Winter 2023, February, Volume 2
Antitrust Chronicle® - Mergers as Monopolization
It has long bubbled under the surface, but there is an inherent tension between the archetypal monopolization/abuse of dominance provisions of global antitrust rules, and the subsequent introduction of merger control legislation.
This is perhaps no more evident than in the parallel sets of rules that hold sway in the two formative antitrust jurisdictions in the world: the U.S. and the EU. Merger control rules, in the form of the U.S. Clayton Act, and the EU Merger Regulation (“EUMR”), respectively, were introduced on the coattails of judicial and regulatory decisions seeking to impose antitrust rules to mergers and acquisitions. Those moves sought to control acquisitive behavior by potentially dominant or “monopolistic” firms, by subjecting such conduct to review under the existing antitrust rules, particularly Section 2 of the U.S. Sherman Act of 1890, and (what is now) Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (“TFEU”).