| Gordon Slynn Baron Slynn of Hadley - 2000 - 724 lapas
...align their conduct on the market, in particular in such a way as to maximise their joint profits by restricting production with a view to increasing prices....traders would thus be affected by the reduction in price levels. 277 That conclusion is all the more pertinent with regard to the control of concentrations,... | |
| Mark Naftel, Lawrence J Spiwak - 2000 - 526 lapas
...align their conduct in the market, in particular in such a way as to maximise their joint profits by restricting production with a view to increasing prices....that it would derive no benefit from its initiative." The Court's holding reasons that a desire to form a price-fixing cartel or even an incentive to do... | |
| John Tillotson, Nigel Foster - 2003 - 697 lapas
...align their conduct in the market, in particular in such a way as to maximise their joint profits by restricting production with a view to increasing prices....traders would thus be affected by the reduction in price levels. That conclusion is all the more pertinent with regard to the control of concentrations, whose... | |
| Antonio Bavasso - 2003 - 450 lapas
...encouraged to align their conduct in the market, in particular in such a way as to maximize their profits by restricting production with a view to increasing prices....example a price cut) would provoke identical action by others, so that it would derive no benefit from its initiative."45 More recently the ECJ in the Compagnie... | |
| Sigrid Stroux - 2004 - 290 lapas
...align their conduct in the market, in particular in such a way as to maximize their joint profits by restricting production with a view to increasing prices....traders would thus be affected by the reduction in price levels'. The Court added 'the fact that these links can be constituted purely from oligopolistic interdependence... | |
| Lennart Ritter, W. David Braun - 2004 - 1248 lapas
...oligopoly must be aware that highly competitive action on its part designed to increase its market share would provoke identical action by the others, so that it would derive no benefit from its initiative';234 - 'third, to prove the existence of a collective dominant position to the requisite... | |
| Mark Hoskins, William Robinson - 2003 - 447 lapas
...not departing from the common policy, which means that each member of the dominant oligopoly must be aware that highly competitive action on its part designed to increase its market share would provoke identical action by the others, so that it would derive no benefit from its initiative... | |
| Lennart Ritter, W. David Braun - 2005 - 1248 lapas
...not departing from the common policy, which means that each member of the dominant oligopoly must be aware that highly competitive action on its part designed to increase its market share would provoke identical action by the others, so that it would derive no benefit from its initiative';234... | |
| Maher M. Dabbah - 2004 - 792 lapas
...not departing from the common policy, which means that each member of the dominant oligopoly must be aware that highly competitive action on its part designed to increase its market share would provoke identical action by the others, so that it would derive no benefit from its initiative... | |
| Nikos Th Nikolinakos - 2006 - 722 lapas
...align their conduct in the market, in particular in such a way as to maximize their joint profits by restricting production with a view to increasing prices....traders would thus be affected by the reduction in price levels. That conclusion is all the more pertinent with regard to the control of concentrations, whose... | |
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