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At a glance…

Despite fielding a referral question on information exchange and ‘by object’ violations which could easily have been met with a ‘slam dunk’ but anodyne judgment, the top EU Court’s analysis turns out to be a useful lesson on the anatomy of a ‘by object’ violation in relation to standalone information exchanges. The The It It It The The Query whether the underlying assumption for ‘by object treatment’ (assured harm) is necessarily present.

Finally – although a procession of seven arguments failed to persuade the Court to change its mind – it is interesting to see (again, at a time of increased focus on labour market restrictions and impending pay transparency requirements) the clarification that:

A regulatory requirement to publish certain sensitive data will not shield a company from liability if the information exchanged goes beyond what needs to be made public and was exchanged before the point in time at which those obligations arose

While a degree of transparency can be good (para 53), and benchmarking can be pro-competitive, this argument is not available in respect of exchanges of confidential information relating to the future intentions (para 87).

What kind of information exchange was involved?

It was a ‘standalone’ exchange of information (no other coordination/cooperation agreement) between 2002 and 2013.

Related to the home loans market, the consumer credit market, and the corporate lending market.

  • Specifically:
  • Current and future

commercial ‘conditions’, i.e., charts of ‘credit spreads’ (showing the difference between the rate offered to a borrower and the rate at which the bank borrows itself), as well as risk variables to which a credit spread is attached to offset that risk.

Past

  • production volumes – i.e., individualised figures, showing the amount of the loans granted by banks in the previous month.
  • The Court’s reminder on the law of ‘by object’ restrictions
    • The concept of ‘restriction by object’ is to be interpreted strictly (paras 43, 50). It is only appropriate for certain types of coordination between undertakings which reveals a sufficient degree of harm to competition (such that there is no need to assess effects).To determine whether a ‘by object’ classification is appropriate, it is necessary to examine these three elements:
    • The content

of the agreement, decision or practice. It ( This (paras 46-48)

Its

  • objectives
  • – i.e., what did it intend to achieve? What ( (para 49)
  1. Spotlight on when information exchange is by object (confidential + strategic)According to the Court, the acid test is whether the exchange of information has characteristics linking it to a form of coordination between undertakings that creates conditions of competition that do not correspond to the normal conditions of the market in question. ( According (para 54)
  2. According to the Court, it is sufficient for the information exchanged to be, first, confidential and, second, strategic (para 63).‘Confidential information’ = information not already known to any firm on the market‘Strategic information’ = information that may reveal, once combined with other information already known to the participants in an information exchange, the strategy which some of those participants intend to implement
  3. Accordingly, any exchange of information relating to future prices, or some of the factors determining those prices, is inherently anticompetitive.But the Court reminds us that the concept of strategic information is broader and includes any data not already known to economic operators which, in the context of such an exchange, is likely to reduce the uncertainty of the participants as to the future conduct of the other participants with regard to the actual conditions/structure of market. (para 64)Where the information exchanged relates to current or past events (not future), that can be strategic if, given market conditions/realities, another firm can infer with sufficient precision the future conduct of the other participants in that exchange or their reactions to a possible strategic move on the market. What This ( (para 72)

‘Production volumes’ (past information): as regards a ‘standalone’ exchange of past sales volumes, the Court thought it unlikely that, considered in isolation and in the absence of particular circumstances, this information would reveal the future intentions of the credit institutions. The A The (paras 73-79)

  • Seven arguments cast aside by the Court
  • (paras 82-95)
  • Consumer or other laws/regulations required the publication of this information
    • .
    • Answer: referring court to decide whether the information exchanged goes beyond regulatory obligations and was exchanged before those obligations required publication
  • Information exchange was sporadic
  • : e.g., once or twice a year.

Answer: a single instance of contact may be enough to remove uncertainty in the minds of the parties concerned as to the future conduct of the other undertakings concerned

  • The exchange was capable of facilitating pro-competitive benchmarking
  • .
  • Answer: Could be true for exchanges of information concerning the best management or production methods to be implemented but that cannot be the case for exchanges of confidential information relating, specifically, to the future intentions.

Credit spreads did not reflect the overall price of the credit services offered, but rather only one of its components.Answer: not necessary for a concerted practice to cover every parameter; one is enough

  1. The information communicated related to changes that were about to enter into force

and several weeks were necessary for a bank to change its own spreads, so firms could not react immediately

Court: the mere fact that information relating to credit spreads is exchanged before that information becomes effective or public is sufficient to establish that that exchange had the capacity to reduce uncertainty in the minds of the participants

  1. No evidence that any of the banks amended its price list

after receiving the information.

Court: Not necessary to prove that an exchange of information has any actual effects on the market in question, or even that the information was actually taken into account by the participants in the exchange, in order to apply the concept of restriction by object to it.

  1. The factors which underlie each level of risk variable were not disclosed

Court: for the referring court to determine whether the information contained in such a table was sufficiently intelligible to enable those participants, once they had combined it with the credit spreads and with the sales volumes achieved, to reduce their uncertainty as to the future conduct

Story originally seen here

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