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This section
is extracted from part 6 of the guidance document CC4:
General Advice and Information (pdf, 817kb).
Procedures
The CC’s
procedures are governed by the provisions of the Enterprise
Act, Schedule 7 to the CA98, relevant regulatory legislation
and the rules, which are binding on groups. Groups should
also have regard to the Chairman’s Guidance to Groups
(CC6),
which gives advice to groups on the conduct of investigations
.
Appointment
of groups
When
a reference is made to the CC, the Chairman selects members
to serve on the group that will conduct that investigation.
A group consists of a minimum of three members, one of whom
acts as the Group Chairman. If the Chairman or a Deputy Chairman
is appointed to a group, he or she acts as the Group Chairman.
Groups of four or five members have been normal practice to
date. The CC has a stringent procedure to ensure that conflicts
of interest do not occur. The Chairman has the power to appoint
a replacement for a group member if during the course of an
investigation that member ceases to be a member of the CC,
or becomes unable to perform his or her duties for a substantial
period, or a particular interest of a member emerges which
means that it would be inappropriate for him or her to continue.
There
are three types of groups defined in paragraph 19A(9) of Schedule
7 to the CA98:
•
merger reference groups;
•
market reference groups; and
•
special reference groups.
The CC
has specialist panels of members (utilities and newspapers)
from which one or more members must be chosen for some references
(eg water licence modification references and newspaper merger
references).
Subject
to any particular provisions in the Act and to the rules,
groups determine their own procedures
The Chairman
of a group has the casting vote. Groups can consult other
CC members with the Group Chairman’s permission, and
the CC Chairman can give advice to groups.
Timetable
The CC
must reach its decisions and publish its report within the
following statutory time limits:
•
Mergers: 24 weeks, with an extension of up to 8
weeks, if the CC ‘considers that there are special
reasons why the report cannot be prepared and published
within that period’. In this case it must publish
a notice of the extension. Furthermore, if a relevant person
does not appear as a witness or provide information or documents
required by the CC, the CC can extend the investigation
until such time as the order is obeyed or it publishes its
decision to cancel the extension. In most cases the CC expects
to complete its work in a shorter time than the maximum
allowed.
•
Market investigations: two years maximum (though it is expected
that some investigations will be completed in a shorter
time, probably 12 to 15 months).
•
Regulatory references (other than Ofcom price control references):
six months but one extension of up to six months (three
months for airports) is permitted.
•
Ofcom price control references: subject to any directions
given by the Competition Appeal Tribunal, four months.
Following
consideration of the views of the main parties, each group
will draw up an administrative timetable for the stages of
its investigation, which it has the power to revise, and publish
it on the website.
Major
stages of merger and a market investigations
An investigation
begins when a reference to the CC is made by the OFT, a sector
regulator or the Secretary of State, depending on the type
of case. (The CC has the power to cancel the reference of
an anticipated merger, should it find that the proposal to
make arrangements of the kind mentioned in the reference has
been abandoned and in this case must publish a notice of the
cancellation.) The OFT has the power to vary a reference,
following consultation with the CC. The CC is under a duty
to publish a notice if there is a material change in circumstances
affecting a reference.
The main
stages of an investigation (which often overlap and do not
necessarily take place in this order) are:
(a)
gathering information, including the issue of questionnaires;
(b)
hearing witnesses;
c) verifying
information;
(d)
providing a statement of issues;
(e)
considering responses to the statement of issues;
(f)
notifying parties of emerging thinking (market investigations);
(g)
notifying parties of and publishing provisional findings;
(h)
notifying and considering possible remedies;
(i)
considering exclusions from disclosure; and
(j)
publishing reports.
The flowcharts
in Figure 1 and
Figure 2 below
indicate the stages of typical merger and market investigations.
FIGURE
1:
Typical shape of
a merger inquiry (pdf,139kb)
FIGURE
2:
Typical shape of
a market investigation (pdf,139kb)
Information
gathering and handling
The CC
requires access to detailed information regarding the companies
and markets in question, in order to take its statutory decisions
on the competition and remedies questions. Those affected,
or potentially affected, by decisions made by the CC should
also have the opportunity to put their views to the CC and
for those views to be considered. The CC invites evidence
from all parties likely to have an interest in the investigation.
They include:
•
the main parties to investigations (the merging companies
in merger investigations, or companies that form a part
of the market under investigation in market investigations);
and
•
third parties that might be affected (for example,
competitors, customers, suppliers, government departments,
expert bodies, and trade or consumer organizations).
The provision
of evidence to the CC can be very time-consuming for the parties
concerned and the CC aims to restrict its requests to the
minimum consistent with carrying out its duties. The CC maintains
regular contact with the main parties or their representatives
to obtain and check information, and to inform them of progress.
At the
outset of a reference, the CC has available to it the information
already gathered by the OFT, to which it must have regard.
The CC then collects further information in a variety of ways:
(a)
Letters and questionnaires. When the reference is made,
the CC writes to the main parties to the investigation, inviting
submissions from them. It also contacts other interested parties
to request their views. Questionnaires are sent to the main
parties to an investigation and sometimes to third parties.
(b)
Press notices, advertisements and website. The CC
publishes press notices seeking information and places advertisements
in relevant publications; a notice is also included on
this
website.
(c)
Publicly available sources of information. Often,
useful information regarding the companies or market in question
is available in publications, on websites, or in analysts’
or consultants’ reports.
(d)
Surveys. In some investigations, surveys (for example,
of consumers) are commissioned to provide evidence about a
particular market.
(e)
Visits to the main parties. These help the group
and staff to gain a first-hand understanding of the workings
of the company and industry in question. They provide the
opportunity for the parties to make presentations and for
the members to ask questions in an informal setting.
(f)
Commissioning of expert advice.
(g)
Hearings with the parties (see
Hearings).
The CC
has long had powers to issue notices requiring a person to
attend at a certain time or place, to give evidence, to produce
documents, or to supply other estimates, forecasts, returns,
or other specified information. The CC may also copy any document.
The Act introduces a new sanction for non-compliance with
such notices and another sanction for the intentional obstruction
of the CC’s power to copy a document.In place of the
former power to institute contempt proceedings in the courts,
the CC may impose a monetary penalty. The CC will use this
power flexibly. Depending on the circumstances and nature
of the infringement, the penalty may be fixed (up to a maximum
of £20,000) or set at a daily rate (of up to a daily
maximum of £5,000) or a combination of both. (See the
CC’s
Statement of Policy on Penalties for further details.)
Intentional provision of false or misleading information,
or intentional alteration, suppression or destruction of any
documents a person is required to produce, also constitutes
an offence.The CC is not obliged to have regard to any information
that it receives after the date reasonably specified for its
receipt.
CC staff
review the information collected. Some documents received
are considered in their entirety by the group; others form
the basis of papers written by CC staff, which summarize,
analyse or draw out the implications of the information. The
members of the group meet regularly with CC staff to discuss
and analyse the evidence and findings presented in these papers.
In this way, the group is able to gain an understanding of
the market and companies in question, and therefore to make
informed decisions on the competition and remedies questions.
Some
of the evidence gathered will form the basis of the statement
of issues sent to the main parties and published on the CC’s
website. The statement indicates the main lines of inquiry
the group is likely to pursue at the hearings with the main
parties.
Hearings
Usually
hearings are held with one party to the investigation at a
time and are thus private. However, it is also possible to
hold hearings that are open to the public, and joint hearings
with more than one party. It is up to each group to decide
on the most appropriate type of hearing for the investigation
in question. It is also a matter for the group to decide which
interested parties may be present, may be heard and may cross-examine
witnesses.
A hearing
can last anything from a couple of hours to a day. Normally
hearings are held at the CC’s office in central London.
A transcript is taken, and is checked with the party. Should
the party wish to clarify or add to any point made in the
hearing, they can write to the CC afterwards.
Hearings
provide the members with an opportunity to explore in depth
the key issues in an investigation, and to raise questions
arising from the party’s written submission and answers
to the questionnaire. Companies or their representatives are
expected to be able to answer the CC’s questions about
matters arising in the investigation including those raised
in the statement of issues. Hearings are not conducted in
an adversarial fashion, but rather in the spirit of gaining
a sound understanding of the issues raised in the investigation.
Provisional
findings
The Act
imposes a duty on the CC to consult on its decisions on the
competition questions and remedies. In the case of merger
investigations, it must do so where it considers that the
decision is likely to be adverse to the interests of a relevant
party, and in the case of market investigations, it must do
so where it considers the decision is likely to have a substantial
impact on the interests of any person.The CC will publish
provisional findings on a reference, to which parties are
invited to respond within a period of not less than 21 days.
These provisional findings may also contain proposals for
remedies: if they do not do so, then remedies will be consulted
on separately (see Remedies)
Following
the publication of and consultation on the provisional findings,
the group will meet to discuss responses to them, and consider
whether or not, in the light of responses received, the provisional
findings should be altered. This might necessitate a further
hearing with one or more of the parties.
Remedies
Groups
must reach decisions that there is an anti-competitive outcome
by a two-thirds majority if they are to go on to consider
remedial action. In the event of such an adverse finding-that
is, that a merger does lead to a substantial lessening of
competition, or that there is an adverse effect on competition
arising from the features of a market-the CC must propose
remedies to counter the adverse effects. The CC may consult
the main parties on its proposed remedies when it consults
the parties on its provisional findings on the competition
questions, but will more often consult them soon after by
means of a remedies statement. The remedies statement will
be published on the CC’s website. The CC will normally
hear parties’ views orally as well as seeking views
in writing. The group’s final decision on remedies,
including offsetting customer benefits, is taken by a simple
majority.
Final
decisions and reports
The CC’s
final decisions on the competition questions and remedies
questions are published in its final report, together with
the reasons for those decisions and such information as the
CC considers appropriate to facilitate a proper understanding
of those questions and the reasons for the decisions.
Reports
under the Act will be structured around the questions that
each group is required to answer and the decisions the group
has made in answer to those questions. The group’s decisions
will be fully supported by appropriate analysis and argument,
and annexes to the report will be included to the extent necessary
to understand the decisions. A report may contain a statement
of disagreement and his or her reasons for disagreeing by
any group member who disagrees with any decisions contained
in the report. Reports are published on the website;
hard copies are also available.
Implementation
of remedies
The report
will contain sufficient detail on remedies to provide a firm
basis for implementation by the CC through negotiating undertakings
and/or imposing orders. The report may specify the timescale
in which undertakings should be agreed before the CC considers
imposing orders instead. The group is discharged only when
negotiations have been completed and suitable undertakings
have been received or orders imposed. Thereafter the OFT has
the duty of monitoring undertakings and orders and recommending
their variation or release to the CC. A single Standing Group
of members will deal with those recommendations on behalf
of the CC by a simple majority decision.
Special
reference groups
Special
reference groups are constituted in relation to regulatory
statutes (for a full list see paragraph 19A(9) of Schedule
7 to the CA98). The procedures they follow are similar to
the procedures for merger and market references, but:
•
they are not obliged to publish provisional findings; and
•
they send the final report relating to such investigations
to the relevant sector regulator.
Disclosure
and confidentiality of information
In the
course of its work, the CC publishes some of the information
provided to it: either in the final report as evidence on
which the decisions are based, or sometimes as background
information on the CC’s website. It may also disclose
additional information to main parties or selected third parties.
Parties who have provided information to the CC which is used
as evidence for the decisions in a final report are generally
invited to check its accuracy and for their comments on possible
disclosure.
The Act
provides that the CC should have regard to the following three
considerations before disclosing any information relating
to the affairs of an individual or a business which has not
previously been disclosed to the public:
•
the need to exclude from disclosure (so far as practicable)
any information whose disclosure the CC thinks is contrary
to the public interest;
•
the need to exclude from disclosure (so far as practicable):
-
commercial information whose disclosure the CC thinks
might significantly harm the legitimate business interests
of the undertaking to which it relates; or
-
information relating to the private affairs of an individual
whose disclosure the CC thinks might substantially harm
the individual’s interests; and
•
the extent to which the disclosure of the information included
in the above categories is necessary for the purpose for
which the CC is permitted to make the disclosure.
The question
of disclosure will arise throughout the course of an investigation,
in managing information, general correspondence, drafting
the issues statement, giving the parties a fair opportunity
to comment on the evidence of others, notifying and publishing
provisional findings, notifying possible remedies and publishing
the final report. The CC will invite those concerned to comment
on the sensitivity of any information they supply. It may
ask the parties early in the investigation to provide information
in a form which can be disclosed. It will take its final decisions
on disclosure of information which a person considers to be
‘sensitive’ by having regard to the three considerations
above. The Act requires that the CC’s reports should
contain the information necessary to understand its decisions
and the reasons for those decisions. Ultimately the CC decides
what information should be disclosed in a report and throughout
the investigation in order to fulfil its statutory functions.
For further information, see CC7:
Chairman’s Guidance on Disclosure of Information
in Merger and Market Inquiries.
The CC
wishes to give parties an opportunity to make further representations
if there is a dispute between a party and the group about
whether or not a piece of evidence should be disclosed. In
such cases, the party may write to the CC’s Chief Executive
about these concerns. He will liaise with the group and the
party about them.
Accountability
and fairness
The CC
aims to keep parties to investigations well informed and seeks
to ensure that all information and arguments which it may
rely on in reaching its conclusions are put to the relevant
parties for comment. The CC also usually ensures that parties
have the opportunity to check the factual accuracy of information
it may rely on in reaching its decisions. The CC consults
parties on certain decisions that might affect them. The CC
makes extensive use of its website to publish issues statements,
provisional findings and remedies statements, and will supplement
that whenever possible with information provided by main and
third parties, surveys and economic analyses.
Overall
the CC’s objective is to provide all the information
necessary to ensure fairness in its processes and decision
making.
Appeals
Parties
to an investigation who are aggrieved by any decision of the
CC in relation to a merger or market investigation reference
may apply to the Competition Appeal Tribunal for a judicial
review of that decision (see Appeals
page). For decisions in regulatory investigations,
applications for judicial review lie with the High Court.
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