  • Your companys web page discloses current rates
    for your products and services. The web page
    also states when new rates will go into effect
    and when special discounts will expire. The web
    sites of all competitors display the same
    information. Your company continually monitors
    its competitors web pages for announcements of
    rate changes and reacts with its own pricing
    decisions, You believe that competitors do the
    same.

16
Hypothetical 6
  • Each year, you meet in Paris for an elegant
    dinner with representatives of your main
    competitors. You discuss global market
    conditions and each companys expectations for
    the market in the coming year, but no agreements
    are reached. Your company does not sell any
    services or products in the United States, but
    other companies who attend the dinners do. The
    US Department of Justice has asked you to testify
    before a grand jury investigating the Paris
    dinners. Are you and your company at risk?

17
Hypothetical 7
  • In your industry, companies regularly call one
    another to confirm information supplied by
    customers about competitive bids. The
    information given is only to confirm or refute
    the information already supplied by a customer.
    Your sales representatives defend the practice as
    necessary to protect against customers who
    present fraudulent information on competitive
    bids. They insist that no agreement exists on
    prices to be charged.

18
Hypothetical 8
  • You are a commercial lender. A trade
    association is conducting a survey of credit
    losses for companies in your industry. You are
    being asked to provide details of your losses
    over for the past three year. In return, you
    will receive a report showing aggregate and
    averages for the losses incurred by all companies
    that choose to participate in the survey, along
    with details on large losses, without identifying
    the parties to the transactions. Only companies
    participating in the survey will receive the
    report.

19
Hypothetical 0
  • Your CEO has been invited to be the featured
    speaker at the main dinner for the annual meeting
    of your industrys trade association. In the
    current draft of his speech, he surveys current
    market conditions, takes note of overcapacity and
    expresses the hope that all companies will act
    with prudence and discipline. He does not
    propose any particular actions for the companies
    to follow.

20
Antitrust Compliance Price Information Sharing
And Transparency Issues
  • Presentation to the
  • Association of Bermuda Compliance Officers
  • Cameron Findlay Aon
  • Thomas F. Bush Lovells June 4, 2007
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