4th Annual GCR Live Brussels - the conference about the bigger picture
Organiser: Global Competition Review • Sponsorship opportunities
13 November 2012 at 09:00 to 14 November 2012 at 17:15
Brussels, Belgium
- Tel: +00 44 207 908 1185
- E-mail
GCR Live’s 4th Annual Brussels 2-day event will be co-chaired by John Davies from Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Derek Ridyard from RBB Economics.
The first day of the conference will feature panels on ‘fines’, ‘merger simulation versus UPP’, ‘arbitration and competition law’ and ‘smart phone wars’. There will also be a debate with the motion: “This house believes that arrival of increasingly sophisticated economics is not helping antitrust enforcement”
The second day of the conference will feature panels on ‘banks and financial services providers’, ‘contracts that refer to competitors’, a live symposium session and an in-house panel.
Co-chairs
John Davies, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Derek Ridyard, RBB Economics
Keynote Speaker
Jonathan Faull, Director General, Internal Market and Services, European Commission
Speakers
George Addy, Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg
Peter Alexiadis, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher
Sir Christopher Bellamy QC, Linklaters
Simon Bishop, RBB Economics
Margaret Bloom, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Peter Camesasca, Peter Camesasca Advocaat BVBA
Lorenzo Coppi, Compass Lexecon
Kaarli Eichhorn, General Electric
Deborah Feinstein, Arnold & Porter
Amelia Fletcher, Office of Fair Trading
Giulio Federico, Chief economist's team, DG Comp, European Commission
Gaucho Rasmussen, Tesco
Niamh Grogan, Lloyds Banking Group
Stephan Barthelmess, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
Jacques-Philippe Gunther, Willkie Farr & Gallagher
Marc Hansen, Latham & Watkins
Ronan Harty, Davis Polk & Wardwell
Maria Jaspers, Head of unit, DG Comp, European Commission
Frédéric Jenny, ESSEC Business School and judge of the Cour de Cassation, France
Nicole Kar, Linklaters
Assimakis Komninos, White & Case
William Kovacic, George Washington University Law School
Nick Levy, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
Munesh Mahtani, Google
Adrian Majumdar, RBB Economics
Francesca Mazza, DIS (German Institute of Arbitration)
Andrew McBride, BHP Billiton
Jean Meijer, Bowman Gilfillan
Samantha Mobley, Baker & McKenzie
Alastair Mordaunt, Clifford Chance
Dr Gunnar Niels, Oxera
Jorge Padilla, Compass Lexecon
Paolo Palmigiano, Lloyds Banking Group
Ramsey Shehadeh, NERA
Nigel Rawding, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Luca Radicati di Brozolo, Bonnelli Erede & Pappalardo
Oliver Bretz, Clifford Chance
Emily Smith, HSBC
Trevor Soames, Shearman & Sterling
Christoph Stadler, Hengeler Mueller
Christopher Thomas, Hogan Lovells International
Deirdre Trapp, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Vanessa Turner, Visa Europe
Sven Voelcker, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
Frank Wijckmans, Contrast Law
Matthew Weiniger, Herbert Smith Freehills
Pierre Régibeau, Charles River Associates
Johan Ysewyn, Clifford Chance
GCR Live Brussels – the conference about the bigger picture
13 and 14 November
DAY ONE
8.30am: Registration and Coffee
9.00am: Chairs’ welcome
John Davies, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Derek Ridyard, RBB Economics
9.10am: Session one: fines – time for a re-think?
It’s one of the open secrets of practising EU competition law that fines are nigh impossible to predict with accuracy. Stories circulate of lawyers leaving meetings amazed at how high or sometimes low a client’s fine turned out to be. So … why? And what can be done about it? This session will consider whether a) it’s time for a rethink and b) what better approaches to fining might be.
Chair: Gunnar Niels, OXERA
Speakers:
Marc Hansen, Latham & Watkins
Nicole Kar, Linklaters
Jacques-Philippe Gunther, Willkie Farr & Gallagher
Maria Jaspers, Head of unit, DG Comp, European Commission
10.30am: Coffee
11.00am: Session two: Oxford Union-style debate – is economics helping?
Motion: “this house believes that arrival of increasingly sophisticated economics is not helping antitrust enforcement”
Two teams have 24 minutes a piece to argue for and against the motion to a panel of three adjudicators. They will then respond to questions put by the judges, and from the debate’s chair, before the judges give their decision and reasons for it.
Chair: Margaret Bloom, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Debaters:
For
Sir Christopher Bellamy QC, Linklaters
Simon Bishop, RBB Economics
Against
William Kovacic, George Washington University Law School
Amelia Fletcher, Office of Fair Trading
Judges
George Addy, Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg
Frederic Jenny, Professor of economics ESSEC Business School and judge at the Cour de Cassation
Jean Meijer, Bowman Gilfillan
12.30pm: Lunch
1.30pm: Session three: merger simulation v UPP – what’s the difference?
The session will consider the relationship between the two approaches to allocating the unilateral pricing effects that are arise from a proposed merger, with speakers debating 1) are they related? How? 2) Which is the most appropriate for screening mergers in phase one? 3) Which provides a more accurate prediction of the price-impact of a merger?
Chair: Jorge Padilla, Compass Lexecon
Speakers:
Deborah Feinstein, Arnold & Porter
Adrian Majumdar, RBB Economics
Alastair Mordaunt, Clifford Chance
2.55pm: Session four: Arbitration and competition law – where are we now?
It is 12 years since the ECJ affirmed the arbitrability of EU competition law in Eco Swiss. So how is reality living up to the expectation of back then? Leading names from the world of international arbitration will discuss the story so far and explain what arbitration can do for the world of competition at this point in time.
In particular they’ll examine:
- The frequency with which competition law arises for arbitrators. Is it arising more as an ancillary issue than the main dispute?
- Procedural issues a competition law point creates
- Selecting the ideal arbitrator – are there individuals who are becoming known for matters with a competition law element?
- How to use experts effectively
- The value of awards – are any problems arising at the enforcement stage?
Chair: Nigel Rawding, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Speakers:
Luca Radicati di Brozolo, Bonnelli Erede & Pappalardo
Assimakis Komninos, White & Case
Francesca Mazza, DIS (German Institute of Arbitration)
Matthew Weiniger, Herbert Smith Freehills
4.25 pm: Coffee
4.45 pm: Session five: should the EU have stepped into the smart phone wars?
EU competition officials don’t have the best record when it comes to playing the role of price regulator. With that in mind, was it wise for the EU to open an investigation of Motorola and thereby step into the middle of the smart phone wars? Speakers will present arguments for and against competition agencies entering this difficult, IP-rich territory.
Chair: Stephan Barthelmess, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
Speakers:
Sven Voelcker, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
Peter Camesasca, Peter Camesasca Advocaat BVBA
Peter Alexiadis, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher
Pierre Régibeau, Charles River Associates
6.10 pm: Chairs' wrap of day
John Davies, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Derek Ridyard, RBB Economics
6.30 pm: Cocktail reception hosted by Hogan Lovells International
DAY TWO
9.00am: Chairs' welcome
John Davies, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Derek Ridyard, RBB Economics
9.05am: Session one: banks and financial services providers - they may be unloved, but are they really anti-competitive?
A session built around individuals with first-hand knowledge of recent and live competition cases in the financial sector. They will debate, panel-style, the reasons underlying the antitrust agencies' increased interest in financial services cases and the legal, economic and regulatory issues that arise in practice as a result.
Expected to discuss:
- Thomson Reuters article 102 case
- Deutsche Borse/NYSE Euronext
- Concerns voiced about the actions of rating agencies
Chair: Nick Levy, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
Keynote Speaker:
Jonathan Faull, Director General, Internal Market and Services, European Commission
Speakers:
Niamh Grogan, LLoyd's Banking Group
Emily Smith, HSBC
Lorenzo Coppi, Compass Lexecon
Johan Ysewyn, Clifford Chance
10.30am: Coffee
10.50am: Session two: contracts that refer to competitors – what is the theory of harm?
The session will discuss how to analyse the impact of contracts that reference competitors- following recent cases enforcement agencies have struggled to fit theory of harm to facts. Should such arrangements be pursued as horizontal cartels, vertical restraints with (possibly) uncertain effects, or none of the above? The session will also discuss MFN clauses in contracts, and information exchange between competitors.
Cases likely to be discussed
- FMCG – Germany
- Trucks – UK
- Tobacco – UK
Chair: John Davies, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Speakers:
Amelia Fletcher, Office of Fair Trading
Christoph Stadler, Hengeller Mueller
Frank Wijckmans, Contrast Law
Ramsey Shehadeh, NERA
Gaucho Rasmussen, Tesco
12.25pm: Lunch
1.45pm: Session three: GCR Live symposium session* – aka, a huge question and answer session with advance preparation
The conference will break into a free-for-all symposium session, in the style that’s used with great success in a few other fields of specialist law.
How this session works: The idea of the symposium is to set up a rolling discussion based around pre-submitted questions.
GCR will collect topics and questions in advance from audience members than then circulate them to all concerned a few days before the event
On the day, the chairs will select a topic from the bundle and then invite whoever submitted it to introduce it from the floor. Other members of the audience, and a panel on stage, will then debate the topic until it has run its course, when a new topic will be teed-up the same way.
Questions can be submitted on any area of antitrust law, economics or practice. The session will run for an hour and a half
*this part of the programme will be Chatham House rule
Oliver Bretz, Clifford Chance
John Davies, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Derek Ridyard, RBB Economics
Ronan Harty, Davis Polk & Wardwell
Samantha Mobley, Baker & McKenzie
Deborah Feinstein, Arnold & Porter
Trevor Soames, Shearman & Sterling
Christopher Thomas, Hogan Lovells International
Jean Meijer, Bowman Gilfillan
3.15pm: Coffee
3.45pm: Session four: what frustrates in-house counsel about antitrust enforcement and advice?”
A panel of in-house counsel will prepare individual lists of “the five things that cause me the greatest aggravation when it comes to antitrust law.”
Topics expected to come up include:
- Privacy and privilege – including status of privilege for lawyers from third-party jurisdictions who’ve advised on patent strength
- Successor-parental liability
- Extra-territorial discovery
Chair: Vanessa Turner, Visa Europe
Speakers:
Andrew McBride, BHP Billiton
Kaarli Eichhorn, General Electric
Paolo Palmigiano, Lloyds Banking Group
Munesh Mahtani, Google
5.10pm: Chairs' wrap and predictions based on day two
John Davies, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
Derek Ridyard, RBB Economics
5.30: Conference Closes
Event details
The Stanhope Hotel, Rue du Commerce 9Brussels, B-1000, Belgium Tel: +32 2 506 91 11 • Fax: +32 2 512 1708
Event files
Session files from this event are available to GCR Premium subscribers only. To subscribe, or upgrade your subscription, please contact us.
Comments on GCR conferences:
"A highly enjoyable day... The best conference on Competition law I've ever attended - the quality of the speakers was unparalleled"
-- Elaine Hutton
Sponsorship opportunities
GCR conferences provide an excellent opportunity to raise your corporate profile, allowing face-to-face interaction with key clients and decision makers.
To discuss the opportunities available, please contact:
- Tel: +00 44 207 908 1185
- gcrlive@globalcompetitionreview.com



