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Fatima Shahid

France Seeks Input on New Merger Control for Below-Threshold Transactions

13.01.2025 | French competition authority

The French competition authority is conducting a public consultation until February 16, 2025, to explore a merger control framework for below-threshold mergers that may harm competition.


The Autorité de la concurrence, France's competition authority, has initiated a public consultation aimed at developing a merger control framework specifically for below-threshold mergers. This move follows the significant Illumina/Grail judgement by the Court of Justice of the European Union on September 3, 2024, which highlighted the need for national competition authorities to have the ability to review mergers that do not meet existing notification thresholds but could still impact competition.

Since 2017, the Autorité has been working on modernizing French merger control, recognizing an increase in mergers involving companies that could play a crucial competitive role but escape scrutiny due to low turnover. The authority has previously explored various approaches, including leveraging Article 22 of the EU Merger Regulation, which allows national authorities to request the European Commission to review certain mergers.

The recent CJEU ruling clarified that national competition authorities must have the legal competence to examine transactions under Article 22. In response, the Autorité is considering options to ensure that no potentially harmful mergers go unchecked, including the introduction of a targeted call-in power and a mandatory notification criterion for companies with significant market power.

Stakeholders are encouraged to provide feedback on these proposed options until February 16, 2025, as the Autorité seeks to balance legal certainty for businesses with the need for effective competition oversight.

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