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15 - Italy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 July 2009

Matteo Beretta
Affiliation:
Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, LLP, Rome/Milan
Maher M. Dabbah
Affiliation:
Queen Mary University of London
K. P. E. Lasok QC
Affiliation:
Monckton Chambers
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Summary

Decision-making bodies and enforcement authority(ies)

Law No. 262 of 28 December 2005 abrogated Article 20(2), (3) and (6) of Law No. 287/1990 which attributed the power to enforce Italian competition law in cases affecting core banking activities to the Bank of Italy. As a result, the Antitrust Authority (“the Authority”) is now the exclusive enforcement body as far as all competition matters are concerned.

For lack of jurisdiction, the Bank of Italy has closed all its pending investigations and has dismantled its specialized Antitrust Unit.

Notification requirements and procedures

Mandatory or voluntary notification

Definition of “concentration” under Law No. 287/90

Acquisition of sole control. Under particular circumstances, sole control may be ascertained even in the absence of a formal participation in the capital of the controlled undertaking. This is shown by an interesting decision in which the Authority assessed that Tetra Pak International SA (“Tetra Pak”) had exercised de facto control over Italpack Srl (“Italpack”) for almost ten years, thus infringing a 1993 decision by which the Authority prohibited Tetra Pak's proposed acquisition of Italpack. The decision is noteworthy since the Authority reached such conclusion notwithstanding the fact that Eaglepack Italia, a third independent company, formally acquired Italpack in 1995.

Type
Chapter
Information
Merger Control Worldwide
Second Supplement to the First Edition
, pp. 67 - 72
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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