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Would the Bureau please try to persuade the competent authorities to break this price cartel and, if necessary, impose fines on those concerned.
In 1940, the Government sued the six companies for operating an illegal pricing cartel in the 1930's.
I am thinking here of huge mergers, amalgamations, price cartels and cartels within a particular field.
In 1998, the Commission penalised a price cartel on the British market in industrial sugar which had lasted for nearly four years.
He manage to break the international coffee monopoly, "the coffee conference", a strictly controlled pricing cartel for the transportation of coffee to Europe.
As long ago as 1992, we ruled to prohibit a price cartel operated by Norwegian, Scottish and Irish salmon breeders.
More worrisome, in Amazon's view, is that the Registry will bring disparate publishers and rightsholders together under a single umbrella, essentially forming a pricing cartel.
On October 19, 2011, Samsung was fined EUR 145,727,000 for being part of a price cartel of ten companies for DRAMs which lasted from 1 July 1998 to 15 June 2002.
For instance, Kawachiya, which has cultivated its image as a renegade eager to smash the old price cartels, sells the 633-milliliter bottles for 220 yen, or $2.14, and 350-milliliter cans for 166.25 yen, or $1.61 when bought in a case.
Competitors that refused to play along in dividing the market, Mr. Reiner said, would be subject to a sales "blitz," in which companies in the price cartel would lure away their customers with below-market prices until they agreed to join the conspiracy.
Perceived or actual higher prices in the UK often have the effect of encouraging British consumers to order goods from the Internet, whether from UK businesses claiming to break a price cartel or directly from abroad, including via eBay and other online auction sites.
For many years transport costs between peripheral regions and major urban centres of the Union, for example the one I cited between the west of Ireland and London, were artificially high because of the price cartels operated by the airlines and also by the train and ferry companies.
Although Mrs. Clinton today again presented herself as a New Yorker-in-training, eager to be educated in a series of forums with voters in the state, she had no problem offering a position on the milk price cartel, one of the most difficult issues in New York state politics today.