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Road to COP29: Our insights
The 28th Conference of the Parties on Climate Change (COP28) took place on November 30 - December 12 in Dubai.
Global | Publication | May 2024
In June 2018, Vietnam’s National Assembly passed a new competition law (the Competition Law or Law), which came into effect on 1 July 2019. The Competition Law overhauled a competition enforcement regime that had been in place with varying levels of success since 2004 under the previous law (the 2004 Competition Law).
The Competition Law introduced a substantial number of changes, including the consolidation of the previous competition authorities into a new Vietnamese Competition Commission (the VCC), which assumed office on 1 April 2023.
The Competition Law provides for four main prohibitions:
The Competition Law provides a non-exhaustive list of restrictive agreements, distinguishing between agreements that are prohibited as a rule irrespective of their effects on competition (also known as a “per se prohibition”) and those that are prohibited if they have the effect of substantially lessening competition (i.e. effects-based prohibition).1
Per se prohibitions
Horizontal and vertical agreements. The following agreements are prohibited as a rule:
The prohibition applies to all agreements, whether entered into between competitors (“horizontal” agreements) or between parties at different stages of the supply chain (“vertical” agreements).
Horizontal agreements. In addition, the following agreements are also prohibited per se provided they are concluded between competitors:
Effects-based prohibitions
Vertical agreements. The same agreements as listed just above are also prohibited if they are concluded between companies at different levels of the supply chain, to the extent they, actually or potentially, substantially restrict competition.
Horizontal and vertical agreements. The following agreements, whether vertical or horizontal, will be prohibited if they have the effect of substantially restricting competition:
De minimis exception. In its implementing Decree with detailed regulations for implementation of the law on competition (Decree 35), the Government provided indicative market share thresholds on the types of agreements that would not be considered to result, or likely to result, in significant anticompetitive effects:
Exemptions
Parties to the agreements listed above, except for bid-rigging and agreements which exclude other enterprises from the market or prevent them from entering the market, can apply to the VCC for an exemption from the prohibition on restrictive agreements if the agreement:
The VCC’s exemption decisions are valid for a maximum of five years and can be extended at the request of parties by another period not exceeding five years.3
Prohibited abusive conduct. The Competition Law prohibits business operators (including enterprises or groups of enterprises) from abusing their dominant position by engaging in the following conduct:
Prohibited monopoly conduct. The same conduct as above is also prohibited if an enterprise holds a monopoly position, that is where there are no other enterprises competing on the relevant market. In addition, the following monopoly conduct is also prohibited:
Assessing dominance. Under the Competition Law, an enterprise with “substantial market power” or with a market share of 30 per cent or above will be deemed to be dominant.6 Substantial market power will be determined based on a number of factors, including, inter alia, the market shares of the enterprise on the relevant market, barriers to market entry and expansion, access to or control over a specific infrastructure, the holding of IP rights or benefiting from a technological advantage on the market.7
Collective dominance. A group of enterprises will be considered to hold a dominant position if either they jointly have substantial market power or their combined market share reaches or exceeds the following thresholds.8
Enterprises with an individual market share of less than 10 per cent will however not be considered to hold a dominant position jointly.9
Similar to the approach in many other jurisdictions, the Competition Law provides for a merger control regime through which the VCC assesses compliance with the prohibition against mergers and acquisitions that lead or can lead to substantial anticompetitive effects on the Vietnamese market.
Merger control thresholds. Under Decree 35, “economic concentrations” are required to be notified to the VCC before their implementation if any of the following thresholds are met:10
Review period. Upon submission of the notification materials, the VCC has seven working days to declare the notification complete, starting from the official date of receipt of the notification, as mentioned on the acknowledgement of receipt issued by the VCC (which can be issued a couple of days or more after the filings materials have been submitted for processing reasons). The preliminary review period (i.e. Phase 1) lasts 30 calendar days and starts once a complete notification is submitted:
It is not uncommon for the VCC to reject the filing materials once before accepting them as complete.
If no notice is issued by the VCC at the end of Phase 1, the economic concentration will be deemed approved. In case a formal appraisal (i.e. Phase 2) is required, the VCC will send a notice to the parties to that effect. The Phase 2 review period can last up to 90 calendar days and, in complex cases, can be extended by up to 60 calendar days upon written notice issued by the VCC to the parties.
The Competition Law also prohibits unfair competition practices including trade secret infringements (such as acquiring trade secrets in breach of security measures, disclosing or using trade secrets without the consent of the owner), forcing customers or business partners not to do commerce with certain enterprises or providing false or misleading information to customers about specific enterprises or products.12
A violation of the Competition Law can lead to, amongst other things, the issuance of fines (as specified below) or warnings, the revocation of business licences, the removal of illegal terms and conditions from “a contract, an agreement or a business transaction”, or the issuance of divestiture or unwinding orders.13
The following fines can be imposed in the context of:14
Fines can also be imposed on individuals. The maximum fines that can be imposed on individuals is of half the level of the fines that can be imposed on enterprises (as detailed above).
Further, anticompetitive agreements may also attract criminal liability in certain cases, such as in the context of agreements which exclude other enterprises from the market or prevent them from entering the market, in case of bid-rigging or where anticompetitive agreements involve competitors with a combined market share of at least 30 per cent.
The Competition Law provides that anticompetitive conduct occurring outside of Vietnam will be caught if the conduct restricts, or has the potential to restrict, competition in Vietnam.15 The merger control provisions are also applicable to foreign mergers where the parties meet the merger control thresholds, regardless of whether the target has any revenue or commercial activities in Vietnam.
Under the Competition Law, the previous authorities in charge of enforcing competition law in Vietnam – the Vietnam Competition and Consumer Authority (VCCA) and the Vietnam Competition Council – have been merged into a new Vietnamese Competition Commission or VCC. The VCC assumed office on 1 April 202316 and is affiliated with the authority of the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT),17 as was the case for the previous authorities under the previous 2004 Competition Law.
The VCC is primarily responsible for initiating competition proceedings, reviewing economic concentrations, considering applicable exemptions to the prohibition against anticompetitive agreements, handling appeals against settlement decisions of competition cases and advising the MOIT on competition and consumers matters.
Private parties who have suffered a loss as a result of a breach (or alleged breach) of the Competition Law are able to bring an action for damages in Vietnam. While the Competition Law does not provide many details on private actions, it appears that civil damages actions can be brought on a “stand-alone” basis (i.e. absent any infringement decision by the VCC) and arguably also on a “follow-on” basis (i.e. relying on an infringement decision issued by the VCC).18
A leniency program has also been introduced in the Competition Law, which only applies to enterprises and not to individuals. Enterprises that are parties to an anticompetitive agreement may be entitled to a full or partial immunity if they voluntarily report the anticompetitive agreement before an investigation is formally opened. The leniency program is only available to the first three applicants in respect of any particular agreement, with the first applicant eligible for a penalty exemption of 100 per cent, while the second and third will, respectively, be eligible for an exemption of 60 per cent and 40 per cent. It is however not clear whether the leniency program also protect enterprises against criminal prosecution.
The Competition Investigation Agency (CIA), an authority placed under the VCC, is in charge of investigating violations of the Competition Law. The CIA has the power to request information, open investigations and conduct “investigative measures”. The CIA can also request other competent authorities to seize documents and search vehicles, objects or premises. Court orders are not required to make use of these investigative measures.
Although the VCC was first mentioned in the 2018 Competition Law, Decree 03/2023/ND-CP that established the VCC was only published on 10 February 2023 (in part due to the covid-19 pandemic), with the new authority taking office on 1 April 2023. While the VCCA continued to handle merger filings in the interim period before the VCC took office, other prohibitions of the Law against anticompetitive agreements, abuses of dominance and unfair competition practices were left relatively unenforced.
Enforcement against competition law infringements is however expected to increase in Vietnam with the establishment of the VCC, in particular in relation to unfair competition practices which were actively enforced under the previous 2004 Competition Law.
According to the last Annual Report published by the VCCA, for the year 2022, the VCCA continued to monitor and investigate possible breaches of competition law across several markets and industries before the VCC was established20 and also carried out inspections in that respect.21 In 2022, the VCCA received and investigated eight competition law complaints and proactively reviewed six cases related to unfair competition behaviours.22
On merger control, while several transactions were notified in 2020 before Decree 35 became effective, 40 of the 62 transactions notified in 2020 were submitted after Decree 35 became effective and clarified the merger control thresholds. In 2021, 130 economic concentrations were notified to the VCC and 154 in 2022.23 The increase in notifications under the Competition Law is a clear sign that merger control is an issue taken seriously in Vietnam.
The vast majority (82 per cent) of notifications submitted in 2022 related to acquisitions of control over a target, while joint ventures and mergers represented 13 per cent and 5 per cent, respectively, of the notified transactions. Offshore transactions and foreign companies accounted for 40 of the transactions notified in 2022, on par with 2021.24
Most merger notifications were cleared after the Phase 1 initial assessment review, while at least five transactions were cleared after a formal appraisal (i.e. Phase 2), including three transactions in 2021 and two transactions in 2022. As of the date of this publication, no penalties or decisions have been imposed in Vietnam in respect of failure to notify economic transactions which reached the merger control thresholds. These statistics are however based on the list of cases published by the previous authority (the VCCA), which does not seem to encompass all notifications and cases the VCCA cleared before the VCC took office. So far, no merger cases have been published by the VCC since it took office.
Competition Law (2018)
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Miranda Cole, Julien Haverals and Emma Clarke of our Brussels/ London offices are the authors of a chapter on procedural issues in merger control that has been published in the third edition of the Global Competition Review’s The Guide to Life Sciences. This covers a number of significant procedural developments that have affected merger review of life sciences transactions.
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