Cartels 2024

Last Updated June 11, 2024

Netherlands

Law and Practice

Authors



Simmons & Simmons has experience working on some of the largest cartel investigations and merger control matters in Europe. As such, the firm has the expertise to act on the most complex of cases in the finance, healthcare, life sciences, technology, transport, water and energy sectors. Much of the investigations work involves complex multi-jurisdictional issues and co-ordination with lawyers within its network and elsewhere, competition authorities or other regulators in parallel investigations around the world, including in Asia, North and South America. Investigations also increasingly require consideration of potential criminal liability. Simmons’ competition teams in Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy and the UK collaborate on national and Europe-wide matters. Simmons also represents clients directly before the courts in competition infringement and follow-on damages claims. Working with its internal e-discovery team, Simmons can process the vast quantities of data in such cases with ease and efficiency.

Public enforcement actions regarding cartels are based on Article 6 of the Dutch Competition Act (“the Act”) and Article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU). In fact, Article 6 of the Act is based on Article 101 of the TFEU, which prohibits the same conduct. Given the relation between these provisions, the Act refers to the TFEU for the definition of terms set out in Article 6, such as “undertaking” and “concerted practices”. Other concepts in the Act regarding cartels are generally also applied in line with EU competition law.

The Authority for Consumers & Markets (ACM) is entrusted with the public enforcement of Article 6 of the Act. When conduct also affects trade between EU member states, the ACM is empowered to enforce Article 101 of the TFEU as well. Its enforcement powers are governed mainly by the Act, the Establishment Act of the Authority for Consumers and Markets and the Dutch General Administrative Law Act. Furthermore, several regulations, decisions and policy guidelines on the application of Article 6 of the Act and the powers of the ACM have been issued by the Minister of Economic Affairs. In addition, the ACM has published several documents, such as guidelines and opinions regarding the application of the cartel prohibition and procedures.

See 5.1 Private Right of Action.

Article 6(1) of the Act provides that “agreements between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted practices of undertakings, which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition on the Dutch market, or a part thereof, are prohibited”. The cartel prohibition covers all types of competition restrictions, such as (i) price, cost and output co-ordination; (ii) territorial and customer distribution agreements; and (iii) bid rigging; as well as mitigated forms such as cover pricing, any exchange of competition-sensitive information and other agreements that have as their object or effect a decrease of competition among competitors, either horizontal or vertical. When applying Article 6(1), a distinction is made between conduct that has the “effect” of restricting competition and conduct that has the “object” of restricting competition, similar to the assessment under Article 101 of the TFEU.

Based on settled case law, a restriction of competition has to be appreciable in order to establish an infringement of Article 6(1). With reference to EU case law, the highest court in competition cases in the Netherlands has determined that when dealing with a restriction by object, an examination into the appreciable impact of the agreement and/or concerted practice can be forgone. The concept of a single and continuous infringement also applies within the frame of this article.

In practice, the ACM deals mainly with horizontal conduct that restricts competition, such as price fixing, bid rigging and market sharing. Vertical conduct, such as agreements between suppliers and purchasers, has rarely been investigated by the ACM. However, in recent years the ACM has announced that it will put more emphasis on enforcement concerning vertical conduct such as retail price maintenance (RPM), and it has also fined two companies in separate cases concerning resale price maintenance (Samsung and LG). The ACM has also increasingly stressed its scrutiny of other forms of RPM conduct in other vertical relationships, especially restrictions applicable to online shops.

The power of the ACM to impose sanctions for infringements of Article 6 of the Act is subject to a limitation period of five years. This limitation is interrupted by any act on the part of the ACM aimed at conducting an investigation or initiating proceedings concerning the infringement, and by any such act on the part of the European Commission or other national competition authority (NCA) of a member state of the EU concerning a violation of Article 101 of the TFEU.

The interruption commences on the first day on which at least one undertaking or association of undertakings that was party to the violation, or one of the persons, as referred to in Article 51(2)(2°) of the Netherlands Criminal Code (principals and de facto managers), is notified in writing of the act. The time limitation commences anew at the moment of the interruption.

In any event, the power to conduct an investigation or initiate proceedings shall ultimately lapse ten years after the violation has ended, plus the period during which the time limitation is suspended pursuant to Article 5:45, paragraph 3 of the General Administrative Law Act.

Article 6(1) of the Act concerns cartel conduct that has an effect on Dutch markets. Therefore, the ACM’s personal jurisdiction extends to those cases in which cartel conduct has an effect on the Dutch market or a part of it, irrespective of the location of the undertakings or associations concerned: the ACM has the competence to impose sanctions on an undertaking even if that undertaking is located in another country. In the Shrimps case, the ACM imposed fines on undertakings located abroad (Denmark and Germany) for the first time. Furthermore, Article 5 of EU Regulation 1/2003 gives the ACM the power to apply Article 101 of the TFEU – ie, cartel conduct that may affect trade between member states, to individual cases.

No specific principles of comity are applied within the context of Dutch competition law. The ACM, however, co-operates closely with the European Commission and other European NCAs through the European Competition Network (ECN), as required by EU Regulation 1/2003, for example in regard to case allocation between the NCAs and sharing information with and using information supplied by another NCA (Article 12 Regulation 1/2003). On the basis of this regulation the ACM may likewise carry out unannounced inspections in the Netherlands on behalf of another NCA.

No changes in statutory regulations affecting cartel enforcement are expected in the near future.

The ACM did draw up new rules on sustainability agreements between businesses in October 2023. See 6.2 Guides Published by Governmental Authorities. The rules are in line with recently revised European rules, and replace previous draft guidelines from the ACM on sustainability agreements between businesses.

The policy rule follows the approach to sustainability agreements that the European Commission explains in its Guidelines regarding horizontal co-operation agreements. The policy rule also explains that the ACM will not take enforcement action in two additional situations if all conditions are met. This provides businesses with more opportunities to collaborate.

Please see the Netherlands Trends and Developments chapter in this guide for further information.

Investigations can be triggered in four ways:

  • on the ACM’s own initiative;
  • after a complaint has been issued by a natural or legal person;
  • after a tip-off has been received by a natural or legal person; or
  • after one of the cartel participants submits a leniency request to the ACM.

Depending on the information that the ACM receives, it will gather more data on market positions before taking further investigative steps. If the case so requires, economic analyses and digital desk research may be conducted, or collaboration with other authorities such as the public prosecutor and the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM) may be sought (see also 3.4 Inter-Agency Co-operation/Co-ordination).

The ACM also has the option to start inquiries into specific economic sectors.

After these steps, most of the time the ACM will carry out a dawn raid, copy documents and digital data, and interview employees.

The ACM is entitled to enter every place (with the exception of a private home) without the consent of the occupier and may take with it the requisite equipment. If necessary – ie, if the company involved refuses entrance – it may gain entry with the assistance of the police. Entitlement to enter “every place” means that the ACM is, for instance, also entitled to enter employees’ cars.

ACM officials are authorised to enter a private home without the resident’s permission, insofar as this is necessary, within reason, for the purpose of exercising the ACM’s investigative powers. However, this requires obtaining a warrant in advance from the examining magistrate entrusted with handling criminal proceedings before the District Court of Rotterdam. If asked for, the warrant must be presented.

ACM officials are authorised to seal off business premises and objects, insofar as is reasonably necessary for the exercise of their investigative powers. As a rule, officials will seal off offices at business premises if they are not able to complete the investigation within one day.

Companies are obliged to co-operate fully with ACM officials, who may reasonably demand this in the exercise of their powers, within such reasonable time limit as they may specify. Refusal to co-operate will result in a fine being issued.

The ACM has the power to conduct interviews with any (former) employee of the company concerned. This power is not limited to the official representatives of the company but can involve any of the employees that may be relevant for the ACM’s investigation. Interviews may be held on the spot during a dawn raid as well as afterwards. They may take place at the company’s premises or at the ACM’s offices. The ACM contends that a company’s employee is obliged to answer all questions, although he or she has the right not to answer questions that could incriminate his or her employer. Counsel are allowed to attend interviews. ACM officials records and takes minutes of the interview and will ask the employee to sign these minutes; it is recommended to exercise due care in doing so, because signing will be seen as agreeing to the contents of the minutes.

There is no obligation to keep documents or data on the basis of the Act or the General Administrative Law Act. There may be obligations to keep documents and data on the basis of other laws (eg, tax laws).

However, once the ACM requires inspection of business information and documents, the spoliation of that information or those documents would mean a violation of the obligation to co-operate with the ACM, for which the ACM may impose fines. The ACM did so for instance in 2019, imposing a fine of EUR1.84 million on a company in a case in which employees of a company under investigation left several WhatsApp groups, and deleted chat conversations during a dawn raid.

Officers or employees have the right to be assisted by a legal representative. The ACM may refuse to allow assistance by a person against whom there are serious objections. This does not apply, however, to counsel that are admitted to the Bar. Legal counsel are not allowed to give answers or to advise on the answers, though they are allowed to advise the interviewee to remain silent.

In practice, an inspection focuses on digital data. For this the ACM has set the “Procedure for the inspection of digital data” in 2014, in which it details in what way it will deal with digital data that has been collected in investigations, what safeguards it will observe when inspecting digital data and a number of verification tools that individuals involved have for verifying whether these safeguards have been observed.

Once the data has been secured, the enforcement official hands an overview of the data in the secure data set to the individual involved, including the relevant hash values. The purpose of calculating a hash value is to safeguard a file’s integrity. Any change to a file will result in a different hash value.

When secured data is to be examined by the ACM for the purpose of determining whether they are a within-scope data set, the enforcement official gives the individual involved the opportunity to be present during this examination. No later than the moment of making them available for perusal, the enforcement official hands to the individual involved an overview of the data that is included in the within-scope data set, and of the manner in which the within-scope data set was realised. The search queries that have been used are provided immediately to the individual involved after a data search has been conducted.

An enforcement official may see reasons to demand inspection of the data under Section 5:17 of the General Administrative Law Act without having inspected it at the time the data was demanded and secured.

If the enforcement official inspects the demanded and secured data in order to assess whether it is within-scope, and the individual involved indicates that some of the data concerns privileged correspondence, then the enforcement official will give the individual involved the opportunity to be present at the offices of the ACM when such data is inspected.

Companies are required to co-operate with the ACM investigations and, if so requested, produce the documents within the scope of the investigation, and the ACM is authorised to demand the inspection of any type of business data or document. Also, it has jurisdiction over practices that affect the market in the Netherlands, irrespective of where the companies involved are located. Therefore, the authority has the power to request the provision of information of companies located outside the Netherlands. The General Administrative Law Act also does not limit these powers to companies located in the Netherlands. Where needed, the ACM may request the assistance of other competition authorities.

The ACM considers documents to be privileged regardless of what regulation the data is related to. In other situations, existing jurisprudence is followed with regard to the material scope of the right to privileged correspondence. The procedure applies to communication with a lawyer (ie, a counsel that is admitted to the Bar), but not to communication with other legal professionals. On the other hand, according to Dutch law, attorney-client privilege also exists in relation to in-house lawyers who are admitted to the Bar. If ACM officials conduct investigations on the basis of Dutch competition law, Dutch national rules apply and the correspondence with both in-house and external counsel, if admitted to the Bar, is covered by attorney-client privilege. The same goes for investigations by the ACM at the request of the Commission or a competition authority of another member state. However, if ACM inspectors only assist the Commission officials, EU rules apply and correspondence with in-house counsel, even those admitted to the Bar, has no legal privilege coverage.

When inspection of data is demanded, the company may indicate that it contains privileged correspondence. If the company believes that the document is privileged (in part or completely), then it is not obliged to disclose the entire contents to the ACM official. The company must support such claims by putting forward to the enforcement official the grounds on which the document is indeed protected by confidentiality. The company can indicate and explain, in particular, who the author is, whom the document is for, the respective positions and duties of each of them, and the objective with which and the context in which the document was created. If the ACM official is not convinced of the claimed privileged nature of the data but the company persists in its claim, the ACM official takes the data with him or her in a sealed envelope. After the dawn raid is finished the sealed envelope will be handed over to the legal professional privilege (LPP) officer for verification of the privileged nature of the data. LPP officers are ACM officials who are not and will not be involved in the investigation in relation to which they have examined data or documents, or in any other investigation in which the data or documents (or parts thereof) from the former investigation are used. They are not, however, independent. The LPP officer will give the company the opportunity to indicate which of the data (or parts thereof) that have been submitted to the LPP officer is, in its opinion, privileged.

The ACM has taken the necessary measures (technical and non-technical) to guarantee compliance with the safeguards mentioned in this procedure. For example, it stores correspondence with the LPP officer on a closed network that cannot be accessed by ACM enforcement officials, alongside the data that is given to the LPP officer.

The procedure regarding legal privilege is not mandatory. If the company believes that an assessment by the LPP officer offers too few safeguards, it is free to start a (civil law) interim injunction proceedings against the inspection (superficial or not) of the document by an ACM official. In such cases, the ACM official can leave the document in question with the company, in a sealed envelope, and the individual involved has ten working days to have a writ served on the Dutch state.

Generally, companies and employees comply with requests for information, since non-co-operation with the ACM can result in a fine of up to EUR900,000 or 1% of the annual turnover. This does not mean, however, that requests for information should not be treated critically. If, for instance, requests are unreasonable or vague, this should be discussed with the ACM.

The ACM is authorised to access any type of document, regardless of whether it contains confidential or proprietary information. After the ACM adopts a decision, it will send it to the company involved in order to give it the opportunity to indicate any confidential information. The ACM will then publish a public version of the decision with the confidential information removed.

From a formal perspective, the target of a cartel investigation has the opportunity to raise legal and factual arguments against the ACM’s view of the case when the ACM has issued its Statement of Objections (SO). The company involved can submit its comments on the SO in writing and orally. In practice, however, defence counsel will be in constant contact with the ACM from the outset of an investigation, submitting information in favour of the company. Defence counsel may also try to persuade the ACM to adopt a so-called commitments decision (comparable to a commitments decision under Article 9 of EU Regulation 1/2003) and stop the investigation.

The rules of the Dutch leniency programme have been laid down in the Policy Rule of the Minister of Economic Affairs of 4 July 2014, No WJZ/14112586, on the reduction of fines in connection with cartels (the “Leniency Policy Rule”). The Leniency Policy Rule does not protect the company from private enforcement actions by third parties.

The leniency programme only applies to a “cartel” – ie, an agreement or concerted practice between two or more competitors with the objective of impeding competition, in violation of Article 101 of the TFEU or Article 6 of the Act.

Immunity

The ACM grants immunity from fines to the first leniency applicant to submit a request for immunity from fines with regard to a cartel, if the application concerns a cartel into which the ACM has not yet launched an investigation and the applicant provides information that enables the ACM to perform a targeted inspection. No immunity will be granted if the applicant has coerced another undertaking into participating in the cartel. Furthermore, the applicant is obliged to co-operate with the authority, which means that the applicant refrains from any action that may impede the investigation or the proceedings until the decision to impose an administrative fine becomes final with respect to all practices involved in the cartel. The applicant is also obliged to provide the ACM with all information regarding the cartel that they have or may reasonably obtain, of their own accord or at the ACM’s request, as soon as possible, and to ensure that individuals who are working for the applicant and, insofar as is reasonably possible, individuals who have worked for the applicant, are available to make statements. The company must cease any involvement in the cartel after submission of the leniency application, unless and insofar as the ACM considers the continuation thereof to be reasonably necessary in order to preserve the effectiveness of inspections.

The ACM also grants immunity from fines to a leniency applicant if the above-mentioned conditions have been met and the application concerns a cartel into which the ACM has already launched an investigation but not yet sent an SO to any of the parties involved. This immunity will only be granted, however, if the application provides the ACM with documents that stem from the period of the practice in question that were not already in the ACM’s possession, and on the basis of which the ACM is able to prove the existence of the cartel.

A company or individual considering applying for leniency may contact the ACM to exchange ideas about a body of facts and the applicability of the leniency policy in that context. This may take place anonymously or through a lawyer and may concern a hypothetical set of facts. A prospective leniency applicant may also inquire with the ACM by telephone, but solely through a lawyer, as to whether immunity from fines (the position of the first-in-the-door whistle-blower) is still available. If the ACM responds positively to the inquiry, the lawyer is required to submit an application for immunity from fines immediately.

A leniency application includes a written leniency statement which contains, inter alia, a detailed description of the cartel arrangement, including the products or services involved, the geographical scope, the duration, the functioning of the cartel and the estimated market volumes or sales affected by the cartel, as well as the specific dates, locations, contents of and participants in the cartel interactions. Furthermore it must mention the names and addresses of all the undertakings that participate or have participated in the cartel, as well as the names, positions, working locations and, where relevant, home addresses of the individuals who are or who have been involved in the cartel.

A leniency application also contains evidence corroborating the statements, insofar as the applicant has such evidence or such evidence is reasonably available to the applicant at the time of the submission of the application.

A natural person who submits a leniency application may be eligible for the same immunity or reduction of a fine as the undertaking at which they work, if they declare that they wish to be considered a leniency co-applicant with the undertaking, and they meet the conditions for immunity from fines on their own.

With the ACM’s permission, a leniency statement may be submitted orally, if the ACM believes that the leniency applicant has a legitimate interest in doing so. In such cases, the ACM records the oral statement and draws up a transcript

The ACM does not disclose the identity of the leniency applicant to third parties until the SO has been issued to everyone involved in the cartel, unless the leniency applicant has consented to disclosure.

In accordance with Article 12 of EU Regulation 1/2003, the ACM only forwards a leniency statement to another competition authority or to the European Commission if:

  • the conditions of the Commission Notice on co-operation within the Network of Competition Authorities (OJ, 2004, C 101) are satisfied; and
  • the protection against disclosure provided by the receiving competition authority or the European Commission is equivalent to that offered by the ACM.

Markers

A leniency applicant who submits an incomplete leniency application may be eligible for a marker if the ACM believes the application offers a concrete basis for reasonable suspicion of the applicant’s involvement in a cartel, and the leniency applicant provides information on at least the name and address of the leniency applicant, the cartel participants, the affected products or services, the cartel’s geographic scope, the cartel’s duration, the nature of the cartel’s practices and whether the leniency applicant has approached or may approach the European Commission with regard to the cartel. The duration of the marker will be set by the leniency officer. As soon as a complete application has been submitted within the time limit the leniency officer has set for it, the marker will turn into a proper leniency application.

Reduction of Fines

The ACM grants a leniency applicant a reduction of at least 30% and no more than 50% on a fine if immunity from fines is no longer available because the applicant is not the first-in-the-door and the ACM has not yet sent an SO. In order to qualify for a reduction, the applicant must be the first to submit an application that contains information which adds significant value to the ACM’s investigation, and complies with the obligation to co-operate. The second company that submits an application for reduction of a fine can get a reduction of 20–30%; subsequent applicants can get a reduction of up to 20%.

Lastly, the ACM does not keep an official public record of its grants of leniency, nor does it publish details if these in its annual reports. However, in each decision in which it imposes fines, the ACM will publish the extent to which it applied leniency.

Apart from the leniency programme, there is no separate amnesty programme in the Netherlands. It should be noted, however, that in exceptional cases the ACM may reduce a fine or impose a symbolic fine if the company’s financial situation is such that it is unable to pay the fine imposed. The company must then clearly demonstrate its financial situation.

The ACM is entitled to interview company employees for the purposes of on-going investigations and will do so in practice. This can be accomplished in informal settings, as part of hearings and in the context of dawn raids. Employees are allowed to be accompanied by counsel and are obliged to co-operate, but will have the right to remain refrain from providing responses that could incriminate the company if they are an employee of a company that is the target of an investigation.

The ACM can seek documentary information directly from the undertaking under investigation, either by sending it a request for information or in the context of dawn raids. The same goes for other undertakings (not the subject of an investigation) or individuals.

The ACM has jurisdiction over practices that affect the market in the Netherlands, irrespective of where the companies involved are located. Therefore, the ACM has the power to request the provision of information from companies located outside the Netherlands. The General Administrative Law Act does not limit these powers to companies located in the Netherlands. Where needed, the ACM may request the assistance of other competition authorities.

The competition department of the ACM works together with other departments within the ACM, such as the consumer, energy, or telecommunications, transport and postal services departments.

Furthermore, the ACM engages in close co-operation with other market authorities, such as the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets, the Dutch Data Protection Authority, the Netherlands Gambling Authority, the Dutch Central Bank, the Dutch Healthcare Authority and the Dutch Media Authority, within the so-called Consultation Forum of Regulatory Bodies.

The ACM has concluded publicly available co-operation agreements with each of these authorities or agencies, and with numerous other bodies. These agreements generally contain clauses that authorise the mutual exchange of case-appropriate information, insofar as the exchange is necessary for the proper fulfilment of the authority’s tasks.

The ACM has also concluded such an agreement with the Public Prosecutor (Openbaar Ministerie). The Collaboration Protocol between ACM, the Public Prosecutor and the Dutch Tax and Customs Administration enables the exchange of information. The Dutch Data from Judicial and Criminal Proceedings Act authorises the Public Prosecutor to supply the ACM with “personal data from criminal proceedings”. Hence, evidence that has been appropriated by the Public Prosecutor and electronically stored, such as information gathered through legitimate phone taps, can be exchanged with the ACM to be used in a formal competition law investigation. Either the ACM can request this information or the Public Prosecutor can do so ex officio.

The ACM participates in the ECN, in the European Competition Authorities (ECA), a collaboration between NCAs in the European Economic Area, and in the International Competition Network (ICN). The co-operation occurs through:

  • informing each other of new cases and envisaged enforcement decisions;
  • co-ordinating investigations, where necessary;
  • helping each other with investigations;
  • exchanging evidence and other information; and
  • discussing various issues of common interest.

It is not uncommon for the ACM to co-operate with enforcement agencies in foreign jurisdictions.

Under Dutch law, criminal enforcement of violations of the Act is not possible.

There is no provision in the Dutch competition law system for civil enforcement by the competition authority.

In general, the ACM brings enforcement proceedings against all parties involved in a cartel in a single proceeding and imposes fines in one single decision. There may, however, be reasons to issue separate decisions, for instance if some of the parties involved agree on a simplified procedure and others do not.

The burden of proving that the prohibition against cartels has been infringed lies with the ACM. The competent courts have full jurisdiction to establish whether the ACM has proved to the requisite legal standard that an infringement has occurred, and that the infringement affected competition to an appreciable extent. If an undertaking argues that Article 6(3) of the Competition Act should be applied, it must prove that the criteria of Article 6(3) have been fulfilled.

The ACM must show precise and concordant evidence in order to establish the existence of the infringement. It is not necessary for every item of evidence produced by the ACM to satisfy those criteria in relation to every aspect of the infringement: it is sufficient if the body of evidence relied on by the institution, viewed as a whole, meets that requirement.

This means that the ACM cannot be required to produce documents expressly attesting to contracts between the traders concerned. The items of evidence should, in any event, be capable of being supplemented by inferences that allow the relevant circumstances to be reconstituted. The existence of an anti-competitive practice or agreement may therefore be inferred from a number of coincidences and indicia which, taken together, can, in the absence of another plausible explanation, constitute evidence of an infringement of the competition rules.

In cartel cases, the ACM acts as the finder of fact and applies competition law to those facts.

There are no limitations on the ACM’s use of evidence gathered in one procedure in another procedure, regardless of whether the evidence has been obtained in a leniency procedure or from another jurisdiction, provided that the evidence has been obtained by the other authority in a lawful way.

In Dutch administrative law, a low threshold of probative value and the principle of unfettered evaluation prevails, which means that, for the purpose of assessing the probative value of evidence lawfully adduced, the only relevant criterion is its credibility.

According to the generally applicable rules on evidence, the credibility and therefore the probative value of a document depends on its origin, the circumstances in which it was drawn up, the person to whom it is addressed, and the soundness and reliability of its contents. In particular, great importance must be attached to whether a document has been drawn up in close connection with the events to which it relates.

Economists specialising in the economics of competition are often retained to provide insights into the definition of a market (ie, its scope) or, for instance, into the competition mechanisms of a market in a specific sector. The involvement of economists may occur at any stage of the procedure. Submitting expert reports when giving a view on the SO forces the ACM to refute the findings of the expert report.

See 2.7 Attorney-Client Privilege.

Since the ACM is the only authority that has the power of public enforcement of the Act, it is not possible to have multiple public enforcement proceedings involving the same or related facts. It is, however, possible that the same or related facts form the basis of civil law proceedings by undertakings that claim damages caused by the infringement of the cartel prohibition.

Furthermore, where an investigation is subject both to EU and Dutch competition law scrutiny, after consultation, the Commission has the authority to relieve the ACM of its competence under Article 11 of Regulation 1/2003.

The sanctions that the ACM may impose on undertakings are fines and orders for periodic penalty payments. An order for periodic penalty payments is designed to lead, among other things, to the quick termination of an infringement, and therefore serves a different purpose to that of a fine. Both a fine and an order for periodic penalty payments can be imposed for the same infringement.

The maximum fine that the ACM may impose per violation of the cartel prohibition is EUR900,000 or 10% of the total (global) annual turnover of the undertaking involved, whichever is higher. The maximum amount also depends on the duration of the cartel, since the aforementioned maximum can be multiplied by the number of years the violation has lasted (with a minimum of one and a maximum of four years). In the case of repeat violations, this fine can even be doubled.

As under the EU competition law regime, a parent company can (and will) be held liable for a fine imposed on its subsidiary. It is for the parent company to demonstrate that it does not or did not exercise a decisive influence over the behaviour of the subsidiary. Moreover, the highest administrative court in the Netherlands with respect to penalty decisions of the ACM has ruled that the ACM may hold an investments firm liable for a cartel infringement committed by one of its portfolio companies, if it exercised decisive influence over that portfolio company. Decisive influence may result from a combination of circumstances, such as percentage of shares, participation in the appointment of the company's management and supervisory bodies, notes, etc. This does not apply to purely financial investors. In this particular case, the investments firm was fined separately instead of jointly and severally, as is normally the case regarding parent companies and their subsidiaries. This was due to the specific circumstances of the case.

The ACM may also impose fines on individuals up to a maximum of EUR900,000. Such a fine may be doubled if the individual committed a similar infringement within the previous five years.

The level of fines that the ACM may impose must be determined along the rules laid down in 2014 Policy Rules of the Minister of Economic Affairs on the imposition of administrative fines by the ACM, which provide detail on the manner in which the ACM may exercise its power to impose administrative fines – within the boundaries of the law.

The ACM sets a basic fine of between 0% and 50% of an undertaking’s relevant turnover, depending on the seriousness of the violation, the circumstances in which it was committed and its duration. The relevant turnover is the one in the last full year in which the company committed the violation, multiplied by a factor of 1/12 for each month that the violation lasted.

The ACM may impose a sanction directly, but there is a separation (Chinese wall) between the ACM department that carries out investigations and prepares the statement of objections, and the department that decides whether a sanction should be imposed. After an investigation has resulted in an SO by the Competition department, the case will be handed over to the legal department of the ACM, which is not independent but part of the ACM organisation. The legal department must hear parties on the SO. Parties are entitled to respond to the SO at least in writing and are normally also allowed to respond orally. The oral hearing will take place in front of a hearing committee composed of officials of the legal department of the ACM. The legal department will consider the case and draft a proposal for a decision to be taken by the Board of the ACM.

In 2018, the ACM introduced the “ACM’s guidelines for simplified resolution of cases involving a fine”. If the ACM finds a violation and deems the case eligible for a simplified resolution, the companies involved can benefit from a 10% fine reduction. This reduction can be additional to other reductions, such as those from leniency. For a simplified resolution, the involved companies must acknowledge the violation, confirm that sufficient access to the file has been provided, and that there has been sufficient opportunity to be heard. The company must agree with the results of its discussions with the ACM and document this in a simplified resolution submission. The company is no longer bound by its submission if the ACM decides to halt the simplified procedure. Companies can also withdraw from this procedure and follow the standard procedure until the ACM approves the statement. However, a company must have already stopped the violation to qualify for this procedure.

The ACM can suggest at any moment that the case is suitable for simplified resolution, but the companies involved can also independently approach the ACM. There’s no fixed time for initiating this simplified procedure, although this is unlikely if the ACM’s decision-making process is already at an advanced stage. The more companies that want to participate in the simplified resolution, the more likely it is that the ACM will opt for a simplified resolution. The ACM insists that a simplified resolution must offer significant efficiency benefits. Consequently, this procedure will result in a considerably shortened decision, which is less comprehensive than in regular procedures. Just like in the regular procedure, this decision will be published on the ACM’s website.

A company wishing to participate in the simplified procedure must also sign a confidentiality agreement. They commit to handling information from the simplified procedure discussions and information exchanged with the ACM confidentially. They cannot share this information with third parties (including other companies involved in the same procedure) without prior ACM approval. The ACM holds separate discussions with each involved company. Parties can have a representative, such as a lawyer, present during discussions with the ACM. During these discussions, the ACM presents the violation and the proposed fine to the involved companies, who can then respond. To expedite the procedure, the ACM sets short response deadlines for parties and can limit the length of written documents.

The ACM keeps a separate file for all simplified procedure correspondence. If the simplified procedure is terminated, the involved company’s aforementioned recognition also becomes void. The ACM will not use information from this company against it. If this company wishes to use certain documents and positions, it can introduce them in the standard procedure.

Furthermore, the Act provides a procedure according to which the ACM may decide to refrain from further investigation and sanctions if the companies involved in the investigation pledge in writing to refrain from certain behaviour, enabling the ACM to adopt a commitment decision (comparable to a commitment decision under Article 9 of EU Regulation 1/2003). The ACM has the discretion to refuse a pledge if it intends to impose a fine. Normally it will refuse a pledge in the case of hardcore cartels or when the pledge has been made when the investigation has nearly been completed.

A penalty decision by the ACM, against which no further appeal is possible, counts as compelling evidence in civil proceedings regarding damages actions. It is therefore clear that a decision is important for follow-on damages claims.

Furthermore, pursuant to Article 2.87 of the Dutch Public Procurement Act 2012, implementing EU Directive 2014/24 on public procurement, contracting authorities may exclude undertakings from taking part in procurement procedures, where the contracting authority can demonstrate by appropriate means that the undertaking is guilty of grave professional misconduct, which renders its integrity questionable. Violation of competition law is considered to be an example of grave professional misconduct. A penalty decision of the ACM may therefore lead to exclusion from a procurement procedure.

Under Dutch law infringement of competition law is not a criminal offence, so an infringement cannot lead to criminal proceedings.

In the Netherlands it is not possible to impose sanctions and penalties in civil proceedings on an undertaking or individual that has infringed the cartel prohibition. However, infringement of the cartel prohibition may lead to civil damages claims (see 5. Private Civil Litigation Involving Alleged Cartels).

Having an effective compliance programme is not a mitigating factor in imposing sanctions and penalties. However, having an effective compliance programme can lead to lower fines or immunity from fines in the sense that if a company has an effective compliance programme, cartel agreements should come to light at an early stage and the company can apply for leniency.

Sanctions in the administrative procedure cannot be extended to mandatory consumer redress.

However, the fact that those harmed by the infringement have been voluntarily compensated is a mitigating circumstance in relation to the fine.

Once the ACM has issued a decision, the addressees of the decision may lodge an objection with the ACM itself. One may, however, ask the ACM in the notice of objection to agree with a direct appeal against the decision with the District Court of Rotterdam. The objection must be lodged within six weeks of the decision being received. If the ACM agrees with the direct appeal, it will forward the notice of objections and the file to the Court. If the ACM does not agree with a direct appeal to the Court, it will reconsider its decision, after having heard the company that lodged the objection. After the ACM has decided on the objection, an appeal may be lodged with the District Court of Rotterdam, again within six weeks of the decision on the objections being issued.

An appeal against a judgment of the Court can be lodged with the Trade and Industries Appeal Tribunal.

Both the District Court of Rotterdam and the Trade and Industries Appeal Tribunal have full jurisdiction and can therefore review the ACM’s findings of fact and legal assessments, as well as sanctions.

Under Dutch law, private firms and individuals do have a private right of action. This means they can initiate a civil lawsuit for damages if they believe they have suffered harm due to a cartel. The threshold requirements for such an action include demonstrating that there has been a violation of the cartel prohibition, that the plaintiff has suffered damages, and that there is a causal link between the violation and the damages suffered. Following a decision by a competition authority, the claimant can rely on that decision to prove the violation. These actions are typically brought before the civil courts in the Netherlands, where the standards for relief differ from those applicable to governmental proceedings. In a private civil action, the focus is on compensating the harm suffered by the claimant, whereas governmental proceedings are aimed at punishing the violation and deterring future violations.

Companies may also rely on an infringement of the cartel prohibition to invoke the nullity of the agreement to which they are a party or otherwise argue that they do not have to comply with the agreement. To do so, they must show that the agreement in question violates the ban on cartels and, in particular, leads to an appreciable restriction of competition.

In the Netherlands, there are several mechanisms available for claiming damages for violations of the cartel prohibition. The Dutch legal system provides various avenues for collective redress, making it a favourable jurisdiction for those seeking compensation for cartel damages.

One of the mechanisms for collective redress is the Dutch Act on Collective Settlement of Mass Damages (Wet collectieve afwikkeling massaschade, WCAM). The WCAM, in place since 2005, allows for collective settlement of damages. Under this act, a universally binding settlement agreement can be reached between potentially liable parties and foundations or associations representing the injured parties. Following the formation of the settlement agreement, the parties to that agreement can jointly request the Amsterdam Court of Appeal to declare the settlement binding on all affected individuals.

The Act on Redress of Mass Damages in Collective Actions (Wet afwikkeling massaschade in collectieve actie, WAMCA), effective from 1 January 2020, significantly broadens the scope of collective actions in the Netherlands as it enables representative organisation to initiate class actions. Consumer associations and public interest groups have standing under Dutch law, and they can represent the interests of a group of consumers and initiate a collective action on their behalf. However, they must meet certain representativeness and governance requirements. They must also have a sufficient connection with the interests of the individuals on whose behalf they are acting. This act contains an op-out and opt-in mechanism.

In addition, another way in which collective action can be pursued is assignment of claims. There are no specific procedures for this type of action as they are considered regular proceedings. Assignment of claims consists of the assignment of claims to a special claims vehicle set up for the action (for instance a foundation), which then brings a collective action on the basis of the assigned claims.

Passing-on defences are handled within the framework of Dutch civil law. As a result of the implementation of EU Directive 2014/104/EU on 10 February 2017, the Dutch Civil Code enables the defendant to argue that the injured party has passed on damage caused by the violation of competition law. This passing-on defence has been raised in courts and has also been accepted by the Supreme Court. Regarding the amount of the claimed damages, in general, the claimant bears the burden of proof. As for indirect purchasers, they can claim damages if they can demonstrate that they have suffered harm as a result of the cartel. This usually means showing that an overcharge was passed on to them. The burden of proof lies with the indirect purchaser.

The process for hearing and resolving such claims is the same as for any other civil litigation in the Netherlands.

Article 152 (1) of the Code of Civil Procedure (CCP) provides that evidence may be submitted in any form, unless the law prescribes otherwise. The assessment of this evidence is left to the discretion of the courts (Article 152 (2) of the CCP).

In Dutch civil procedural law, parties can demand access to documents from the other party (Article 843a of the CCP). In order for a claim under Article 843a of the CCP to be successful, the claimant must fulfil the following conditions.

  • The request must relate to documents sufficiently specified (fishing expeditions are not allowed).
  • The requesting party must have a legitimate interest in requesting the disclosure of the documents.
  • The requested documents must relate to a legal relationship (including tort, contractual or non-contractual) to which the claimant is a party.

Article 843a(2) of the CCP provides that the court may decide in which form access to documents shall be granted. The court may, for example, appoint a trusted third party that will have access. The court can also impose a non-disclosure obligation on the party that gets access.

If a previous cartel investigation concerning the same facts has been performed by the ACM, evidence derived from the previous investigation, such as an enforcement decision, is admissible as evidence in the subsequent investigation.

The duration from the start of a claim to its resolution can significantly fluctuate, influenced by factors such as the case’s complexity and the number of involved parties. Proceedings for cartel damages may span several years before a judgement is issued or a settlement is achieved. Currently, the volume of cases that have either reached litigation completion or settlement is too limited to derive statistically significant conclusions.

In civil law cases, successful claimants are entitled to compensation of procedural costs (including attorneys’ fees, court fees, costs related to obtaining and preserving evidence, witness fees). However, the actual amount is determined via a points-based system, which will depend on the type of case. In general, and in cartel cases, the awarding of compensation of procedural costs will generally cover only a small part of those costs.

See 5.6 Compensation of Legal Representatives.

Judgments rendered by the Dutch district courts (courts of first instance) may be appealed to a Court of Appeal. In general, Courts of Appeal fully review the case, both regarding the facts and the ruling, within the ambit of the lodged appeal. It is not uncommon for district courts’ judgments to be overturned on appeal.

There is no other pertinent information in this jurisdiction.

All the information in English regarding cartels and the ACM’s enforcement and leniency policy can be found through the website of the ACM.

Regarding cartel enforcement and leniency, the most relevant documents are:

Simmons & Simmons

Claude Debussylaan 247
1082 MC Amsterdam
The Netherlands

+31 6 5398 53 75 / +31 20 722 2500

Ekram.belhadj@simmons-simmons.com www.simmons-simmons.com
Author Business Card

Trends and Developments


Authors



Simmons & Simmons has experience working on some of the largest cartel investigations and merger control matters in Europe. As such, the firm has the expertise to act on the most complex of cases in the finance, healthcare, life sciences, technology, transport, water and energy sectors. Much of the investigations work involves complex multi-jurisdictional issues and co-ordination with lawyers within its network and elsewhere, competition authorities or other regulators in parallel investigations around the world, including in Asia, North and South America. Investigations also increasingly require consideration of potential criminal liability. Simmons’ competition teams in Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy and the UK collaborate on national and Europe-wide matters. Simmons also represents clients directly before the courts in competition infringement and follow-on damages claims. Working with its internal e-discovery team, Simmons can process the vast quantities of data in such cases with ease and efficiency.

An Overview of Cartel Enforcement in the Netherlands

The Dutch Authority for Consumers and Markets (ACM) has recently intensified its cartel enforcement activities in the consumer electronics market and, more generally, in the area of sales through retail channels. In recent cases, the ACM has imposed heavy fines on manufacturers of these products for retail price maintenance (RPM). What is striking here is, firstly, that the RPM was presented in as recommended retail prices, accompanied by what the ACM perceived as pressure to adhere to those prices. Secondly, it is worth noting that the ACM did not target retailers, unlike, for example, its German counterpart the Bundeskartellamt in the Haribo case.

Also notable is that resellers were not targeted in relation to the horizontal price-fixing case between cigarette manufacturers, which had exchanged information through their resellers. The District Court of Rotterdam last year confirmed the high fines imposed on the manufacturers.

These cases are also a warning to retail chains. The ACM’s frequent announcements, warning various product suppliers – such as those dealing in construction materials, children’s items, bicycle and car accessories, batteries, and care products – that they may be applying inappropriate pressure on retailers to increase prices, underscores this fact.

It is also noteworthy that the ACM has recently fined a number of purchasing cartels. It is important to consider where the dividing line is between permissible purchasing agreements on the one hand and prohibited purchasing cartels on the other.

In the area of dawn raids and digital file searches, a decision by the District Court of Rotterdam is worth mentioning.

In addition, the ACM has adopted a new enforcement prioritisation policy.

Finally, a sector enquiry into banking is worth mentioning.

This article will explore each of these topics in further detail.

Resale price maintenance or price recommendations?

The ACM recently fined, in two separate cases, Samsung (approximately EUR40 million) and LG (approximately EUR8 million) for infringing the cartel prohibition, by influencing retailers with the aim of causing them to increase or not decrease prices for TVs. Last year the District Court of Rotterdam dismissed Samsung’s appeal against the ACM’s decision.

While suppliers are allowed to give retailers non-binding price recommendations and to monitor online retail prices, the ACM found in both cases that the suppliers actually co-ordinated their retailers’ resale prices.

Using online monitoring tools: Samsung and LG monitored the online retail prices of retailers in an automated manner using so-called web crawlers. If they saw prices that were lower than their recommended resale prices, they contacted those retailers and urged them to increase their prices. Both suppliers also acted when retailers complained to them that competing retailers offered prices they considered to be too low, frequently informing retailers that they had urged or would urge other retailers in a similar manner.

Both suppliers sent numerous WhatsApp messages and emails (that ACM collected during dawn raids), urging retailers to follow the recommended retail prices. According to the ACM, retailers knew that they would not price themselves out of the market if they followed their suppliers’ price, as Samsung and LG kept retailers constantly informed. The ACM held that, in this way, Samsung and LG had unduly interfered directly in the competition between retailers.

It is clear from these decisions that price recommendations must remain non-binding. Suppliers are not allowed to exert pressure in any way, shape or form on their retailers, nor are they allowed to inform retailers about the pricing strategies of competitor retailers. When retailers complain to suppliers about the retail prices used by other retailers, suppliers must ignore such complaints.

It should be noted that in these two cases the ACM imposed fines only on suppliers and not on retailers, unlike, for example, the German Federal Cartel Office (Bundeskartellamt) in the cases Haribo put pressure on Aldi and Lidl to increase their retail prices following complaints from retail chains. In these and similar cases the Bundeskartellamt also imposed fines on the retailers.

It cannot be ruled out, especially now that the ACM has launched an awareness-raising campaign following the Samsung and LG decisions, that retailers will also be punished next time.

Indirect exchange of information on retail prices

The District Court of Rotterdam recently dismissed the appeal of four cigarette manufacturers against the fine of approximately EUR82 million imposed on them by the ACM in 2020 for exchanging information on resale prices via their resellers. Since the Dutch excise law requires that manufacturers unilaterally set the retail prices of their cigarettes and that the price must be printed on the cigarette pack with a tax stamp, manufacturers inform their resellers of new price lists several weeks before the prices in the shops are adjusted. This gives retailers time to adjust their sales systems. However, some purchasers passed these price lists directly to competing manufacturers before the new retail prices came into effect.

It appears that the manufacturers requested, received and accepted this information and used the information of their competitors when setting their own retail prices for packs of cigarettes, knowing that their price information would be passed on by these retailers to their competitors.

In some cases, they sent “trial balloons” of information to retailers to see how competitors would react. The ACM considered that competition between these manufacturers was distorted because, by exchanging information about future prices, they reduced uncertainty among themselves about competitors’ future prices and were able to co-ordinate their pricing strategies. Again, the ACM only fined the suppliers, although the resellers also played a role in the exchange of information. The possibility of resellers also being fined in future cases cannot be excluded.

On appeal, the manufacturers argued that they shared the price lists with their customers for legitimate reasons and that they could not prevent some customers from forwarding the lists to other manufacturers for their own commercial interests. Although the Court accepted that the exchange of information between a manufacturer and its customers was per se lawful, it applied the presumption that companies participating in a concerted practice and remaining active on the market take into account the information exchanged with their competitors when determining their conduct on that market.

The implication of this case is that, while it may not be possible to prevent the receipt of information about a competitor, even indirectly through a customer or supplier, there is a risk of infringing the prohibition on cartels if a company does not explicitly refuse the information and informs the sender that it does not want to receive this type of information.

Buyer cartels and joint purchase agreements

In late 2002, the ACM adopted a decision (published much later) fining three trading companies active on the buy-side of the market for industrial eggs, (ie, eggs that are further processed in the food industry into, for example, liquid egg products or powdered egg products). The companies co-ordinated purchase prices for industrial eggs, allocated suppliers (farmers of laying hens) among themselves and frequently exchanged competitively sensitive information. The conduct of the traders was mainly evidenced by WhatsApp chats and supportive emails exchanged between the directors of the companies involved.

The more general interesting point of this case is that joint purchasing arrangements are generally not considered problematic (although not all joint purchasing arrangements are allowed), while buyers’ cartels are usually considered to restrict competition by object.

Joint purchasing involves two or more purchasers jointly negotiating and concluding an agreement with a particular supplier, whether through a purchasing organisation or otherwise, on one or more commercial terms. Collective purchasing agreements are less likely to raise competition concerns if the buyers have a market share of less than 15% of both the purchasing and the selling market, while if the combined market share exceeds 15%, a detailed assessment of the effects on the market is necessary – taking into account factors such as market concentration, profit margins, whether the buyers are close competitors and the possible countervailing power of suppliers – in order to conclude whether or not it restricts competition.

A buyer cartel, on the other hand, concerns an agreement or collusion between two or more buyers who do not enter into joint negotiations with the supplier. Typically, in this type of agreement or collusion, the companies:

  • co-ordinate their individual competitive behaviour on the purchasing market or influence the relevant parameters of competition between them, for instance by fixing or co-ordinating purchasing prices; or
  • influence those buyers’ individual negotiations with suppliers or their individual purchases from suppliers, for instance by co-ordinating the buyers’ price negotiation strategies or by polling suppliers on the state of such negotiations.

According to the ACM, buyer cartels harm suppliers by forcing them to supply their goods and services on less favourable terms and by depriving them of the benefits they would have obtained from joint purchasing, such as the ability to sell larger volumes or to save on transaction costs. Buying cartels can also reduce the pressure on buyers to control costs, improve quality and innovate.

Buyer cartels have recently received more attention from several national competition authorities, not only from the ACM. The ACM itself recently fined buyers of used cooking oil, while the European Commission fined a purchasing cartel in the ethylene and styrene markets and opened an investigation into a purchasing alliance between retailers, which was closed without further investigation. The French competition authority, for example, has also investigated and taken action against retail alliances.

This makes clear that restrictive agreements on the demand side of the market are currently attracting the attention of competition authorities.

Dawn raids and searching of digital documents and messages

According to the investigated egg traders, the ACM did not follow its “digital working method” during the investigation. The ACM asked an employee to apply a search term to WhatsApp and iMessage. Where this search term produced a hit, the ACM conducted a cursory review of these messages to assess whether they fell within the scope of the investigation. The ACM also searched the email boxes of two individuals. This involved a cursory review of the emails returned by the searches to assess whether they fell within the scope of the investigation. The ACM’s cursory review of these e-mails revealed concrete indications of a sales cartel. On the basis of these messages, the ACM then broadened the scope of the investigation: from purchase agreements in a few companies to purchase and sales agreements in several companies.

In January 2023, the Court of Appeal in The Hague ruled that it follows from the analogy with a search of a paper file that WhatsApp and iMessage chats may also be searched once it has been established that they contain possible indications of an infringement. Furthermore, the wording of the target of the investigation did not prevent its extension to several companies: the target description was in fact aimed at buyers of eggs and did not mention a limited number of companies. The Court of Appeal therefore found that it was not plausible that the ACM had acted unlawfully in broadening the scope of the investigation and dismissed the claims. In the end, the ACM did not sanction any sales agreements.

Enforcement Prioritisation and the ACM’s agenda for 2024

In May 2023, the ACM issued its enforcement prioritisation policy rules for the coming years.

The rules are particularly important when considering whether to lodge a complaint about a possible infringement of the competition rules. The prioritisation rules can be used to assess what to focus on in a complaint, apart from the infringing conduct itself of course.

They cannot be used as a defence if the ACM starts an investigation into an infringement that would not be a priority under the rules.

In its prioritisation policy, the ACM uses three general criteria on the basis of which it assesses requests for enforcement:

  • How harmful is the conduct to which the request or signal relates to the proper functioning of markets and the confidence in them of people and businesses?
  • How great is the public interest in the ACM’s action?
  • To what extent is the ACM able to act effectively and efficiently?

In its initial assessment, the ACM will ask whether, and if so to what extent, the potential breach would be detrimental to the proper functioning of markets for people and businesses in the short and long term.

In carrying out its enforcement powers the ACM’s primary objective is to protect the proper functioning of markets and the confidence that people and businesses have in them. According to the ACM, markets work well when they focus on the products and services that people and businesses actually need, deliver efficiently and stimulate innovation, thereby promoting the achievement of societal goals.

As part of its prioritisation policy, the ACM will consider harm in the broadest sense, including harm to people’s and businesses’ confidence in the proper functioning of markets and will consider the harm an ACM enforcement action could prevent or mitigate. Harm is not limited to purely financial harm to individuals and businesses. Not only is the effect on prices important, but also the effect on the quality and variety of supply or innovation. Nor is harm limited to direct harm caused by a possible infringement by certain parties within or outside the market.

Harmfulness can also include indirect harm, such as the effect that the possible infringement may have on other parties and/or other markets or the damage it may cause to the general confidence of people and businesses. Finally, the assessment of harm is not limited to “average” or “representative” market participants.

The ACM may also prioritise an enforcement investigation because its actions may have a relatively large impact on a limited group, such as individuals and companies in vulnerable or dependent positions.

In order to gain insight into the social relevance of an enforcement investigation, the ACM considers the different public interests involved in the initial investigation at stake. Well-functioning markets, optimal regulation of legal or natural monopolies, and consumer protection are public interests that the ACM is required by law to promote. Other public interests may also be considered, such as sustainability, economic resilience, quality of care, privacy or safety.

In making this assessment the ACM will also consider whether the potential breach falls within one of the strategic objectives of the ACM agenda.

In its 2024 Agenda, the ACM has indicated its intention to focus on, among other things, the digital economy (eg, by investigating abuse of dominance by online platforms). In relation to sustainability, the ACM has announced that it will investigate abuses of dominance and anti-competitive agreements that impede sustainability, and that it will act against misleading sustainability claims.

Sustainability agreements

The ACM has established itself as a frontrunner in Europe regarding sustainability agreements. In an effort to support companies aiming to form agreements that further sustainability goals across various sectors, and to eliminate potential obstacles posed by competition law, the ACM offered guidance on the application of the cartel prohibition in its draft guidelines on sustainability agreements, of which a second draft was published in 2021. The ACM has particularly championed a more expansive interpretation of the justification for competition-restricting agreements in Article 6(3) of the Competition Act (analogous to Article 101 of the TFEU), with a focus on ensuring that users receive a fair proportion of the benefits. A key issue with sustainability agreements is whether the benefits should be exclusively for the users and to what degree they should fully profit from the competition-restricting sustainability agreement. The ACM has suggested that for agreements aimed at limiting environmental damage, the benefits considered should include those to wider society, not just the users, unlike “other sustainability agreements”.

After the European Commission adopted the Horizontal Guidelines, which encompass a section on competition and sustainability, the ACM revised draft guidelines to align with those of the European Commission. As a result, in October 2023, the ACM introduced its policy rule “ACM’s oversight of sustainability agreements”. This policy rule offers clarity on how competition rules are applied to sustainability agreements and the ACM’s approach to oversight in this field. Interestingly, the ACM has explicitly indicated that it will generally refrain from initiating an investigation into an agreement in two scenarios. One of these includes agreements on environmental damage that efficiently contribute to meeting an international or national standard or a specific policy goal to mitigate or prevent such damage.

For practical purposes, it is crucial that the ACM is keen to offer guidance to companies wishing to form sustainability agreements, thereby providing them with the necessary legal certainty. It is essential for companies to conduct comprehensive assessments that they can then submit to the ACM.

Banking sector study

In November 2023, the ACM announced that it had launched a broad market study into the functioning of the Dutch savings market. The ACM is doing this in response to a request from the Ministry of Finance, the specific reason being that the savings rates of the major Dutch banks lag behind the European Central Bank (ECB) rate. In the ACM’s announcement of this market study, it notes that there are providers (including international ones) that, at first glance, offer Dutch savers higher rates than the major banks in the Netherlands do, while consumers appear to switch to these banks only to a limited extent. These kind of general market studies are not rare and the ACM frequently conducts them in relation to a variety sectors. In this context, the ACM questions a wide range of parties. In this case, the ACM has at least mentioned the Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets (Autoriteit Financiële Markten) and the Dutch central bank (De Nederlandsche Bank). In addition, it can be assumed that the ACM also questions banks by means of requests for information. The ACM’s findings are expected in the coming months.

The ACM’s study is not focused on alleged violations by banks of the cartel prohibition in Article 6 of the Competition Act or Article 101 of the TFEU or other provisions of competition law. This does not exclude the possibility that, in the course of its study, the ACM may come across situations that could lead it to investigate further. However, in view of the explanations already given by the Minister for the lagging savings rate and possibly also in view of legal barriers to market entry, it is doubtful that such evidence will be found.

Whether there will be any consequences from the results of the study will, of course, depend on the conclusions drawn. As is often the case with the ACM’s market studies, these may also include recommendations, for example, for legislative intervention to promote competition if it is found that there is insufficient competition because of the current regulatory framework.

Simmons & Simmons

Claude Debussylaan 247
1082 MC Amsterdam
The Netherlands

+31 6 5398 53 75 / +31 20 722 2500

ekram.belhadj@simmons-simmons.com www.simmons-simmons.com
Author Business Card

Law and Practice

Authors



Simmons & Simmons has experience working on some of the largest cartel investigations and merger control matters in Europe. As such, the firm has the expertise to act on the most complex of cases in the finance, healthcare, life sciences, technology, transport, water and energy sectors. Much of the investigations work involves complex multi-jurisdictional issues and co-ordination with lawyers within its network and elsewhere, competition authorities or other regulators in parallel investigations around the world, including in Asia, North and South America. Investigations also increasingly require consideration of potential criminal liability. Simmons’ competition teams in Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy and the UK collaborate on national and Europe-wide matters. Simmons also represents clients directly before the courts in competition infringement and follow-on damages claims. Working with its internal e-discovery team, Simmons can process the vast quantities of data in such cases with ease and efficiency.

Trends and Developments

Authors



Simmons & Simmons has experience working on some of the largest cartel investigations and merger control matters in Europe. As such, the firm has the expertise to act on the most complex of cases in the finance, healthcare, life sciences, technology, transport, water and energy sectors. Much of the investigations work involves complex multi-jurisdictional issues and co-ordination with lawyers within its network and elsewhere, competition authorities or other regulators in parallel investigations around the world, including in Asia, North and South America. Investigations also increasingly require consideration of potential criminal liability. Simmons’ competition teams in Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy and the UK collaborate on national and Europe-wide matters. Simmons also represents clients directly before the courts in competition infringement and follow-on damages claims. Working with its internal e-discovery team, Simmons can process the vast quantities of data in such cases with ease and efficiency.

Compare law and practice by selecting locations and topic(s)

{{searchBoxHeader}}

Select Topic(s)

loading ...
{{topic.title}}

Please select at least one chapter and one topic to use the compare functionality.