From Antitrust & Competition Policy Blog: Keep Calm—Yes; Carry on—No! A Response to Whish on Intel “Brian Sher, Nabarro LLP argues Keep Calm—Yes; Carry on—No! A Response to Whish on Intel. ABSTRACT: In November 2014 Professor Richard Whish published an editorial in this journal entitled ‘Intel v Commission: Keep Calm and Carry on!’ Whish makes two…” This is Commentary Elsewhere, from writers around the web. Please note the explanation of this section on the “About the Site” page.
From Competition Bulletin: Eurotunnel: when buying assets is a merger “When is an asset acquisition a merger? As the Eurotunnel litigation shows, the answer is not clear-cut. The background is the 2011 liquidation of the cross-channel ferry company SeaFrance. It could not be sold as a going concern, so instead there was an asset sale. Eurotunnel bought three ferries and various other assets including the […]” This is Commentary Elsewhere, from writers around the web. Please note the explanation of this section on the “About the Site” page.
From Antitrust & Competition Policy Blog: Period of limitations in follow-on competition cases: when does a ‘decision’ become final? “Pınar Akman, Associate Professor of Law, School of Law, University of Leeds asks Period of limitations in follow-on competition cases: when does a ‘decision’ become final? ABSTRACT: A series of private competition law cases in the UK has demonstrated that…” This is Commentary Elsewhere, from writers around the web. Please note the explanation of this section on the “About the Site” page.
From Antitrust & Competition Policy Blog: The French Taxi Case: Where Competition Meets—and Overrides—Regulation “Liliana Eskenazi, Allen & Overy discusses The French Taxi Case: Where Competition Meets—and Overrides—Regulation. ABSTRACT: A new market for passenger cars with driver (VTC) booked in advance online or through smartphone apps has recently emerged in France, in parallel to…” This is Commentary Elsewhere, from writers around the web. Please note the explanation of this section on the “About the Site” page.