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Exploring whether funding is driving major business competition cases and how funders reap cash from these deals
By Rick Mitchell | April 9, 2024
An ECJ decision to follow its Advocate General's advice could doom the EU antitrust watchdog's other cases targeting mergers that don't meet revenue thresholds.
3 minute read
By Maydeen Merino | April 8, 2024
"The whole of government approach is an incredibly coherent and sophisticated way to think about competition policy," said U.S. Justice Department antitrust chief Jonathan Kanter.
4 minute read
By Chris O'Malley | April 8, 2024
Regulators say the consequences of anti-competitive practices in health care can be especially grave. It "is often the difference between life and death," Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter said.
5 minute read
By Greg Andrews | April 8, 2024
The tech giant argues that the government is defining the social media market in a "contrived" way that ignores the reality that features offered by its apps are available across the internet.
4 minute read
By Maydeen Merino | April 4, 2024
Since mid-2023, the FTC has operated with only three commissioners, all Democrats: the chair, Lina Khan; Rebecca Kelly Slaughter; and Alvaro Bedoya.
3 minute read
By Ellen Bardash | April 4, 2024
A surge in filings in the Nashville federal court made U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw Jr. the most active antitrust judge in 2023.
3 minute read
By Patrick Smith | April 3, 2024
Brad Karp confirmed that having a "strong presence in Brussels" was a "strategic imperative" as the firm works on cross-border M&A work and consequential client matters.
2 minute read
By Randy D. Gordon | April 2, 2024
"So is it wrong for a lawyer to counsel a client to achieve vertical price-fixing ends via transactional structuring?" writes columnist Randy D. Gordon.
8 minute read
By Chris O'Malley | April 1, 2024
The DOJ's and FTC's retreat from long-standing guidance on information-sharing appears to have been intended "to inject some uncertainty—to make people nervous about antitrust," Fenwick & West partner Steve Albertson said. "And it worked."
6 minute read
By Chris O'Malley | April 1, 2024
The DOJ's and FTC's retreat from long-standing guidance on information-sharing appears to have been intended "to inject some uncertainty—to make people nervous about antitrust," Fenwick & West partner Steve Albertson said. "And it worked."
6 minute read
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A large and well-established Tampa company is seeking a contracts administrator to support the company's in-house attorney and manage a wide...
We are seeking an attorney to join our commercial finance practice in either our Stamford, Hartford or New Haven offices. Candidates should ...
We are seeking an attorney to join our corporate and transactional practice. Candidates should have a minimum of 8 years of general corporat...
MELICK & PORTER, LLP PROMOTES CONNECTICUT PARTNERS HOLLY ROGERS, STEVEN BANKS, and ALEXANDER AHRENS