ARTICLE
6 August 2019

Recent Developments In Hybrid Settlement Cases

AO
A&O Shearman

Contributor

A&O Shearman was formed in 2024 via the merger of two historic firms, Allen & Overy and Shearman & Sterling. With nearly 4,000 lawyers globally, we are equally fluent in English law, U.S. law and the laws of the world’s most dynamic markets. This combination creates a new kind of law firm, one built to achieve unparalleled outcomes for our clients on their most complex, multijurisdictional matters – everywhere in the world. A firm that advises at the forefront of the forces changing the current of global business and that is unrivalled in its global strength. Our clients benefit from the collective experience of teams who work with many of the world’s most influential companies and institutions, and have a history of precedent-setting innovations. Together our lawyers advise more than a third of NYSE-listed businesses, a fifth of the NASDAQ and a notable proportion of the London Stock Exchange, the Euronext, Euronext Paris and the Tokyo and Hong Kong Stock Exchanges.
Since the introduction of the European Commission's (EC) settlement procedure in 2008, just over one in five of all its settlement cases have involved at least one party dropping out of the settlement
Belgium Antitrust/Competition Law

Since the introduction of the European Commission's (EC) settlement procedure in 2008, just over one in five of all its settlement cases have involved at least one party dropping out of the settlement procedure. This has usually led to settlement and standard infringement proceedings being pursued in tandem against the various participants of the same cartel. Such hybrid cases have turned out to be a more frequent occurrence than "the exception" that the EC had initially envisaged.

Settlement negotiations, particularly if certain parties are at risk of dropping out, entail complex and strategic decision-making by the parties. The EC's future procedural practice in its hybrid cases, i.e., whether it decides to run the settlement and non-settlement proceedings in parallel or by way of the adopting the settlement decision followed by the standard ordinary infringement decision, will have a significant influence on parties' settlement strategies in the future. The General Court's judgments in ICAP and Pometon have provided diverging assessments as to the legality of the EC's historical preference to run hybrid cases in a staggered procedure. The EC's apparent practice in its first hybrid case since these judgments, Forex, suggests that the EC has been comforted by the more recent Pometon judgment in order to continue running hybrid cases in a staggered format in the future.

Read this chapter in Shearman & Sterling's 2019 Antitrust Annual Report, "Recent Developments in Hybrid Settlement Cases."

The authors and contributors below were supported by associate Agostino Bignardi.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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