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Antitrust Division Annual Report PDF

101 Pages·2000·2.03 MB·English
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A D NTITRUST IVISION U S D J NITED TATES EPARTMENT OF USTICE A R NNUAL EPORT FY 1999 Contents Foreword 1 5 The Criminal Enforcement Program 9 The Merger Enforcement Program 13 The Civil Non-Merger Enforcement Program 17 The Telecommunications Competition Program C o n 21 t International Antitrust Policies and Procedures e n t s 25 Appendix A: Selected Criminal Cases iii 41 Appendix B: Merger Challenges 87 Appendix C: Civil Non-Merger Cases 99 Appendix D: Antitrust Division Organization Directory Antitrust Division Annual Report Foreword March 20, 2000 By Assistant Attorney General Joel I. Klein I am pleased to present this Report This is the kind of antitrust enforcement summarizing the recent major activi- policy to which this Administration is ties of the Antitrust Division of the committed. It is both principled and Department of Justice. As the Report pragmatic. There is no presumption that documents, this has been an active “big” is “bad,” but neither is there an assumption that the market will always period for the Antitrust Division across “correct” anticompetitive problems. the full-range of its enforcement respon- Instead, the Antitrust Division pays sibilities: criminal prosecutions, merger careful attention to facts, informed by review, and civil non-merger activities. economic analysis, in making its Our accomplishments range from enforcement decisions. prosecutions of international cartels that F o have resulted in greater fines than ever r e before to successful challenges to “magna carta” of the free enterprise w multibillion dollar mergers, not to system. The antitrust laws are thus used o r mention challenges to exclusionary to deter and punish anticompetitive d behavior in technologically critical conduct and to obtain prospective relief 1 industries. to prevent such conduct in the future. Antitrust plays an important role in At the same time, caution must be our economy. Competition is the corner- taken to assure that the antitrust laws stone of this country’s economic founda- are not misused to protect competitors tion. We have long extolled the virtues from the vigor of the competitive of the free market, which provides process. In a free market system, innova- business with the opportunity to inno- tion and creativity should be rewarded, vate, produce, and distribute goods and not penalized. There will inevitably be services without direct intervention by winners and losers in this battle, but the government. Competition, rather while the antitrust laws are intended to than government directives, determines prevent conduct that impairs the com- which businesses will succeed, and petitive process, the antitrust agencies consumers are the ultimate—and appro- are not in the business of picking who priate—beneficiaries of the competitive should win and who should lose. That process. responsibility falls to consumers, who make that determination through their The antitrust laws ensure that the purchasing decisions. benefits of the competitive process are not interdicted by private anticompeti- This is the kind of antitrust enforce- tive conduct. The Supreme Court has ment policy to which this Administra- described the Sherman Act as the tion is committed. It is both principled Antitrust Division Annual Report The increasing globalization of economic behavior presents important challenges to antitrust regimes that have traditionally been administered by individual sovereign nations. Globalization of Trade International trade is of increasing importance to the economic well-being of United States producers and consum- ers. U.S. firms frequently export to foreign countries, and American con- sumers purchase goods manufactured abroad. Nearly 25 percent of our GDP is now related to export and import trade. The increasing globalization of economic behavior presents important challenges to antitrust regimes that have traditionally been administered by individual sovereign nations. The Anti- d r trust Division has taken account of the o w globalization of trade in important ways. e r o First, the Antitrust Division is F and pragmatic. There is no presumption devoting more of its resources to uncov- 2 that “big” is “bad,” but neither is there ering international cartel behavior that an assumption that the market will has significant economic consequences always “correct” anticompetitive prob- for American consumers. Perhaps the lems. Instead, the Antitrust Division most widely publicized example during pays careful attention to facts, informed the past year was the successful prosecu- by economic analysis, in making its tion of companies and individuals enforcement decisions. involved in vitamin production, which culminated in fines of over $875 million Despite the diversity of our enforce- for companies and in significant jail ment targets—ranging from hard-core time for individuals. More of our crimi- criminal violations to exclusionary nal investigations involve foreign com- practices by dominant producers and panies than ever before. To detect and service providers—we have observed prosecute international cartels, the certain important trends that cut cross Antitrust Division has developed pro- the full range of competitive activity: grams that encourage cooperation by globalization of trade, rapid technologi- foreign companies and their employees, cal change, and deregulation. Each of including various forms of cooperation these trends has important implications agreements with other governments. for the future of antitrust enforcement. Antitrust Division Annual Report Another important focus of the Department’s antitrust enforcement efforts over the past few years has been our continuing effort to eliminate both private and public restrictions on competition in industries traditionally regulated as franchise monopolies. So, too, the Antitrust Division has recognized the international dimension of merger activity. An increasing number of transactions have competitive implica- tions in more than one country, and today it is not uncommon for a transac- tion to be subject to multicountry review. The Antitrust Division has endeavored to develop good working relationships with other countries and the European Union. We are working closely with governments around the world to cooperate in merger review, both to minimize burdens on private parties and to advance the cause of F proper antitrust analysis. To advance this o r process, the Attorney General estab- e w lished the International Competition work externalities and first-mover o Policy Advisory Committee, which r advantages, which pose risks that mar- d recently issued its report reviewing kets will “tip” very quickly toward a international antitrust issues and making 3 dominant supplier and thereby make recommendations for consideration. entry extremely difficult. The more important that innovation becomes to Technological Change society, the more important it is to A number of our most important preserve economic incentives to inno- industries have been characterized vate. In such circumstances, timely and recently by unprecedented levels of effective antitrust enforcement may be technological change. Such change has the key to preserving an environment in important implications for antitrust which companies—whether new or old, enforcement. On the one hand, such large or small—believe that there will be change creates opportunities for compa- no artificial barriers to bringing new nies to develop new products and products and services to market. services and find rapid customer accep- tance. It has been argued that the pros- It is undoubtedly true that rapid pect for such change reduces the need technological change requires careful for antitrust enforcement because a attention to facts. Our challenges to the company that dominates an industry Lockheed Martin-Northrop Grumman today may be replaced tomorrow by a transaction and Microsoft’s monopoly of company that suddenly offers a superior computer operating systems are not product or service. However, rapid garden-variety antitrust actions. They technological change may actually and other challenges filed by the Anti- increase barriers to entry through net- trust Division were undertaken only Antitrust Division Annual Report The past decade has witnessed remarkable progress in moving these industries from a regime based largely on regulated monopoly to one that encourages competition wherever possible, a trend portending an increasingly important role for antitrust. after careful consideration of both The United States has again become historical conduct and likely future the dominant economy of the world. effects. The fact that antitrust analysis of The fact that this reemergence has issues arising in high-technology indus- coincided with a substitution of compe- tries may be difficult is no basis for tition for regulation and a reinvigorated abandoning the effort altogether. En- antitrust enforcement policy is not a forcement decisions that are made today, coincidence. Michael Porter noted in his especially in industries characterized by landmark work The Competitive Advan- rapid technological change, will have tage of Nations (at pp. 662-63) that important ramifications for the nature of domestic firms spared from competing the American economy for many years at home are unlikely to succeed abroad. to come. He also found that the importance of domestic rivalry has “strong implications d Deregulation for antitrust policy…. A strong antitrust r policy, especially in the area of horizon- o w In recent decades, legislative and tal mergers, alliances, and collusive e regulatory changes in the United States behavior, is essential to the rate of r o have reversed a generation of pervasive upgrading in an economy.” We could F government regulation and deregulated not agree more. such basic industries as telecommunica- 4 tions, energy, financial services, and I hope you will find the attached transportation. Competition, with report informative. This is the first appropriate reliance upon antitrust laws, Annual Report published by the Anti- has again become the norm. trust Division in over three years. As a result, the discussion of our enforcement The Antitrust Division continues to programs includes references to certain work with various agencies to find ways matters begun before fiscal 1999 that to replace regulatory constraints with carried over into that year, and the competitive incentives. We have been appendices contain information about very active in promoting competition cases filed subsequent to publication of pursuant to the Telecommunications Act our last annual report. of 1996, both to the Federal Communi- cations Commission and in the courts. Our recent accomplishments are The Antitrust Division is the primary testimony to the hard-working men and advocate of competition within the women of the Antitrust Division and executive branch and works regularly the bipartisan support that antitrust with Congress, urging that the market- enforcement has enjoyed. Both are place—through purchase decisions made critical to the health and future of the by consumers—rather than government American economy. agencies determine the products and services that businesses will provide. Antitrust Division Annual Report The Criminal Enforcement Program T h e C The Antitrust Division institutes The Antitrust Division recently has r i criminal enforcement of Section prosecuted international cartels m operating in a broad spectrum of i One of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. n commerce, including vitamins, food and a Section 1, against hardcore cartel activ- l feed additives, chemicals, graphite E ity such as price-fixing, bid-rigging, and electrodes (used in steel making), and n market-allocation agreements. Such f marine construction and transportation o conduct causes substantial harm to r services. c purchasers of goods and services. e m e The prosecution of such domestic additives, chemicals, graphite electrodes n cartel activity has been at the heart of (used in steel making), and marine t P the Department of Justice’s antitrust construction and transportation services. r o enforcement efforts ever since the Since the beginning of FY 1997, the g enactment of the Sherman Act in 1890 Antitrust Division has prosecuted ar and continues unabated. In the last international cartels affecting over $10 m several years, however, the Antitrust billion in U.S. commerce. The cartel 5 Division has made the prosecution of activity in these cases cost U.S. busi- international cartels that victimize nesses and consumers many hundreds of American businesses and consumers one million of dollars annually. of its highest priorities. This strategy recognizes that in many instances inter- The Antitrust Division’s strategy of national cartels pose an even greater concentrating its criminal resources on threat to American businesses and international cartels has led to unprec- consumers than do domestic conspira- edented success in terms of cracking cies because they tend to be highly those cartels, securing the conviction of sophisticated and extremely broad in the major conspirators, and obtaining their impact—in terms of geographic record-breaking fines. scope, the amount of commerce af- fected, and the number of businesses Since the beginning of FY 1997, the and consumers victimized by the con- Antitrust Division has obtained over spiracy. $1.5 billion dollars in criminal fines, well over 90 percent of which were The Antitrust Division recently has imposed in connection with the prosecu- prosecuted international cartels operat- tion of international cartel activity. To ing in a broad spectrum of commerce, put this fine figure into perspective, including vitamins, food and feed consider that the highest amount of Antitrust Division Annual Report fines obtained by the Antitrust Division the amount of harm caused to American in any given year prior to FY 1997 was businesses and consumers, than any roughly $42 million. In FY 1997, the conspiracies previously encountered by Antitrust Division shattered that mark the Antitrust Division. when it collected $205 million in crimi- nal fines—nearly 500 percent higher For example, the international m than during any previous year in the vitamin cartel, which affected over $5 a Antitrust Division’s history. In billion in U.S. commerce, was the most r g FY 1998, the Antitrust Division topped harmful and elaborate conspiracy ever o r that number when it obtained over $265 uncovered by the Antitrust Division. P million in criminal fines. And then, in The members of the vitamin cartel t n FY 1999, the Antitrust Division thrust reached agreements on everything from e m the new record still another 400 percent how much product each company would e higher when it secured over $1.1 billion produce, to how much they would c r in criminal fines. The amount of fines charge, to which customers they would o f obtained since FY 1997 is many mul- sell. The victims who purchased directly n E tiples higher than the sum total of all from the cartel members included l criminal fines imposed for violations of companies with household names such a n the Sherman Antitrust Act dating back as General Mills, Kellogg, Coca-Cola, i m to the Act’s inception in 1890. Tyson Foods, and Proctor & Gamble. ri However, these companies were just the C The dramatic increase in fines first to feel the effects of this conspiracy. e reflects the fact that the major interna- In the end, for nearly a decade, every h T tional cartels prosecuted over the past American consumer—anyone who took few years have been bigger, in terms of a vitamin, drank a glass of milk, or had 6 the volumes of affected commerce and a bowl of cereal—ended up paying more Antitrust Division Criminal Fines $1,200 Fine Amounts $1,100 $1,000 ) 1990: $23,575,000 s n o $900 1991: $20,379,000 milli $800 1992: $23,705,000 n 1993: $42,296,000 s (i $700 e 1994: $40,236,000 n $600 Fi 1995: $41,653,000 al $500 n 1996: $26,817,000 mi $400 ri 1997: $205,178,000 C $300 1998: $266,924,000 $200 1999: $1,105,654,316 $100 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Antitrust Division Annual Report Sherman Act Violations Yielding a Fine of $10 Million or More Defendant (Fiscal Year) Product Fine Geographic Country (million) Scope F. Hoffman-La Roche Ltd. (1999) Vitamins $500 International Switzerland BASF AG (1999) Vitamins $225 International Germany SGL Carbon AG (1999) Graphite Electrodes $135 International Germany T UCAR International, Inc. (1998) Graphite Electrodes $110 International United States h e Archer Daniels Midland Co. (1997) Lysine & Citric Acid $100 International United States C Takeda Chemical Industries, Ltd. Vitamins $72 International Japan r i m (1999) i n Haarmann & Reimer Corp. (1997) Citric Acid $50 International German Parent a l HeereMac v.o.f. (1998) Marine Construction $49 International Netherlands E Eisai Co., Ltd. (1999) Vitamins $40 International Japan n f o Hoechst AG (1999) Sorbates $36 International Germany r c Showa Denko Carbon, Inc. (1998) Graphite Electrodes $32.5 International Japan e m Daiichi Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. Vitamins $25 International Japan e (1999) n t Nippon Gohsei (1999) Sorbates $21 International Japan P r Pfizer Inc. (1999) Maltol/Sodium $20 International United States o Erythorbate g r Fujisawa Pharmaceuticals Co. a m (1998) Sodium Gluconate $20 International Japan Dockwise N.V. (1998) Marine Transportation $15 International Belgium 7 Dyno Nobel (1996) Explosives $15 Domestic Norwegian Parent F. Hoffmann-LaRoche, Ltd. (1997) Citric Acid $14 International Switzerland Eastman Chemical Co. (1998) Sorbates $11 International United States Jungbunzlauer International (1997) Citric Acid $11 International Switzerland Lonza AG (1998) Vitamins $10.5 International Switzerland Akzo Nobel Chemicals, BV & Glucona, BV (1997) Sodium Gluconate $9 International Netherlands ICI Explosives (1996) Explosives $10 Domestic British Parent Mrs. Baird’s Bakeries (1996) Bread $10 Domestic United States Ajinomoto (1996) Lysine $10 International Japan Kyowa Hakko Kogyo, Co., Ltd. (1996) Lysine $10 International Japan so that the conspirators could reap Swiss, German, Canadian, and Japanese hundreds of millions of dollars in addi- firms and over $875 million in criminal tional revenues. fines against the corporate defendants, including a $500 million fine imposed To date, the vitamin investigation on F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. (HLR) has resulted in convictions against and a $225 million fine imposed on Antitrust Division Annual Report BASF AG. The $500 million fine the United States is committed to imposed against HLR is the largest fine vigorous antitrust enforcement against ever imposed in any Department of international cartel activity. Justice proceeding under any statute. The Antitrust Division also has thus far The increased effectiveness of the prosecuted seven American and foreign Antitrust Division’s anticartel efforts m executives who participated in the result from more effective investigation a vitamin cartel. All of these individuals, as well as good trial work. The Antitrust r g including the foreign defendants, are Division’s Amnesty Program has been a o r either already serving time in federal major contributor to its investigative P prison or are awaiting sentencing and success. In August 1993, the Antitrust t n face potential jail sentences as well as Division expanded its Amnesty Program e m heavy fines. For example, Kuno to make it easier and more attractive for e Sommer, the former director of World- companies to come forward and cooper- c r wide Marketing for Vitamins at HLR, ate with the Antitrust Division in o f and Roland Brönnimann, the former exchange for a complete pass on pros- n E president of the Fine Chemical and ecution. Today, that program is the l Vitamin Division at HLR, were recently Antitrust Division’s most effective a n sent to prison and ordered to pay sub- generator of large cases, and it is the i m stantial fines for their roles in the vita- Department of Justice’s most successful ri min cartel. Messrs. Sommer and leniency program. During the past year, C Brönnimann are the first European the Antitrust Division has been receiv- e nationals to serve time in a U.S. prison ing amnesty applications at the rate of h T for engaging in cartel activity. The approximately two per month—a more imposition of jail sentences against than twenty-fold increase compared to 8 foreign nationals residing outside this the prior Amnesty Program. Moreover, country, together with the unprec- in the past year alone, the Amnesty edented fines obtained in this matter, Program has led to dozens of convic- sends a powerful deterrent message that tions and over $1 billion in criminal fines. Antitrust Division Annual Report

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system. The antitrust laws are thus used to deter and punish anticompetitive conduct and to . computer operating systems are not . Archer Daniels Midland Co. (1997) International. Japan. (1999). Haarmann & Reimer Corp. (1997) Citric Acid. $50 Robert J. Hart, (E.D.. Pa. Kanji Mimoto, (N.D..
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