OT: The Rat Pack

TGS wrote on 11/22/2007, 10:15 AM
EU fines Sony, others for videotape price fixes
Reuters
Published on ZDNet News: Nov 20, 2007 5:36:00 AM

The European Commission hit Sony and two other Japanese producers of videotape with fines totaling nearly 75 million euros ($109.8 million) on Tuesday for fixing prices.
"Between 1999 and 2002, Sony, Fuji, and Maxell managed to raise or otherwise control prices through a series of regular meetings and other illicit contacts," the European Union executive said in a statement.

Sony's fine was increased by 30 percent, to just more than 47 million euros ($68.74 million), after it obstructed the investigation, the statement said.

The fines for Fujifilm Holdings and Hitachi Maxell were reduced by 40 percent and 20 percent, respectively--to 13.2 million and 14.4 million euros--after they cooperated with the investigation.

"This decision sends two warnings to companies engaging in cartel activities," European Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said in the statement.

"First, the Commission can prosecute cartels effectively even without prompts from immunity applicants, and second, obstructing a Commission antitrust investigation leads to severe penalties," she said.

The Commission started an investigation with raids on EU subsidiaries of Sony, Fuji, and Maxell in May 2002.

The raids found "abundant evidence of cartel activities," though a Sony employee refused to answer questions by EU officials, in breach of Sony's obligations, and another employee shredded documents during the raid, the Commission said.

Sony acknowledged its involvement only after receiving a formal charge sheet from the Commission, it said.

The cartel covered the two most popular professional videotape formats at the time--Betacam SP and Digital Betacam, which in 2001 had total annual sales of 115 million euros ($168.2 million) in the EU and other European countries.

Television stations and independent TV producers are the main customers for professional videotapes.

Sony, Fuji, and Maxell, controlling more than 85 percent of the professional videotape market, "organized three successful rounds of price increases and endeavored to stabilize prices whenever an increase was not possible," the Commission said.

They also regularly monitored the implementation of price agreements, and the evidence had details of 11 meetings at which the three companies organized their cartel, it said.

The fines were the first applied under new EU guidelines, which will generally increase such penalties for companies that fix prices or do deals to divide up markets.
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9588_22-6219448.html?tag=nl.e550

Comments

Coursedesign wrote on 11/22/2007, 6:02 PM
Some day we may see anti-trust protection in this country again...

The current stewards of our country couldn't care less.

According to the L.A. Times, our Treasury Department is now working on a proposal to reduce the U.S. corporate income tax and replace the lost revenues through a Value Added Tax on all consumer purchases.

If this goes through, you'll have a devilish choice between rushing out to buy new gear or rushing out to buy stock in the wealthiest American companies that will now have greater net profits to distribute to shareholders.