Unfair Pricing and Standard Essential Patents

M. Botta
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Abstract

Technical standards that are agreed within a Standard Development Organization (SDO) often cover several ‘essential’ patents for the implementation of a standard (i.e., Standard Essential Patents, SEPs). In order to allow for the standard implementation, the SEP holder commits to license its patents to any potential licensee on the basis of Fair and Reasonable and Non-Discriminatory (FRAND) conditions. In view of the recent ruling of the UK Supreme Court in Unwired Planet and the judgement of the German Bundesgerichtshof in Sisvel v. Haier, the paper assumes that the FRAND commitment implies a ‘range’ rather than a ‘single’ royalty rate. On the other hand, a royalty rate ‘beyond the outer boundary of the range’ should be considered ‘unfair’, and thus incompatible with the FRAND commitment. Besides representing a breach of the FRAND commitment, an ‘unfair’ royalty rate might also be considered an abuse of a dominant position by the SEP holder, in breach of Art. 102(a) TFEU. This paper analyses whether, and under what circumstances, Art. 102(a) TFEU can be relied upon by a competition authority in Europe to sanction a case where an ‘unfair’ royalty rate has been set by the SEP holder. To this regard, the paper provides a detailed analysis of the EU Court of Justice’s jurisprudence on Art. 102(a) TFEU. In particular, the latter jurisprudence is relied as a ‘yardstick’ to assess ‘when’ competition policy should sanction a request of unfair royalty rate by the SEP holder, ‘how’ a competition agency should assess the case and, eventually, ‘what’ remedies the competition authority might adopt. Economists have elaborated a number of ‘filters’ to define ‘when’ EU competition policy should sanction unfair pricing cases. In particular, antitrust intervention would be justified only in markets that are characterized by high and stable entry barriers, in which a firm enjoys a super-dominant position. Due to the phenomenon of over-declaration, not every SEP is indeed ‘essential’; the market power of the SEP holder thus requires a case-by-case analysis of the ‘essentiality’ of every SEP. A number of authors have also argued that excessive pricing cases should not be sanctioned in industries characterized by dynamic efficiencies. The paper argues that innovation considerations could be considered as efficiency defences in the context of antitrust investigations, rather than in excluding a priori competition policy enforcement in this field. The paper argues that a competition agency should rely on the case law of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) on Art. 102(a) TFEU to analyse a case of unfair royalty rate. In particular, United Brands cost/price test is not suitable for assessing an unfair royalty rate requested by the SEP holder, since it is de facto impossible to determine the ‘costs of production’ of individual SEPs. On the other hand, in accordance with the CJEU case law, the competition agency might rely on a number of benchmark methods with which to assess the alleged unfairness of the rate. In particular, the agency should verify its findings under multiple benchmark tests, in order to minimize the risk of false negative errors. Finally, the SEP holder could argue that the requested royalty rate is justified by its past R&D investments. In terms of remedies, the paper argues that a competition agency could require the SEP holder to license its ‘essential’ patent; such behavioral remedy is well established in the practice of the European Commission. In light of the recent Broadcom interim decision, if the competition authority was confident about its preliminary findings of unfair pricing, the agency might require the SEP holder to license its ‘essential’ patents via an interim decision; the scope, duration and exact obligations of such a duty would later be refined in the final commitment decision.
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不公平定价与标准必要专利
在标准开发组织(SDO)内达成一致的技术标准通常涵盖实现标准的几个“必要”专利(即标准必要专利,sep)。为了允许标准的实施,SEP持有人承诺在公平合理和非歧视(FRAND)条件的基础上将其专利许可给任何潜在的被许可人。鉴于最近英国最高法院对Unwired Planet的裁决以及德国联邦法院对Sisvel诉海尔案的判决,本文假设FRAND承诺意味着一个“范围”而不是一个“单一”的版税费率。另一方面,“超出范围外边界”的特许权使用费应被视为“不公平”,因此与FRAND承诺不相容。除了代表违反FRAND承诺外,“不公平”的特许权使用费费率也可能被视为SEP持有人滥用主导地位,违反了第102(a)条TFEU。本文分析了欧洲竞争管理机构是否以及在何种情况下可以依据第102(a)条TFEU对SEP持有人设定的“不公平”特许权使用费费率进行制裁。在这方面,本文对欧盟法院对第102(a)条TFEU的判例进行了详细分析。特别是,后者的判例被视为评估竞争政策“何时”应批准SEP持有人提出的不公平特许权使用费要求的“尺度”,竞争机构应“如何”评估案件,以及最终竞争机构可能采取的“何种”补救措施。经济学家已经详细阐述了一些“过滤器”,以定义欧盟竞争政策“何时”应该制裁不公平定价案件。特别是,反垄断干预只有在以高而稳定的进入壁垒为特征的市场中才是合理的,在这种市场中,企业享有超级支配地位。由于过度申报的现象,并非每个SEP都是“必要的”;因此,SEP持有人的市场力量要求对每个SEP的“必要性”进行逐案分析。一些作者还认为,在以动态效率为特征的行业中,不应该批准过度定价的案例。本文认为,在反垄断调查的背景下,创新考虑可以被视为效率抗辩,而不是排除该领域的先验竞争政策执行。本文认为,竞争机构应依据欧盟法院(CJEU)第102(a)条TFEU的判例法来分析不公平版税率的案件。特别是,联合品牌的成本/价格测试不适合评估SEP持有人所要求的不公平的专利使用费率,因为事实上不可能确定单个SEP的“生产成本”。另一方面,根据欧洲法院的判例法,竞争机构可以依靠一些基准方法来评估所谓的费率不公平。特别是,该机构应在多个基准测试下核实其调查结果,以尽量减少假阴性错误的风险。最后,SEP持有人可以辩称,其过去的研发投资证明了所要求的专利使用费是合理的。在救济方面,本文认为,竞争机构可以要求SEP持有人许可其“必要”专利;这种行为救济在欧盟委员会的实践中已经确立。鉴于最近的博通临时决定,如果竞争管理机构对其不公平定价的初步调查结果有信心,该机构可能会要求SEP持有人通过临时决定许可其“必要”专利;这种义务的范围、期限和确切义务将在以后的最后承付决定中加以细化。
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Calculating Cartel Damages Data Collaboratives, Competition Law and the Governance of EU Data Spaces The Effectiveness of European Antitrust Fines Unfair Pricing and Standard Essential Patents A Reform Too Few or a Reform Too Many: Judicial Review, Appeals or a Prosecutorial System under the UK Competition Act 1998?
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