Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byChester Reynolds Modified over 9 years ago
1
Antitrust Issues in the Insurance Industry A Webinar presented by Edwards Angell Palmer & Dodge LLP Ruth T. Dowling October 2, 2007
2
2 Today’s Program Brief Statutory Background McCarran-Ferguson: Will the exemption be repealed? Recent Antitrust Concerns In the Insurance Industry The Broker/Insurer Relationship: Beyond the Spitzer Investigation Reinsurance Facilities: A CT AG Investigation
3
3 Background The purpose of the antitrust laws is to maximize competition. The goal is to maximize benefits to consumers.
4
4 Antitrust Laws Sherman Act Section One: Conspiracies Section Two: Monopolization Clayton Act Section Seven: Mergers & Acquisitions that may substantially lessen competition Hart Scott Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act McCarran Ferguson Insurance “Exemption”
5
5 Sherman Act, Section One: Agreements in Restraint of Trade Section One Prohibits Agreements; which unreasonably interfere; with free and open competition.
6
6 Sherman Act, Section One: Restraints of Trade or Commerce “Rule of Reason” Evaluates the state of competition with, as compared to without, the relevant agreement in place. Balancing procompetitive and anticompetitive effects. Key Metrics price output quality
7
7 Sherman One Example Spitzer investigation and follow-on private litigation over contingent commission agreements and alleged bid- rigging.
8
8 Sherman Act, Section Two: Monopolization Elements of a Section Two Claim Intent to acquire, use or maintain monopoly power by unfair and exclusionary conduct Relevant market determines existence of monopoly power product/service market geographic component
9
9 Sherman Act, Section Two: Monopolization (continued) Elements of a Section Two Claim Factors used in assessing monopoly power: market share ease or difficulty of entry into the market relative size of competitors pricing strategies historical trends within the industry
10
10 Business Conduct Typically Tested Under Section Two refusals to deal/exclusive dealing arrangements monopoly leveraging predatory pricing
11
11 Clayton Act Essentially same application as Sherman Act “Incipiency Standard”
12
12 Hart Scott Rodino HSR Act requires regulatory approval of acquisitions valued at $59.8 million or more if the parties are sufficiently large (one party with assets of $119.6 million and the other with at least $12 million) or any acquisition with valuation of at least $239.2 million. Deal cannot close until regulatory clearance given.
13
13 McCarran-Ferguson Act Enacted in response to United States v. South-Eastern Underwriters Ass’n, a 1944 US Supreme Court decision which sustained a criminal antitrust indictment of a rating organization. The Supreme Court rejected the argument that insurance was not interstate commerce. Primary concern of McCarran was to protect cooperative ratemaking efforts.
14
14 McCarran-Ferguson Act (continued) Insurers are exempted from federal antitrust laws under two conditions: The challenged practice is part of the “business of insurance” and The practice is “regulated by State law.” Exemption does not reach acts or agreements of “boycott, coercion, or intimidation.” Current movement to repeal the Act is gaining momentum. State-level enforcement activity largely undeterred by the Act.
15
15 McCarran-Ferguson Act (continued) The “Business of Insurance” Conduct-oriented test, not blanket exemption for activities of insurance companies. Criteria courts will consider: Whether the practice has the effect of transferring or spreading a policyholder’s risk; Whether the practice is an integral part of the policy relationship between the insurer and the insured; and Whether the practice is limited to entities within the insurance industry.
16
16 What Will Happen to McCarran? Bills in House/Senate to Repeal Antitrust Modernization Commission concluded Congress should look carefully at all exemptions On September 25 th, the EC issued the Final Report on its Competition Inquiry into the Business Insurance Sector. Key Issues: Concerns over coverage of large risks through co- and reinsurance “following markets” Remuneration of intermediaries Block Exemption – Serious concerns, will revisit in 2009
17
17 Does McCarran Matter? Only exemption from federal antitrust laws, not state regulation Potential fall-out: Increased number of private class action antitrust suits Closer scrutiny of insurance merger and acquisition activity
18
18 The Broker/Insurer Relationship State Attorney General focus: NY: Spitzer contingent commission/bid-rigging CT: Reinsurance facility investigation Concerns that brokers/insurers too cozy and acting to the detriment of the insured.
19
19 Rule of Reason Analysis Primarily analyzed as vertical arrangements (unless broker acting as a conduit for competitor insurers) Will be analyzed under Rule of Reason analysis which weighs anticompetitive aspects against pro-competitive efficiencies. Problematic: agreements that the broker will not seek competitive bids in return for higher commission; agreements that broker will direct business without considering competitive bids.
20
20 Preferential Treatment of Brokers Is an insurance company entitled to have special underwriting rules or special claims handling processes for only selected brokers? Can an insurance company give certain brokers a dedicated service channel? Can an insurance company give one broker an exclusive right to distribute special products for a period of years?
21
21 Preferential Treatment of Brokers (continued) Considered “vertical arrangements” under antitrust analysis. Analyzed under “rule of reason.” Balancing of pro-competitive benefits with any anticompetitive harms.
22
22 Preferential Treatment of Brokers (continued) Generally these vertical arrangements are permissible unless: They control the only market for the product and therefore the non-favored distributors/brokers have no access to any comparable product. They permit the use of monopoly power in one market to leverage into another.
23
23 Banning Brokers Can an insurance company refuse to deal with certain brokers? Can a broker refuse to deal with certain insurance companies? In general, yes. A company “has a right to deal, or refuse to deal, with whomever it likes, as long as it does so independently.” (Supreme Court, Monsanto Corp. v. Spray-Rite Service Corp.). Potential problem areas: Concerted refusal to deal. Termination of ongoing relationship likely to cause fatal injury to rival (Aspen Skiing)
24
24 Reinsurance Facility Investigation The typical practice of reinsurance facilities is being evaluated by at least one State Attorney General for potential antitrust concerns. Facilities will generally be considered “joint ventures” under US antitrust laws and will be evaluated under “Rule of Reason.” Courts/Enforcers will evaluate whether an agreement on price & terms is “necessary” in order to create and market the insurance product. Courts/Enforcers will evaluate the procompetitive benefits of the facility – does it add capacity that would not otherwise exist and/or does it permit the sharing or spreading of risk?
25
25 Protecting Your Company Documents Eliminate Unnecessary Documents Retention programs Address corporate culture of “Over Documenting” Emails “Don’ts”: War metaphors Overemphasize adverse effects on competitors/inflate benefits of reducing competition “Do”: Stress positive benefits to consumers
26
26 The Problem of Emails Actual Email from In-House Counsel to Management: “I’m sending you this information by email because I have been directed by outside counsel not to write any of this down...”
27
27 Rules of Thumb Meetings Inventory who is attending which meetings Educate “usual suspects” Written agendas should be the norm High risk meetings: Counsel should clear agenda or attend Identify Key Person in Company Responsible For Fielding Competition Inquiries
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.