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The Closed Season Is Over – Vertical Antitrust Violations Are Not Trivial Offences

It is a widespread misconception that only horizontal antitrustviolations (such as in truck, beer or sausage cartels), i.e. practices between competitors that violate antitrust law, are the sole focus of the antitrust authorities. Practices that are prohibited and sanctioned in horizontal relationships include, for example, information sharing, price fixing or market division schemes.

However, companies that only focus on this horizontal aspect in their compliance efforts often overlook the relevance and the risk of vertical restraints of competition. In recent years, the risk of prosecution in the case of vertical antitrust violations has increased significantly, as both national antitrust authorities and, at the European level, the EU Commission are increasingly clamping down on vertical restraints of competition and imposing fines, in some cases substantial ones.

A classic example of unlawful vertical restraints of competition is resale price maintenance, i.e. the setting of minimum prices by the manufacturer vis-à-vis the retailer or distributer. While the setting of maximum prices is quite permissible under antitrust law, the setting of minimum prices influences competition in an improper manner. Such price fixing can, for example, also take the form of a ban on participating in discount campaigns.

In the latest vertical cartel case, the German Federal Cartel Office reported in a press release of 5 August 2021, that it had imposed fines totalling EUR 21 million on manufacturers and retailers of musical instruments as well as on the staff involved in these companies. The background to the case was the manufacturers’ request to the retailers to respect the minimum sales prices set by the manufacturers, which the retailers in many cases did. Although the retailers often did not comply with the manufacturer’s demands, either by not implementing them or avoiding them, in some cases they nevertheless still continued to adhere to the minimum prices, which led to house searches by the German Federal Cartel Office and ultimately to the imposition of fines.

Since RPM is not only imposed by manufacturers, but retailers also play their part by following the manufacturers’ dictates, both manufacturers and retailers (and their employees) were to be fined accordingly. The details of the specific conduct sanctioned by the German Federal Cartel Office are described in the report of 5 August 2021, in particular the manufacturers’ dictate regarding the margin and the monitoring of retailers’ compliance with the sales conditions set by the manufacturers.

Due to the increasing focus on vertical competition violations, we recommend that companies review any provisions in their contracts relating to vertical relationships that may be problematic under antitrust law, with particular focus on price fixing, provisions regarding internet distribution (especially platform bans) or exclusivity clauses.

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作者

Elke Wurster

Partner

Attorney-at-law

Maîtrise en droit international

Certified Compliance Officer (Univ.)