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Wood Pulp Case

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II. Judgement of the Court (1993) Conclusion about the Case. I. Decision ... II. Judgement of the Court (1993) January 2004. Introduction to Competition Policy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Wood Pulp Case


1
Wood Pulp Case
  • Are similar prices
  • sufficient to prove
  • collusion?

2
Overview of the presentation
  • Introduction to the theory of collusion.
  • Description of the Wood pulp market.
  • The Legal Case
  • An Economic Analysis

3
What is collusion?
Collusion is a situation where firms coordinate
their actions to be able to exert a higher market
power than they would ususally have.
  • Firms agree to set prices higher than the
    competitive (Bertrand) equilibrium price
  • Firms agree to set quantities lower than the
    competitive (Cournot) equilibrium quantity
  • Other types of coordination such as division of
    market etc.

4
How does collusion occur?
  • 2 elements are necessary for collusion to arise
  • Firms must be able to detect in a timely way that
    a deviation has occurred.
  • There must be a credible punishment which follows
    a detection.
  • Large time horizon.

5
Implicit vs. explicit collusion
  • Implicit (tacit) collusion

Arises through purely non-cooperative behaviour
by firms Conditons - rapid detection of
deviations - credible and effective
punishments Most likely to occur in an
oligopolistic market Results from rational and
profit maximising market behaviour.
6
Overview of the presentation
  • Introduction to the theory of collusion.
  • Description of the Wood pulp market.
  • The Legal Case
  • An Economic Analysis

7
The Product
  • Wood pulp bleached sulphate pulp
  • Used for paper and packaging
  • Wood pulp exists in different qualities depending
    on - geography (North vs. South) - type of trees
    (soft wood vs hard wood)
  • Paper manufacturers typically use different types
    of wood pulp

8
The Customers
  • More than 800 buyers in the EC
  • Main customers paper manufacturers
  • Wood pulp is interchangeble, but when changing
    the mixture of different pulps, a paper
    manufacturer might incur large switching costs.
  • Wood pulp accounts for 50-75 of the costs in
    paper production.
  • Consequence
  • diversification of supply sources
  • long-term trade relationships

9
The Suppliers
  • More than 800 producers worldwide
  • 50 of them selling in the EC
  • Market leaders US, Canada, Sweden, Finland
  • Vertical integration many wood pulp producers
    are also paper manufacturers
  • Some wood pulp sold through agents

10
Transparency of market
  • System of quarterly price announcements? ceiling
    price
  • Wood pulp prices quoted in US dollars
  • Vertical integration
  • Common agents
  • Wood pulp prices listed in trade press

11
Is the Wood Pulp Market perfectly competitive?
  • The basic assumptions of perfect competition
  • Large number of suppliers (in our case more than
    800 worldwide, 50 selling in EC)
  • Large number of consumers (in our case more than
    800 in the EC)
  • Homogenous product (wood pulp is highly
    substitutable)
  • Perfect information

12
KEA
  • Cartel of American pulp producers
  • Fixing of export price by executive committee?
    price announcement
  • Producers are free to set the transaction price
    below the announced price
  • 1975-1981 announced prices coincided with
    transaction prices

13
Fides
  • Swiss trust company operating a research and
    information centre for the European pulp and
    paper industry
  • Discussions about prices and quantities (at the
    initiative of the Finnish producer Fincell and
    the Swedish producer Svenska)

14
Possible explanations for similarity in prices
  • Two strands of argumentation possible
  • Wood pulp market perfectly competitive,
    similar prices may be due to explicit collusion
    within producer associations (KEA and Fides)
  • Wood pulp market oligopolysimilar prices are
    due to rational profit maximising behaviour of
    competing firms (tacit collusion)

15
Overview of the presentation
  • Introduction to the theory of collusion.
  • Description of the Wood pulp market.
  • The Legal Case
  • An Economic Analysis

16
Structure
  • I. Decision of the Commission (1984)
  • II. Judgement of the Court (1993)
  • Conclusion about the Case

17
I. Decision of the Commission (1984)
18
Breach to Article 85 (1)
  •  Article 85 (1) of the EEC Treaty prohibits as
    incompatible with the common market all
    agreements between undertakings, decision by
    associations of undertakings and concerted
    practices which may affect trade between Member
    States and which have as their object or effect
    the prevention, restriction or distortion of
    competition within the common market, and in
    particular those which directly or indirectly fix
    purchase or selling prices or any other trading
    conditions and those which share markets or
    sources of supply. 

19
Accusations and condemnations
  • Concerted practice proved by
  • -since parallel conduct on the wood pulp market
    cannot be explained as independently chosen
    parallel conduct in a narrow oligopolistic
    situation, it can only be explained by concerted
    practice
  • -direct or indirect exchange of data between
    firms, obvious proofs of concerted practice
  • Condemnations of a whole range of pulp producers
  • Concertation on announced and/or transaction
    prices, within or outside of KEA and Fides
  • Exports and resale bans
  • Fines between 50 000 and 500 000 ECUs

20
Observed parallel conduct
  • prices are (almost) simultaneously announced
  • announced prices are identical
  • transaction prices announced prices
  • price level unchanged during period despite
    changes in costs and demand

21
Accusation of concertation relying on the
dismissal of oligopolistic explanations of
parallel conduct
  • no precluded competition on the wood pulp market
    (about 50 competitors )
  • no equilibrium prices (no trial and error
    process), artificially high and rigid prices
  • no market leader
  • no inherent market transparency (when prices
    increase, customers dont have any incentive to
    inform their seller)
  • no cost uniformity exchange rates, demand
    variations, transportation, different capacity
    utilization ratios
  • no coincidence

22
Accusation of concertation relying on material
proofs
  • Telexes and meetings
  • But the Commission maybe went too far in
    asserting that
  • The (quasi-)simultaneity of price announcements
    would not have been possible without a constant
    flow of information between producers
  • The system of quarterly announcement constituted
    in itself, at the very least, an indirect
    exchange of information on future market conduct

23
II. Judgement of the Court (1993)
24
Defence Strategy
  • To bring the Court to annul the Commissions
    decision or to reduce the amount of the fines the
    defence strategy of the condemned firms consists
    in
  • First, reduce legally available evidence
  • Then, contest the conclusions of the Commission
    pricing parallelism results from oligopolistic
    structure of the wood pulp market, parallel
    conduct is not a proof of concertation, but part
    of the right of firms to adapt themselves
    intelligently to the existing and anticipated
    conduct of their competitors. This claim was
    supported by the reports of two economic experts
    in charge of imagining a non-colluding economic
    explanation to the parallel conduct of the firms
    (not to make a statement about the
    existence/non-existence of collusion)

25
Reduce legally available evidence
  • Infringement of the rights of the defence who had
    no opportunity to respond to
  • Certain complaints not included in the statement
    of objections
  • Concertation on transaction prices
  • Duration of the infringement extended the period
    notified in the statement of objections
  • Some complaints have not been notified
    individually to some of the firms in the
    statement of objections
  • Certain evidence collected after the statement of
    objections was issued
  • Important material proofs

26
Contest the conclusions of the Commission
  • Prohibition of exports and resale bans dont fall
    under Art. 85 (1)
  • Plea rejected by the Court
  • Absence of concertation within KEA and Fides
  • Concertation proved by Commission, but legally
    irrelevant proofs
  • Absence of concertation on announced and/or
    transaction prices
  • Once the legally available evidence has been
    limited, possible to imagine an explanation of
    parallel conduct deriving from the
    characteristics of the market
  • Oligopolistic structure
  • Inherent transparency

27
No concertation on announced and/or transaction
prices (1)
  • System of quarterly price announcement
  • Historical origin, required by buyers, no
    artificial transparency
  • Uncertainty remains about future behavior of
    firms
  • No evidence that the system, in itself,
    establishes concertation
  • (Quasi-)simultaneity of announcements inherent
    transparency
  • Buyers are in contact with several wood pulp
    producers
  • Paper manufacturers exchange information on
    prices
  • Some agents works for several producers
  • Trade between producers

28
No concertation on announced and/or transaction
prices (2)
  • Parallelism of prices as a rational market
    behavior
  • Short-term prices are slow to react
  • Reluctance to reduce prices because other
    producers would follow and demand for pulp is
    inelastic
  • Price increases only when competing firms have
    limited spare production capacity and stocks, so
    that they will follow knowing they cannot
    increase their market share
  • Long-term substitution possibilities soften
    oligopolistic trends
  • Other evidence
  • 40 of market remaining to firms not belonging to
    the supposed cartel (but explicit threats were
    formulated against outsiders)
  • Shifts in market shares no quotas, competition

29
Conclusion
  • Necessity for the Commission to respect the
    rights of the defendants if she wants to make
    them pay for their crimes. Justice is not law.
  • Parallel conduct is not a sufficient proof to
    establish the existence of concertation (explicit
    collusion) since it can be explained by market
    structure, inherent transparency and rational
    behavior (implicit collusion, see final
    conclusion).

30
Overview of the presentation
  • Introduction to the theory of collusion.
  • Description of the Wood pulp market.
  • The Legal Case
  • An Economic Analysis

31
Structure
  • Cost Uniformity
  • Constant Market Shares
  • Equilibrium Price
  • Strategic Analysis
  • Bertrand Competition
  • Tacit Collusion
  • Symmetry and Collusion
  • Stochastic Demand and Collusion (Green-Porter
    model)

32
Cost Uniformity
  • Uniform price can be the consequence of perfect
    competition and symmetry.
  • In the pulp case
  • Different marginal costs due to
  • Social systems
  • Exchange rates
  • Sizes
  • however, differences due to quantities do not
    exceed 3.

33
Constant Market Shares
  • In a perfectly competitive market, if one firm
    sets its price below the others, it would get the
    whole market.
  • The Commission argued that none of the producers
    even tried to increase its market share by
    deviating from the agreed price.
  • Cooperation is thus the only explanation
  • The Court challenged this point by showing that
    market shares actually varied.
  • It could be argued that all firms were at their
    capacity level. Dismissed by the facts.

34
Constant Market SharesWhat does it imply?
  • The important point is what type of return to
    scale?
  • If constant constant market shares reflect an
    historical situation. No incentive to deviate if
    price is at marginal cost. If it is not, capacity
    constraint.
  • If not constant firms with low costs could be
    tempted to deviate in order to get the lion
    share. Competitors are unable to punish it
    without losing money.
  • Thus constant market shares can here be
    interpreted as a consequence of collusion.

35
Equilibrium Price
  • A uniform price can mean that it is THE
    equilibrium price.
  • The Commission was astonished that none of the
    producers tried to test if it were effectively
    the equilibrium price.
  • The Court argued that it could be an equilibrium
    price since the market is actually characterized
    by a succession of oligopolies and oligopsonies
    for each kind of pulp.
  • ?4 prices.

36
Strategic approachBetrand Competition
  • Assuming symmetry between firms, analyzing the
    duopoly case and considering the following
    demand qa-pi?pj.
  • We find
  • If ?0.
  • If ?1.

37
Strategic approachTacit Collusion
  • Assume 2 firms competing in Bertrand with a
    time-discounting factor ? during a given number
    of periods T.
  • If T lt ? classical Betrand outcome (solve
    backward).
  • If T ? the reasoning gets more complex.

38
Strategic approachTacit Collusion / 2
  • Consider the following strategy
  • Set pm as long as the other sets pm and get ?m/2.
  • If the other sets pltpm, set pmc forever and thus
    get ?0 forever.
  • Collusion holds if deviating is not profitable,
    I.e.

39
Strategic approachTacit Collusion / 3
  • In the Pulp Market, Pim has to be divided by 50
    (if considering only the EC market). This leads
    to a time-discounting factor ? equal to

40
Strategic approachMarket Share and Collusion
  • Assume there are 2 firms, one with market share ?
    the other with 1- ?, with ?gt0.5.
  • For Collusion to be stable
  • Equivalent to
  • ??1- ? for the big firm
  • ?? ? for the small firm
  • Intuitively, the small firm has more incentive to
    deviate.
  • The more symmetric firms are, the more
    sustainable collusion is.

41
Strategic approachMarket Share and Collusion / 2
  • In the pulp market on the EC market, European
    firms had much bigger market shares than
    Americans.
  • However, European producers had similar shares.

42
Strategic approachStochastic Demand and Collusion
  • We assume n identical firms selling an
    homogeneous product and facing a stochastic
    demand (can be low or high with given
    probabilities).
  • The greater the probability of low is, the more
    difficult it is to sustain collusion.

43
Conclusion
  • A straightforward conclusion is impossible.
  • Without the factual proofs, it is impossible to
    prove collusion.
  • Thus In determining the probative value of
    those different factors, it must be noted that
    parallel conduct cannot be regarded as furnishing
    proof of concertation unless concertation
    constitutes the only plausible explanation for
    such a conduct. It is necessary to bear in mind
    that, although Article 85 of the Treaty prohibits
    any form of collusion which distort competition,
    it does not deprive economic operators of the
    right to adapt themselves intelligently to the
    existing and anticipated conduct of their
    competitors.
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