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In brief

This week, the Egyptian Competition Authority (ECA) issued three price fixing cartel cases against 21 of the major producers of table eggs, including board members of the Table Eggs Chamber which is part of the General Union of Chicken Producers (“Cartel Members“). In those cases, the Cartel Members agreed on the selling price of white and red table eggs, violating Article 6 of the Egyptian Competition Law No. 3 of 2005 (ECL). The ECA initiated criminal proceedings before the public prosecution office for the Cartel Members and did not settle the case.


In more details

The ECA’s press release indicates that the Cartel Members had agreed, on a daily basis, on the selling price of white and red table eggs from the farmers to the traders/merchants. Such acts led to an excessive increase in the price of table eggs in the Egyptian market in the past period.

Upon investigation, the ECA found that at the end of each day, the Table Eggs Chamber and the major farms discuss setting the price of table eggs for the next day. Additionally, they shared this daily selling price with market players on the Facebook page of Chamber and Union and the individual pages of each geographic area in Egypt. Further, the major producers shared the daily price on their private pages to disseminate the new prices to all farms in Egypt.

More importantly, according to the ECA, gathered evidence indicated that a senior member at the Chamber has encouraged the members not to cooperate with the ECA and other supervisory authorities along with destructing evidence and hindering the ECA’s investigation.

Further, the ECA considered the exchange of future pricing of table eggs a violation to article 6 of the ECL which prohibits cartels.

Conclusion and main takeaways

A number of takeaways can be noted from the above cases, including the following:

  1. The ECA has significantly increased its cartel (horizonal agreement) enforcement by issuing several cases under Article 6 of the ECL in more recent years.
  2. The ECA seems to have begun to strategically utilize their resources. Recently, the ECA issued infringement decisions against schools for restrictions on school uniform and also conducted a consumer campaign for their awareness ahead of the new academic year. Similarly, in this case, the ECA has issued this important decision weeks before the beginning of the academic year where parents particularly rely on eggs for breakfast.
  3. The ECA has confirmed its stance that the discussion of all forms of future pricing is prohibited.
  4. Strategic goods that have a direct impact on consumers seem to be on the priority list of the ECA. Enforcement efforts in the FMCG, medical/health and education sectors in Egypt confirm this trend. Other strategic sectors such as household electrical appliances case. Please refer to our Client Alert.
  5. Obstructing ECA’s investigation is a serious infringement to the ECL. It is not clear, however, whether the senior member who tried to obstruct the investigation has been found to have violated the ECL and been issued a separate violation decision.

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Updated 2023 LOGO_Egypt Helmy Hamza & Partners Cairo

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Author

Mohamed ("Mo") advises multinational companies in a wide range of industry sectors, on antitrust and competition and trade law issues. In the antitrust and competition law area, he is experienced with cartels, price fixing, and market division as well as abuse of dominance and compliance issues. Mo also works extensively on trade disputes related to customs, dumping, and safeguard measures. Mo has additional expertise providing compliance advice to clients, including in the areas of anti-bribery, compliance investigations, dawn raids, and unfair competition. He provides assistance in mergers and acquisitions transactions to obtain regulatory approvals and advise on related compliance with competition laws. Advising and representing clients as Counsel (qualified in Egypt only) in Baker McKenzie's Toronto office, Mo joined Baker McKenzie in 2014 as a Senior Associate in the Cairo office. He has worked in the Firm's London office, where he worked on investigations and merger filings in the EU, Competition & Trade Department. Mo also worked at the Egyptian Competition Authority as a case handler and consultant. Mo holds an LL.M in international and comparative law from the American University in Cairo, an LL.M in EU law from Stockholm University, a GPLL.M in Canadian law from the University of Toronto, and a Ph.D in competition law from Queen Mary, University of London where he taught Competition Law for three years. He has authored several publications on competition law matters in a wide range of peer-reviewed international journals and periodicals.

Author

Hania Negm is a senior associate at Helmy, Hamza & Partners, Baker McKenzie Cairo. She focuses her practice on antitrust and competition law, international commercial law and trade, and compliance and investigations. Prior to joining the Firm, she worked at the Egyptian Competition Authority, where she was involved in numerous competition law cases across several sectors, such as pharmaceuticals, automotive, food and beverage, information and communication technology, sports media rights, and entertainment. She was also involved in assisting the committees drafting internal regulations and draft laws. She received an LLB from Cairo University's Faculty of Law in 2016 before receiving a Master 1 in Business Law from Universite Jean Moulin Lyon III in 2017 and a Master 2 in Public Business Law after that. Hania was admitted to the Egyptian Bar Association in 2018.

Author

Mohamed El Baroudy is an associate at Helmy, Hamza & Partners, Baker McKenzie Cairo. Prior to joining the firm, he practiced at the Egyptian Competition Authority (ECA) as Senior Case Handler almost 5 years; where he gained practical knowledge and experience from an ECA's perspective on a wide range of competition related matters. He has also chaired several rounds of negotiation in Africa on behalf of the ECA.
In the Middle East and Africa, Baroudy has also developed and trained a number of competition authorities in enforcing competition law in the region; he has also advised several competition authorities on technical antitrust queries.
In Egypt, Baroudy investigated numerous violation competition cases across several sectors and worked on the Egyptian Competition Law Amendments Project. He was responsible for reviewing the Egyptian draft legislation related to competition to ensure its compliance. He has also provided several trainings to government employees at different governmental authorities to comply with the competitive neutrality policy and the detection of anti-competitive conducts, e.g. collusive practices in public bids.
He received his LL.M. from University of Hamburg, a Master in Economics from Cairo University and a Non Degree LL.M. Diploma from Loyola University in International Merger Control Regulation.