Sometimes business rivals would sooner team up than fight for dominance. There are advantages to competing companies agreeing not to undercut each others' prices or hire away each others' best workers. However, it's a disadvantage for consumers and workers, which is why such collusion is against the law.
Legal collusion examples include firms agreeing not to undercut each others' prices or outbid each other for employees. This saves money for the companies, but it doesn't work out well for consumers or employees.
In legal terms, collusion happens when two or more parties form a secret agreement and cooperate for fraudulent, deceitful or illegal purposes, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. Technically, collusion isn't a legal charge, FindLaw explains. The specific charges are along the lines of price-fixing, conspiracy or market manipulation.
Criminal collusion doesn't just happen in business. The culprits in treason cases often engage in collusion with their country's enemies. Criminal organizations charged with racketeering usually involve the crooked players acting in collusion. In the old days before no-fault divorce, couples sometimes colluded to falsify grounds for ending their marriage.
In business, collusion between firms can take multiple forms, the Corporate Finance Institute notes. Some companies have formal agreements not to compete in some fashion. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting States (OPEC) – an alliance of oil-rich nations – is a classic example. Their agreement not to undercut each other lets them dictate prices to the world market.
Tacit collusion happens without a written agreement. For example, the dominant player in an industry might set prices high, with other companies following. There's no formal deal; it's just tacitly understood that nobody will try to undercut the top dog. If this sort of collusion is done subtly, proving price-fixing can be difficult.
In a market with lots of competition, colluding can become impossible. If it's easy to enter the industry, a steady stream of new competitors makes it hard for even the biggest companies to dictate terms. Collusion has its greatest power in oligopoly, where there are only a few players and entering the market is expensive. There are several examples of collusive oligopoly.
Congress passed the United States' first antitrust law, the Sherman Act, in 1890, according to the Federal Trade Commission. Other laws followed. The laws bar monopolies, any attempts to form monopolies, and conspiracy or collusion for restraint of trade. The anti-monopoly rules exist because a monopoly goes beyond oligopoly: When a company is the only player in an industry, prices are whatever it wants to make them.
The Standard Oil Case from the early 20th century is a classic example of legal oligopoly, as described by the Library of Congress. Standard Oil was a dominant player in the oil industry. It used hardball tactics, including industrial spying and pressure on railroad shipping rates, to crush smaller players, increasing its own power. Eventually, the government invoked the Sherman Act to bust Standard Oil into multiple smaller companies.
A more recent example of collusive oligopoly happened in Silicon Valley. A lawsuit charged that Apple, Google, Adobe and Intel had a non-compete agreement not to lure top performers from each other, Ars Technica reports. As they weren't outbidding each other on salaries, the suit claimed, employees lost out on $3 billion in potential wages. The companies eventually settled out of court.
Also found in: Thesaurus, Financial.
tr.v. out·bid, out·bid·den (-bĭd′n) or out·bid, out·bid·ding, out·bids To bid higher than: We outbid our rivals at the auction. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved. vb, -bids, -bidding, -bid, -bidden or -bid (tr) to bid higher than; outdo in bidding Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014 v.t. -bid, -bid•den or bid, -bid•ding. to outdo in bidding; make a higher bid than (another bidder). Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
Past participle: outbid
Gerund: outbidding
ImperativePresentPreteritePresent ContinuousPresent PerfectPast ContinuousPast PerfectFutureFuture PerfectFuture ContinuousPresent Perfect ContinuousFuture Perfect ContinuousPast Perfect ContinuousConditionalPast Conditional
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
bridge - any of various card games based on whist for four players bid, call - make a demand, as for a card or a suit or a show of hands; "He called his trump" bid, tender, offer - propose a payment; "The Swiss dealer offered $2 million for the painting" underbid - bid lower than a competing bidder Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.Verb 1. outbid - bid over an opponent's bid when one's partner has not bid or doubled 2. outbid - bid higher than others
[aʊtˈbɪd] (outbid (pt, pp)) VT → pujar más alto que Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005 Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005 [ˌaʊtˈbɪd] (outbid (pt, pp)) vt → offrire di più di Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995
Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content.
Link to this page:
In order to furnish the quotas required of them, they outbid each other till bounties grew to an enormous and insupportable size.
The trade was injured by their artifices to outbid and undermine each other; the Indians were debauched by the sale of spirituous liquors, which had been prohibited under the French rule.
Deane would say nothing decided about the matter; the fact that Wakem held the mortgage on the land might put it into his head to bid for the whole estate, and further, to outbid the cautious firm of Guest &Co., who did not carry on business on sentimental grounds.
After Occidental (OXY) revealed that it has sent a letter to the Anadarko (APC) board offering to outbid Chevron (CVX) with a proposed buyout of $76 per share in cash and stock, Raymond James analyst Pavel Molchanov called this "unambiguously bad news" for Occidental shares in the very near term, including today's trading.
and the pilgrimage to the altar of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee is in full swing with the various contestants for the highest post in America set to turn the entire institution into an auction house by trying to outbid each other in their defense of blanker support for Israel regardless of its crimes.
When the Realty Collective agent's client was outbid on a two-family Grown Heights house he was selling, the found them a four-family in the neighborhood for the same price.
What the ACCC does What the ACCC can't do
A cartel exists when businesses agree to act together instead of competing with each other.
Cartels cheat consumers and other businesses. They restrict healthy economic growth, drive up prices and reduce innovation and investment.
A cartel:
- is made up of independent businesses
- attempts to increase members’ profits while maintaining the illusion of competition
- can involve businesses of any size, from small, local businesses to large corporations
- can be local, national or international.
Cartel conduct is illegal and is strictly prohibited. The laws about cartel conduct are in the Competition and Consumer Act 2010, which applies to all corporations in Australia, as well as individuals involved in the conduct.
If the businesses acting together are owned by the same company, this is not a cartel.
There are 4 types of cartel activity.
Cartel activity is when 2 or more competitors agree to:
- fix prices - when competitors agree on pricing instead of competing against each other
- market share - when competitors agree to divide a market between themselves so they don’t have to compete
- control output - when competitors agree to limit the amount or type of goods and services available
- rig bids - when suppliers discuss and agree among themselves who should win a tender, and at what price.
Price fixing
Price fixing happens when competitors agree on pricing instead of competing against each other. The agreement or understanding can be about:
- prices for selling or buying goods or services
- minimum prices
- a formula for pricing or discounting goods and services
- rebates, allowances or credit terms.
Price fixing agreements may be formal or informal. They may be written, verbal, or just a signal, like a ‘wink and a nod’.
Signs of possible price fixing include:
- tenders or quotes are all much higher than expected
- all suppliers raise prices at the same time and by more than what seems reasonable or can be explained by changes in the cost of inputs
- prices submitted are much higher than previous tenders for similar products or services
- prices drop markedly after a new supplier tenders. This may indicate that the existing suppliers have been colluding and the new supplier has forced them to compete.
Sometimes, businesses independently change their prices to match their competitors’ prices.
This can create price changes that may look like price fixing. However, this is unlikely to be illegal as long as each business is making independent decisions about its prices.
A group of local builders decides to start meeting regularly at the pub. At their first meeting, they agree to increase their hourly rates to a certain amount for a trial period.
This is price fixing.
Market sharing
Market sharing happens when competitors agree to divide a market between themselves so they don’t have to compete. They may agree to:
- avoid producing each others’ goods or services
- serve different geographical areas
- divide contracts by value
- assign customers to each competitor, with an understanding not to win each other’s customers.
Bid rigging
Bid rigging, also known as collusive tendering, happens when suppliers discuss and agree among themselves who should win a tender, and at what price.
They may decide to take turns at winning tenders, giving each cartel member an agreed share of business. They may agree on a reward for the losing businesses, such as a guaranteed subcontracting role or a compensation payment.
To make sure that the agreed bidder wins, other cartel members may:
- not bid at all
- bid above an agreed amount
- include terms and conditions that they know the client won’t accept
- withdraw a winning bid.
Signs of possible bid rigging include:
- regular suppliers decline to tender, for no obvious reason
- bidders include unacceptable terms in their tenders
- bidders sometimes bid low and sometimes bid high on the same type of product or service
- the winning firm regularly subcontracts to competitors that submitted higher bids
- one firm of professional advisers represents several of the businesses submitting tenders.
Four foreign companies that supply rubber hosing agree to create a committee to allocate contracts in Australia. Each company appoints a member to the committee, which coordinates bidding and quoting. To hide its activity, the cartel uses codes, such as referring to the chosen winner as the ‘champion’.
This is bid rigging and market sharing. Even though the cartel is made up of foreign companies meeting overseas, it can be prosecuted in Australia.
Controlling output
Output restrictions happen when competitors agree to limit the amount or type of goods and services available. They do this to increase prices or stop them falling.
Businesses can independently reduce their output in response to demand, but it is illegal for competitors to agree to restrict output.
Businesses should take care to protect themselves from cartel activity among suppliers.
Businesses should also be careful not to be drawn into a cartel.
- Avoid speaking to your competitors about customers and pricing, including bids for projects.
- Never agree or even try to agree with a competing business on the prices you or they will charge or what discounts will be offered including in tenders or quotes for jobs.
- Never limit the goods or services you or they supply or allocate customers or geographic areas.
- If you are approached by another competing business to discuss arrangements about pricing, customers or bidding, don’t get involved and report it to the ACCC.
If you are invited into an arrangement that seems like a cartel, seek independent legal advice. You should also report any suspicious activity to the ACCC.
Don’t be a target. Read our Cartel detection and deterrence guide for procurement professionals.
Cartel activity is prohibited under the law. It is prohibited as a civil breach. It is also a criminal offence for individuals and for businesses.
Penalties for individuals
Individuals involved in a cartel can face:
- jail of up to 10 years
- fines of up to $440,000 for each criminal cartel offence
- penalties of up to $500,000 for each civil contravention
- injunctions to stop the conduct
- orders barring them from managing corporations in future
- community service orders.
It is illegal for a corporation to protect its officers against loss, or to compensate or pay their legal costs or any financial penalty.
Penalties for corporations
For corporations, the maximum fine or penalty for each criminal cartel offence or civil contravention is the greater of:
- $10,000,000
- three times the total value of the benefits gained through the cartel activity
- 10% of the annual turnover of the company (including related corporate bodies) in the previous 12 months.
The ACCC has extensive powers to investigate cartels. We can:
- compel a person or company to provide information about a suspected breach of the law. This includes providing documents and giving verbal evidence
- seek a warrant to search company offices and the homes of company officers
- partner with the Australian Federal Police, which can collect evidence using phone taps and other surveillance devices.
If you’re involved in a cartel and you are the first to report the cartel to the ACCC and cooperate with our investigations, you may be eligible for immunity from civil proceedings and criminal prosecution.
To apply for immunity, contact the ACCC Immunity Hotline: Phone: 02 9230 3894
Email:
For more information, see:
Cartels: What you need to know – A guide for business
Cartels: deterrence and detection – A guide for government procurement professionals
Exemptions
Competition and Consumer Act 2010
- Section 45AA Outline of the criminal offences and civil prohibitions relating to cartel conduct
- Section 45AF Criminal offence for making a contract, arrangement or understanding containing a cartel provision
- Section 45AG Criminal offence for giving effect to a contract, arrangement or understanding containing a cartel provision
- Section 45AJ Civil prohibition for making a contract, arrangement or understanding containing a cartel provision
- Section 45AK Civil prohibition for giving effect to a contract, arrangement or understanding containing a cartel provision
- Section 51 Exemptions for certain anti-competitive arrangements.
The ACCC takes cartels very seriously. If you are aware of or suspect cartel conduct, report it to us.
Anyone can report possible cartel activity to the ACCC.
Report cartel activity to the ACCC
We have special arrangements for people who want to anonymously report cartel conduct to the ACCC.
We use a secure third-party platform that protects your identity. You stay completely anonymous when giving us a tipoff or having ongoing contact with the ACCC.
Report cartel activity to the ACCC and remain completely anonymous