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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Phones 4U Ltd v EE Ltd & Ors [2023] EWHC 2826 (Ch) (10 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/2826.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2826 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMPETITION LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PHONES 4U LIMITED (In Administration) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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(1) EE LIMITED (2) DEUTSCHE TELEKOM AG (3) ORANGE SA (4) VODAFONE LIMITED (5) VODAFONE GROUP PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY (6) TELEFONICA UK LIMITED (7) TELEFÓNICA, S.A. (8) TELEFONICA O2 HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Meredith Pickford KC, Laura John KC, David Gregory and Daniel Schwennicke
(instructed by Clifford Chance LLP) for the First Defendant
Robert O'Donoghue KC and Hugo Leith (instructed by Covington & Burling LLP )
for the Second Defendant
Marie Demetriou KC, David Scannell KC and David Heaton
(instructed by Norton Rose Fulbright LLP) for the Third Defendant
Ewan McQuater KC, Rob Williams KC, Adam Kramer KC and Hannah Glover (instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP) for the Fourth and Fifth Defendants
Mark Hoskins KC, Sarah Abram KC, Matthew Kennedy and Aarushi Sahore
(instructed by Mishcon de Reya LLP and Linklaters LLP) for the Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Defendants
Hearing dates: 16-20 May, 23-26 May, 7-10 June, 13-16 June, 20-23 June, 27-30 June, 4-7 July, 11-12 July and 25-28 July 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Paragraph | ||
A. | INTRODUCTION | 1 |
B. | THE UK MOBILE MARKET | 10 |
C. | THE P4U-MNO AGREEMENTS | 29 |
D. | THE PROCEEDINGS | 35 |
Witnesses of fact | 40 | |
Expert evidence | 49 | |
Evidence not available | 51 | |
E. | THE COMPETITION LAW CLAIMS | 63 |
O2/ Telefónica and Vodafone | 66 | |
EE and O2/Vodafone | 69 | |
The law | 73 | |
Standard of proof and evidence required | 87 | |
F. | THE CULTURE AND ATTITUDE OF THE MNOs | 84 |
G. | 2012: THE O2 DECISION – ALLEGED COLLUSION WITH EE | 104 |
The Landmark Lunch and subsequent exchanges | 147 | |
Analysis | 202 | |
H. | 2012: THE O2 DECISION – ALLEGED COLLUSION WITH VODAFONE | 236 |
I. | 2013: O2/ TELEFÓNICA AND VODAFONE | 246 |
The 27 January 2014 meeting: part 1 | 273 | |
(a) Ms Castillo – Mr Humm | 287 | |
(b) Mr Alierta – Mr Colao | 296 | |
The 27 January 2014 meeting: part 2 | 305 | |
J. | THE FINANCIAL POSITION OF P4u | 312 |
K. | 2014:VODAFONE AND EE | 328 |
L. | THE VODAFONE DECISION | |
Background | 329 | |
Vodafone UK's early negotiations with P4u | 333 | |
Vodafone UK's negotiations with CPW | 352 | |
Parallel discussions with P4u and CPW | 361 | |
The decision | 375 | |
17 June – 29 August 2014 | 384 | |
Termination with P4u | 392 | |
The allegations against Vodafone | 399 | |
The potential acquisition | 412 | |
Mr Humm | 415 | |
Two investment banks | 418 | |
Alleged collusion with O2 | 421 | |
The aftermath of the Vodafone decision | 423 | |
M. | THE EE DECISION | |
Background | 426 | |
September 2013 – February 2014 | 438 | |
The Dixons/CPW merger and the 20 March 2014 BRM | 445 | |
Potential acquisition of P4u | 452 | |
The 10 April 2014 BRM | 473 | |
EE's financial modelling | 476 | |
The shareholders' Bonn strategy meeting | 481 | |
Late April – early May 2014 | 486 | |
The 6-7 May drill-down workshop | 496 | |
The lead-up to the 21 May 2014 BRM | 500 | |
The allegations about the modelling assumptions | 517 | |
The 21 May 2014 BRM | 527 | |
Further consideration of acquisition of P4u | 535 | |
The continuing negotiations with P4u | 540 | |
Negotiation of the CPW Agreement | 551 | |
The collapse of P4u | 557 | |
A Series of unfortunate events | ||
(1) The Scheen – Humm conversation: 2 April 2014 | 562 | |
(2) The remarks at the drill-down workshop: 7 May 2014 | 577 | |
(3) The minutes of the 21 May 2014 BRM | 590 | |
(4) Mrs Derbyshire's email: 10 August 2014 | 599 | |
(5) The meeting with Ofcom: 4 September 2014 | 609 | |
Alleged collusion with Vodafone UK | 616 | |
N. | THE EXPERT EVIDENCE | 620 |
O. | LIABILITY OF ORANGE AND DT FOR THE CONDUCT OF EE | 636 |
Legal principles | 639 | |
The present case | 641 | |
P. | BREACH OF CONTRACT BY EE | 647 |
The contractual terms relied on | 648 | |
The events of 29 August to 10 September 2014 | 669 | |
The BRM of 11 September and EE's letter of 12 September 2014 | 693 | |
The alleged bad faith | 698 | |
(a) The CPW-EE Agreement | 699 | |
(b) The decision to leave P4u | 706 | |
(c) The letter of 12 September 2014 | 710 | |
Was there a lack of good faith? | 722 | |
Q. | THE TORT CLAIMS AGAINST DT AND ORANGE | 726 |
R. | CONCLUSION | 728 |
Mr Justice Roth :
A. INTRODUCTION
B. THE UK MOBILE MARKET
"The UK mobile telecommunications market is one of the biggest in Europe. All of the European operators have shown an interest in participating. By way of comparison, in the United States there are three MNOs competing for a market of 300 million customers, whereas in the UK, there are four MNOs competing for a market of 60 million customers. Notably, the UK has more MVNOs than other markets around the world. Also, the UK has historically had a strong indirect sales presence, whereas in other markets, MNOs typically sell directly to customers, generally do not distribute through any indirect sales channels, and therefore do not have to share value with third party sellers. As a consequence of all of this, customers in the UK have benefitted; they have more choice and that choice has driven competition. That is, competition for the customer relationship for connectivity. The UK has one of the lowest costs of connectivity in the world."
All the economic experts called by the parties similarly agreed that the UK mobile market at the time was effectively competitive. Moreover, for the defendants with mobile businesses elsewhere in Europe, the UK was the least profitable of the major European markets.
a) "Post-pay" connections, which are also sometimes called "contract" or "pay monthly" connections. The customer agrees to pay a monthly fee in arrears for a minimum term contract, typically for 18 or 24 months. For a handset-linked post-pay connection, the customer is provided with a handset at the point of sale, and the price of the handset is generally spread over the duration of the contract. The monthly fee therefore reflected the two separate components: the handset and the tariff for access to the network services, and the customer received a specified quota of minutes, texts and data. The handset might be supplied at a significant discount or in some cases "free". Post-pay connections took two forms:
i) New connections: where the customer entered into a contract with an MNO with which the customer did not have an existing contract; and
ii) Upgrades: where the customer entered into a new contract replacing or renewing their existing one on the same network and upgraded their handset to a new device.
b) "Pre-pay" connections, also called "Pay-as-you-go" connections, where the customer purchases a handset and a SIM card which they can then "top-up" periodically by purchasing credit for voice, text and data services. This form of connection therefore involves no contractual monthly payment or contract term. As with post-pay connections, a pre-pay connection may be handset-linked or SIM-only.
"P4U's marketing strategy was skewed towards young adults, and they were quite pioneering in digital marketing and social media, so tended to attract younger, high-spending customers."
However, younger customers often preferred pre-pay to post-pay contracts, and it was also suggested that they accounted for a disproportionate share of what in the industry is termed "fraud" but in fact refers to contractual default by non-payment.
C. THE P4U-MNO AGREEMENTS
- with O2: an agreement dated 9 March 2009 (as amended), for the period from 1 January 2009 to 31 January 2013 for new connections and to 31 January 2014 for upgrades and SIM-only connections ("the O2 Agreement");
- with Vodafone UK: an agreement dated 16 August 2011 for a minimum term from 1 July 2011 to 31 October 2014, and continuing thereafter unless terminated by 6 months' notice ("the Vodafone Agreement");
- with EE: an agreement dated 10 October 2012, for a three-year term from 1 October 2012 expiring on 30 September 2015 ("the EE Agreement").
D. THE PROCEEDINGS
Witnesses of fact
Mr David Kassler: Mr Whiting's successor as CEO of P4u from November 2013 and CEO of P4u Group from 31 July 2014 until 15 September 2014.
Mr Philip Dobson: Deputy CEO of P4u Group from January 2012 until December 2013 and a non-executive director of P4u Group from January 2014.
Mr Steven Lloyd: the Chief Legal Officer/Legal Director and Company Secretary of P4u Group from September 2006 to November 2014.
Mr John Whittle: the Chief Commercial Officer ("CCO") of P4u from November 2013 to 15 September 2014. Prior to that he had been Director of Commercial of P4u from May 2012 to November 2013.
EE
Mr Olaf Swantee: CEO of EE between September 2011 and January 2016 and a member of the EE Board of Directors.
Mr Neal Milsom: CFO of EE between September 2011 and January 2016 and a member of the EE Board of Directors.
Mr Stephen Harris: Chief Corporate and Strategy Officer at EE between 2011 and December 2015. Prior to that, he had been Chief of Staff to Mr Swantee since the formation of EE in 2010.
Mr Marc Allera: Chief Commercial Officer of EE from January 2014 who reported directly to Mr Swantee, EE's CEO. He was previously Chief Sales Officer from December 2011.
Mr James Blendis: EE's General Counsel and Company Secretary from July 2010 to January 2018.
Mr Roger Eyre: EE's Sales Finance Director from July 2013, and previously Head of Sales Finance at EE. He reported to Mr Allera and Mr Milsom.
Mrs Nicola Derbyshire: Head of Indirect Sales (Finance) at EE from December 2013. She reported to Mr Eyre.
Ms Angela Thomas: Head of Legal (Sales, Retail and Distribution) at EE between January 2011 and July 2017.
DT
Mr Timotheus Höttges: CEO of DT since January 2014. He was a member of DT's Group Board of Management from 2009 to 2014 and was on EE's Board of Directors between April 2010 and January 2014.
Mr Thomas Dannenfeldt: CFO of DT between January 2014 and December 2018. He was a member of EE's Board of Directors from February 2014 until January 2016.
Mr Markus Goeddertz: Vice President, Services Headquarters, Investor Relations, from January 2012 to December 2014.
Mr Wolfgang Kniese: Vice-President, Area Management UK from April 2013 to August 2014.
Ms Claudia Nemat: a member of the DT Board for European Business from October 2011 to December 2016. She was on EE's Board of Directors between October 2011 and January 2014.
Mr Joerg Weber: Vice-President, Mergers & Acquisitions ("M&A"), between 2012 and 2016, and now Senior Vice-President and head of M&A.
Mr Michael Wilkens: Senior Vice President in Group Controlling from October 2013 to May 2022.
Orange
Mr Gervais Pellissier: CFO from 2006 until September 2014 and from November 2011 to September 2014 the Delegate CEO in charge of Finances and Orange's JV in the UK (i.e. EE). He was a member of EE's Board of Directors from April 2010 to January 2016. He was also a member of Orange's Executive Committee.
Mr Christophe Naulleau: Executive Vice President of UK Operations from October 2010 until January 2016.
Mr Benoit Scheen: Senior Executive Vice President - Europe Region from September 2011 to 31 August 2014. As such, he was a member of Orange's Executive Committee and in charge of its European Division, reporting to Mr Richard, the CEO of Orange. He was a member of EE's Board of Directors from September 2011 until 1 September 2014.
Mr Gilles Deloison: Appointed as the Country Controller and Project Owner for EE in the UK following the merger that created EE in 2010. He remained in this role during the relevant period.
Mr Jerome Berger: Head of Orange Group Financing and Treasury from June 2012 until October 2014.
Mr Olivier Froissart: Senior Vice President, M&A, from 2002 to December 2016.
Vodafone
Mr Vittorio Colao: CEO of Vodafone Group between July 2008 and September 2018.
Mr Philipp Humm: Regional CEO for Europe at Vodafone Group from October 2012 until October 2015.
Mr Jeroen Hoencamp: CEO of Vodafone UK between October 2013 and August 2016. Previously he had been Enterprise Director at Vodafone UK between January and September 2013.
Ms Cindy Rose: Consumer Director at Vodafone UK between September 2013 and 30 April 2016, reporting to Mr Hoencamp.
Ms Sara Perry: Senior Commercial Finance Manager for Consumer Channels and Acquisition and Retention Spend at Vodafone UK between March 2010 and February 2015.
Mr Philip Roberson: Head of Indirect Distribution at Vodafone UK between January 2014 and April 2017, reporting to Ms Rose.
Ms Justine Campbell, General Counsel and External Affairs Director at Vodafone UK between July 2009 and November 2013.
O2
Mr Ronan Dunne: CEO of O2 between January 2008 and July 2016 and a member of Telefónica Europe's Board, and of Telefónica Europe's Executive Committee and Project Approvals Committee.
Mr Mark Evans: CFO between 1 January 2012 and 1 August 2016, and a Member of O2's Board.
Mr Phil Maple: Head of Commercial Sales and Service between March 2011 and April 2013. He was then General Manager of Consumer Business between May 2013 and September 2016 and also chaired O2's P4U Deal Committee.
Mr Edward Smith: General Counsel between November 2011 until July 2021. He was also a member of the O2 Board and of the P4U Deal Committee.
Mr Timothy Fox: a member of the Data, Insights and Analytics team since September 2011.
Telefónica
Mr César Alierta Izuel: Chairman and CEO of Telefónica SA between July 2000 and April 2016.
Ms Eva Castillo Sanz: Chair and CEO of Telefónica Europe between September 2012 and February 2014.
Mr Ivan Varela Sanchez: Director of Corporate Strategy at Telefónica Europe between April 2012 and April 2014.
"Two common (and related) errors are to suppose: (1) that the stronger and more vivid is our feeling or experience of recollection, the more likely the recollection is to be accurate; and (2) that the more confident another person is in their recollection, the more likely their recollection is to be accurate."
And after referring to the effect on witness memory of the preparation process for trial, he said, at [22]:
"… the best approach for a judge to adopt in the trial of a commercial case is, in my view, to place little if any reliance at all on witnesses' recollections of what was said in meetings and conversations, and to base factual findings on inferences drawn from the documentary evidence and known or probable facts. This does not mean that oral testimony serves no useful purpose – though its utility is often disproportionate to its length. But its value lies largely, as I see it, in the opportunity which cross-examination affords to subject the documentary record to critical scrutiny and to gauge the personality, motivations and working practices of a witness, rather than in testimony of what the witness recalls of particular conversations and events. Above all, it is important to avoid the fallacy of supposing that, because a witness has confidence in his or her recollection and is honest, evidence based on that recollection provides any reliable guide to the truth."
The warning articulated in Gestmin is now reflected in the Appendix to Practice Direction 57AC (Trial Witness Statements in the Business and Property Courts), noting that the courts recognise that human memory "is vulnerable to being altered by a range of influences, such that the individual may or may not be conscious of the alteration" (para 1.3(3)).
"50. … it is important to bear in mind that there may be situations in which the approach advocated in Gestmin will not be open to a judge, or, even if it is, will be of limited assistance. There may simply be no, or no relevant, contemporaneous documents, and, even if there are, the documents themselves may be ambivalent or otherwise insufficiently helpful. … Even in a case which is fairly document-heavy (as this one was) there may be critical events or conversations which are completely undocumented. The CarbonDesk dinner is a good example. Whilst there are documents from which inferences might be drawn about what was or was not said at that dinner, there are no notes of the discussions and no memoranda or emails sent afterwards which appear on their face to record or report what was said on that occasion.
51. Faced with documentary lacunae of this nature, the judge has little choice but to fall back on considerations such as the overall plausibility of the evidence; the consistency or inconsistency of the behaviour of the witness and other individuals with the witness's version of events; supporting or adverse inferences to be drawn from other documents; and the judge's assessment of the witness's credibility, including his or her impression of how they performed in the witness box, especially when their version of events was challenged in cross-examination. Provided that the judge is alive to the dangers of honest but mistaken reconstruction of events, and factors in the passage of time when making his or her assessment of a witness by reference to those matters, in a case of that nature it will rarely be appropriate for an appellate court to second-guess that assessment."
"It is frequently very difficult to tell whether a witness is telling the truth or not; and where there is a conflict of evidence such as there was in the present case, reference to the objective facts and documents, to the witnesses' motives, and to the overall probabilities, can be of very great assistance to a judge in ascertaining the truth."
Expert evidence
- Mr David Thomas, the managing partner of DT Economics and a former director of Ofcom, instructed on behalf of P4u;
- Mr Paul Reynolds, a senior vice-president of Compass Lexecon, instructed on behalf of EE, DT and Orange;
- Mr Simon Bishop, a founding partner of RBB Economics, instructed on behalf of Vodafone; and
- Dr Gunnar Niels, managing partner at Oxera Consulting, instructed on behalf of O2 and the Telefónica defendants.
Evidence not available
"So far as possible, tribunals should be free to draw, or to decline to draw, inferences from the facts of the case before them using their common sense without the need to consult law books when doing so. Whether any positive significance should be attached to the fact that a person has not given evidence depends entirely on the context and particular circumstances. Relevant considerations will naturally include such matters as whether the witness was available to give evidence, what relevant evidence it is reasonable to expect that the witness would have been able to give, what other relevant evidence there was bearing on the point(s) on which the witness could potentially have given relevant evidence, and the significance of those points in the context of the case as a whole. All these matters are inter-related and how these and any other relevant considerations should be assessed cannot be encapsulated in a set of legal rules."
"Please confirm by return that Telefónica has taken all reasonable steps to preserve documents which are relevant to the matters raised in this letter before claim."
For reasons which it is not necessary to go into, it appears that these letters did not reach those companies until mid-June 2015.
"… Tef SA was of the view that the Claimant's claim was unmeritorious and that, therefore, it was unnecessary and disproportionate to spend management time and incur business costs in order to preserve documents in respect of a claim that would not withstand scrutiny. Tef SA considered it highly unlikely that a claim would be issued, which view was sustained by the fact that over three and a half years elapsed between the date of the letter before action and the commencement of proceedings"
E. THE COMPETITION LAW CLAIMS
"… each Defendant undertaking was, and/or it is to be inferred was, party to an agreement and/or decision[[6]] and/or concerted practice which had the object or effect of preventing and/or restricting and/or distorting competition in the market for Connections in the UK. In particular, each Defendant undertaking was party to direct or indirect contact(s), the object or effect of which was to influence the conduct on the market of each of the other Defendant undertakings as actual or potential competitors, or to disclose to each of the other Defendant undertakings the course of conduct on which each Defendant undertaking had decided to adopt or was contemplating adopting on the market for Connections in the UK. The object and/or effect of such contact and communication was the restriction of competition in the UK."
O2/ Telefónica and Vodafone
"(a) Unlawfully colluded with and/or made unlawful commitments to Vodafone Group that prevented renewal of the O2 Agreement. P4U is unable to identify the precise content of the commitments but avers that such commitments must logically have involved one or more of the following elements:
(i) A commitment to cease or reduce supplies to P4U (alternatively, supplies to both or at least one of P4U and CPW).
(ii) A commitment not to extend, renew or replace O2's commercial relationship with P4U (alternatively, with both or at least one of P4U and CPW).
(iii) A commitment to move towards supplying at most one of P4U and CPW.
(iv) A commitment to reduce or eliminate O2's reliance on retail intermediaries in the UK.
(b) Unlawfully disclosed to Vodafone Group their future intentions in relation to one or more of the following aspects of their commercial conduct on the market (in competition with Vodafone Group):
(i) The extension, renewal or replacement of O2's commercial relationship with P4U.
(ii) The extension, renewal or replacement of O2's commercial relationship with retail intermediaries in the UK generally and/or P4U and/or CPW specifically.
(iii) The choice between trading with both or only one of the major retail intermediaries in the UK (i.e. P4U and CPW).
(iv) The reduction or elimination of reliance on retail intermediaries in the UK."
"… it is to be inferred that at a date unknown to P4U but before 27 January 2014 (and, it is to be inferred, on or around 19 September 2012), Vodafone Group and/or Vodafone UK also gave to Telefónica and/or Telefónica Europe and/or O2 unlawful commitments and/or disclosure of confidential and commercially sensitive information as to its intended commercial policy in relation to some or all of the same subject matter as to the commitments and/or disclosures identified in paragraph 131 above."
EE and O2/Vodafone
"… on 19 September 2012, O2 informed EE that O2 wished to reduce volume from indirect retailers, and sought to reduce the risk of EE taking up that volume. EE did not publicly distance itself from that collusive approach"
and that EE thereby participated in an unlawful agreement and/or concerted practice.
"… it is to be inferred that, in 2014, Vodafone UK and/or Vodafone Group coordinated, with EE and/or [DT] and/or Orange, their decisions to discontinue their relationships with P4U, and in that respect disclosed to one another confidential and commercially sensitive information as to their intended commercial policy in relation to some or all of the same subject matter as the disclosures identified in paragraph 131 above, mutatis mutandis."
The law
"The following shall be prohibited as incompatible with the internal market: all agreements between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted practices which may affect trade between Member States and which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the internal market,…"
"i) The object of the inclusion of concerted practices in the prohibition is to bring within Article [101] a form of coordination between undertakings which, short of the conclusion of an agreement properly so-called, knowingly substitutes practical co-operation between the undertakings for the risks of competition. A concerted practice does not have all the elements of an agreement but may arise out of co-ordination which becomes apparent from the behaviour of the participants. Parallel behaviour may amount to strong evidence of a concerted practice if it leads to conditions of competition which do not correspond to the normal conditions of the market: ICI v Commission [1972] ECR 619 ("Dyestuffs").
ii) The requirement of independent determination of policy on the market on the part of competitors strictly precludes any direct or indirect contacts between competing undertakings, the object or effect of which is either to influence the conduct on the market of an actual or potential competitor or to disclose to such a competitor the course of conduct which the undertaking has decided to adopt or contemplates adopting on the market: Suiker Unie v Commission [1975] ECR 1663.
iii) The prohibition on concerted practices applies to all collusion between undertakings whatever the form it takes. An agreement arises from the expression by the participating undertakings of their joint intention to conduct themselves in a specific way. Concerted practices include forms of collusion having the same nature as agreements which are distinguishable from agreements by their intensity and the forms in which they manifest themselves: Commission v Anic Partecipazioni [1999] ECR I-4125.
iv) A decision on the part of a manufacturer which constitutes unilateral conduct of that undertaking escapes the Chapter I prohibition (though if the undertaking has a dominant position, it might be caught by the Chapter II prohibition). The concept of an agreement centres around the existence of a concurrence of wills between at least two parties, the form in which it is manifested being unimportant so long as it constitutes the faithful expression of the parties' intention: Bayer v Commission [2000] ECR II-3383, upheld by the European Court of Justice, Joined Cases C-2 and 3/01P, 6 January 2004.
v) Although the concept of a concerted practice implies the existence of reciprocal contacts, that requirement may be met where one competitor discloses its future intentions or conduct on the market to another when the latter requests it or, at the very least, accepts it: Cimenteries v Commission [2000] ECR II-491.
vi) The fact that only one of a number of competing undertakings present at a meeting reveals its intentions is not sufficient to exclude the possibility of an agreement or concerted practice: Tate & Lyle v Commission [2001] ECR II-2035."
"a form of coordination between undertakings, which, without having been taken to the stage where an agreement properly so-called has been concluded, knowingly substitutes for the risks of competition, practical cooperation between them which leads to conditions of competition which do not correspond to the normal conditions of the market, having regard to the nature of the products, the importance and number of the undertakings as well as the size and nature of the said market."
And just before the passage forming the basis of the second proposition formulated by the Court of Appeal, the CJEU stated, at para 173:
"The criteria of coordination and cooperation laid down by the case-law of the Court, which in no way require the working out of an actual plan, must be understood in the light of the concept inherent in the provisions of the Treaty relating to competition that each economic operator must determine independently the policy which he intends to adopt on the common market including the choice of the persons and undertakings to which he makes offers or sells."
"subject to proof to the contrary, which it is for the economic operators to adduce, there must be a presumption that undertakings participating in concerting arrangements and remaining active on the market take account of the information exchanged with their competitors when determining their conduct on the market, particularly when they concert together on a regular basis over a long period" (para 121).
This is sometimes referred to as the "Anic presumption." The Court proceeded to state that, in accordance with the wording of art 101(1), concerted practices are prohibited regardless of their effect when they have an anti-competitive object.
"60. … the number, frequency, and form of meetings between competitors needed to concert their market conduct depend on both the subject matter of that concerted action and the particular market conditions. If the undertakings concerned establish a cartel with a complex system of concerted actions in relation to a multiplicity of aspects of their market conduct, regular meetings over a long period may be necessary. If, on the other hand, as in the main proceedings, the objective of the exercise is only to concert action on a selective basis in relation to a one-off alteration in market conduct with reference simply to one parameter of competition, a single meeting between competitors may constitute a sufficient basis on which to implement the anti-competitive object which the participating undertakings aim to achieve.
61. In those circumstances, what matters is not so much the number of meetings held between the participating undertakings as whether the meeting or meetings which took place afforded them the opportunity to take account of the information exchanged with their competitors in order to determine their conduct on the market in question and knowingly substitute practical co-operation between them for the risks of competition. Where it can be established that such undertakings successfully concerted with one another and remained active on the market, they may justifiably be called on to adduce evidence that that concerted action did not have any effect on their conduct on the market in question."
"It is thus apparent from the case law that the provision of sensitive business information, such as the exchange of information regarding pricing, including future pricing, and information regarding supply and demand, including in relation to future supply and demand (in particular production volumes or increases or decreases in shipments), makes it possible to reduce uncertainty as to the conduct of competitors on the market and to create conditions of competition which do not correspond to the normal conditions of the market and, consequently, gives rise to a concerted practice having as its object the restriction of competition, within the meaning of art.101(1) TFEU."
The standard of proof and evidence required
"55. Since the prohibition on participating in anti-competitive agreements and the penalties which offenders may incur are well known, it is normal for the activities which those practices and those agreements entail to take place in a clandestine fashion, for meetings to be held in secret, most frequently in a non-member country, and for the associated documentation to be reduced to a minimum.
56. Even if the Commission discovers evidence explicitly showing unlawful contact between traders, such as the minutes of a meeting, it will normally be only fragmentary and sparse, so that it is often necessary to reconstitute certain details by deduction.
57. In most cases, the existence of an anti-competitive practice or agreement must be inferred from a number of coincidences and indicia which, taken together, may in the absence of another plausible explanation, constitute evidence of an infringement of the competition rules."
"36. … it must be recalled that, according to the case law of the Court, in most cases the existence of a concerted practice or an agreement must be inferred from a number of coincidences and indicia which, taken together, may, in the absence of another plausible explanation, constitute evidence of an infringement of the competition rules (see, to that effect, judgment in Total Marketing Services SA v European Commission (C-634/13 P) EU:C:2015:614 at para 26 and the case law cited).
37. Consequently, the principle of effectiveness requires that an infringement of EU competition law may be proven not only by direct evidence, but also through indicia, provided that they are objective and consistent."
See also per Kokott AG in T-Mobile Netherlands at paras 87-89, stating that it would be incompatible with the EU principle of effectiveness for national courts to impose on competition authorities or private litigants criteria for proof of an infringement of art 101 or 102 "that are so onerous as to render such proof impossible in practice or excessively difficult."
F. THE CULTURE AND ATTITUDE OF THE MNOs
"In all regions in which competitors are present, minutes should be drawn up outlining the discussions held. In this way, what takes place at the meeting is duly recorded for future consultation, avoiding undue speculation over what had been discussed…. Do not forget that a lack of rigour in recording information or meetings in documents may give rise to significant risks for Telefónica, even in the absence of any infringement of the law."
"Every meeting which I have had [with a competitor] were, you know, pre-discussed or was, let's say, planned: there was a topic behind that. Sometimes it might have not been, you know, exactly documented, but most of the topics were following a clear agenda, pre-discussed, and then discussing the topic in that group."
And he said that for informal meetings, he would expect that there would have been an agenda agreed beforehand, by which I do not think he meant a specific document headed "Agenda" but an exchange prior to the meeting specifying what the meeting would discuss.
"… we're both senior people and we know what we can and cannot discuss with competitors.
So he was a very serious man and I take things very seriously so I wouldn't have conversations lightly."
Mr Humm for his part said that he felt comfortable addressing different topics without, in effect, trespassing into any competition law issues. He said, when asked in respect of another conversation with a competitor why no attempt was made to specify what would be discussed:
"… typically the people I interacted with knew what was and what was not allowed to be said."
I think that encapsulates what was a prevailing attitude among many of the senior executives that since they were responsible people who knew well what they cannot talk about with each other, any recommendations to set out the topics for discussion in advance and make some record afterwards were not really important for them.
"… the distribution model in the UK was substantially different from other markets in which Telefónica operated. The Spanish model of distribution (and that which was very largely replicated in the markets of its other subsidiaries) was almost exclusively direct sales with very little, if any, role for indirect distributors and/or no handset subsidies. As a result, the margin achieved by Tef SA and its other subsidiaries was significantly higher than the margin TUK could achieve in the UK market, where (as noted above) indirect channels played a substantial role in the distribution model. This was because Tef SA and its subsidiaries in other markets did not have to make substantial commission payments to indirect channels, whereas TUK did, which had a significant impact on its profitability."
"… the worst possible thing to happen to a network is to be commoditised. So if we're – if people view network connectivity like they view water or gas, it becomes very difficult to differentiate and build customer brand loyalty and customer lifetime value."
"Due to [the indirect retailers'] size of share they create a "prisoner's dilemma" for MNOs meaning any unilateral move carries a high degree of risk, hence a lack of structural change in recent times"
G. 2012: THE O2 DECISION - ALLEGED COLLUSION WITH EE
"• Choices do not exist today — Create over next 24mths
• Customers choose Indirects for reach, brand, choice and perception of independence
• They will always be part of O2's mix as long as customers choose to shop with them and the economic return is optimised for O2
• We need Indirects today! They deliver 40% of our new business in Pay Monthly"
"1. Direct is still our first choice every time, we need to maximise every opportunity for acquisition
2. Accept Indirect is part of the industry mix, there will always be customers who chose to shop in the indirect channel, but choose profitable partners and seek over time to reduce volumes going to CPW & P4U in particular
3. Any additional distribution we create must be cost-effective and flexible and we will look for ways to optimise existing distribution against these criteria"
In that presentation, the option of withdrawing from or significantly reducing volumes with the indirects was dismissed on the basis that that capacity would be taken up by a competitor and that 40% of O2's post-pay acquisitions were provided through the indirects, which was too much for O2 currently to absorb through its direct channels. There was no distinct consideration at this time of the possibility of exiting from one of the two major indirects.
"The business was going backwards from a revenue and profitability perspective and, clearly, O2 was not as relevant in the market as it needed to be. We needed to make significant changes to the operation of the business in order to increase O2's relevance in the market and to increase TUK's profitability."
Among other costs savings, O2 was therefore concerned to reduce its distribution costs. And the day before the ExComm presentation described above, another internal presentation on "Consumer Postpay Profitability" reported that direct channels were twice as profitable as the indirect channels.
"1. Can we agree the proposal? No, as it would be heavily loss making business
a. O2's gross profit is around 70% as for every £10 we bill the customer we incur around £3 of Interconnect costs. P4U propose paying them 80% of New customer billed revenues (70% for Upgrade customers) so at a high level we would lose money. As we then went down the P&L and incurred costs for Voice and Network, the loss would further increase
b. Broadly speaking P4U customers currently make us £100 as do CPW. The proposal would turn this profit into a very rough £100 loss per customer.
c. Finally compared to our latest "market rate deal" agreed recently with CPW, the deal looks expensive. We pay CPW £85 at point of connection and then 50% revenue share. If you move the £85 fixed amount into the revenue share the outcome would be broadly 60%. P4U are asking for 80% for New……..
2. We need to be in P4U as they provide access to a unique customer segment and are likely to become the no.1 Indirect player medium term. So what is our counter proposal? The CPW deal "streamlined" is a reasonable response and would pay slightly more than current deal
a. So our counter proposal tomorrow should be £85 fixed fee plus 50% revenue share over life of contract
i. CPW enjoy revenue shares after customer contract 24m term expires AND the right to Upgrade data. Neither of these elements would be offered to P4U. We would improve upon the opening £85 + 50% to reflect these benefits if discussions are entered into so outcome maybe say £100 + 55% revenue share
b. We wish to pay slightly more than now as we recognise P4U are committing to give us a higher market share and we wish to stay at the deal table
c. Profit if this deal is agreed would be c.£60 per customer and over multiple customer cycles be broadly equal to CPW
3. What happens if the counter proposal is rejected out of hand? This would mean we would lose a large amount of the 240k Gross delivered by P4U so we would supercharge other channels to protect our overall market share
a. Accept a low level of P4U share — say 10%. +100k
b. + Invest in Direct operations such as O2 Retail Franchise stores, O2 Online and O2 Retail stores. +50k
c. + Increase market share purchased in CPW from say 25% to 30%. +50k
d. + Do a deal with Other partners such as Al Comm's. +50k
e. In event any of these options don't deliver to required level, purchase of up to 100k via Tesco would be a (painful) fall back option"
"Although you can not at this stage agree with the proposal we sent across yesterday as more work is needed we have agreed the following:
O2 are looking for a deal that reflects their natural market share (30 %)
Both parties will put whatever resource required to get to an agreement within the next two weeks
On value we agree that the base value is that paid for the deferred deal in place for the first half of 2012. O2 recognize that an increment is required to get to the volume/value required.
P4u recognize that approval from Telefónica will take longer although it is targeted to achieve this during July."
"I confirm we are looking to conclude a deal to secure our natural market share, on terms consistent with a) both sides making an appropriate return, b) maintaining (and growing) the value of the market and c) giving you value consistent with our current contract (i.e. a deal not predicated on improving our value just at your expense). We are open to reflect volume / value mix opportunities in the value share / market share in the agreement. In that context we are committed to driving to agreement between the teams in the next 2 weeks so that a deal with a UK board recommendation can be table [sic] in Madrid during July in line with the formal authorisation process."
Mr Dunne explained in his evidence that he was saying that O2 would ensure that the new terms would not result in P4u being worse off in total commission than under that current arrangement, if they delivered greater volumes to O2. And he said this about the reference to Madrid:
"I cannot now recall whether my reference in that email to requiring formal authorisation from Madrid was an explanation of our governance model or a negotiating tactic. In fact, both explanations hold true. I did not have delegated authority to sign any renewal contract, as the contract value quantum would have been above the limit of my authority. At the same time, in these situations, the pressure would have been different if P4U believed the local team had absolute authority versus thinking that we still needed authority from Madrid. I would have used this sort of positioning in order to retain flexibility."
"• O2 potentially approaches a critical point in the evolution of the consumer marketplace, with risks coming from new sources such as LTE driven change and customer handset subsidy reductions. These risks are exacerbated by pressure on customers revenues, fierce MNO competition and increasing economic influence of key handset providers
We have multiple options available to mitigate these market risks such as securing market share with key Indirect partners such as Phones 4u over the medium term, exiting from one (or more) Indirect partners to encourage wider market changes or attempting to extend existing contracts to address specific key market risks such as LTE [i.e. 4G]"
The slides outlined the key elements of the proposed new deal, stating:
"This new deal gives T.UK and Phones 4u stronger risk alignment vs. today and meets medium term requirements against the intense market pressures we are expecting to face including LTE and customer revenue declines
• Revenue share aligns both parties in keeping customers longer and growing spend
• Customer Handset investment share means both benefit from reductions in customer subsidy encouraging strategic market value improvement"
However, unlike an earlier draft, the final presentation did not positively recommend signing a new deal based on the agreed heads of terms but set out also alternative options of exiting P4u, attempting to reach a more favourable contract, or exploring a JV to with another MNO to purchase P4u.
"… we should try and break the model from a position of strength but we are not there now = deal"
However, the O2 team assessed the proposed new deal from P4u as unlikely to provide more value than the existing agreement and as considerably less valuable than O2's agreement with CPW.[9]
a) to produce a briefing on the structure of the UK distribution market for Mr Alvarez-Pallete (the then chair and CEO of Telefónica Europe); and
b) to "determine the 4-5 terms that need to change in the latest P4U negotiations to make a new deal acceptable."
"- they believe execution risk in current plan too high for the proposed outcome
- they believe the strategy (we and others adopt) is flawed and is a big factor in the declining market
- they want a plan to break the downward spiral in the market and believe, despite past experience, that others will follow."
And he added:
"Based on the sentiment yesterday, the following are components:-
- differentiating retention from acquisition
- changing direct / indirect mix
- ability to raise prices across the board
- handset accounting and handset financing"
As Mr Dunne expressed it in his evidence:
"Spain had thrown [the draft 3 Year Plan] out and said you need to think again, you are not being bold enough in the decisions you are making."
I consider that this weighed heavily with the executives of O2 at their meeting shortly afterwards, on 17 July 2012.
"I believe that at the time the profitability of the UK market made other MNOs more willing to potentially take the risk, and -- and we thought that the profitability for them of the indirect channel would probably be also low, as it was for us. Therefore, the incentive for them to follow was bigger, and the risk for us [if] we could move volume to these new channels was lower.
So it's not that I was thinking this is definitely going to work, but the balance between the risk and the -- and the value may be worth it."
"Game Changing Options:
• We've assessed 2 bold commercial moves: Distribution change and a major Price increase/Subsidy removal
• For distribution, we've been able to clarify the implications for 2013 and beyond. Despite the lack of a positive short-term financial benefit we remain confident that distribution is an area to address strategically
• For pricing/subsidy, we've reviewed the option of further price increases although must be mindful that competitors have shown no sign of following our strategy. In fact quite the reverse"
"Even when market follows there isn't a significant financial benefit in the short-term. However we remain focussed that Distribution must be addressed strategically"
"• A distribution shift would be financially negligible in 2013 but does have strategic benefit in subsequent years
• A major price increase/subsidy removal would represent a significant financial opportunity in the short-term but would jeopardise TUK in the long-term
• We therefore recommend to implement the handset financing proposition and consider the Indirect Distribution move"
"1) A need to demonstrate ambition to Group [i.e. Telefónica Europe / Telefónica SA] that we will change the market
2) Realistically the conditions are not present in … our market place for the industry or individual operators to coerce change in the indirect market. In addition we have a poor track record as an industry in the UK and recent events in Spain has shown that success is hard to achieve across the market.
3) Pragmatically we still need strong distribution in the short term as we face a challenging 12-18 months given our position on LTE. A heroic withdrawal from the indirect market would damage our business in the short term."
The reference to the challenge on LTE (i.e. 4G) concerned the fact that it was known that EE was about to introduce a 4G network offering whereas O2 would only be able to offer 4G later in 2013.
"O2 UK strategy – is volume required if handset solution successful? Likelihood other operators will follow."
"To make any strategic move in the indirect channel viable there must exist certain conditions...
1. We must have financial strength as a company
2. There must exist an economic need in the market place that would incentivise other operators to follow
3. To avoid negative share implications other MNO's must pursue the same strategy
4. The option needs to be economically viable with full understanding of short term effects on trading positions
5. We need to have a unique and compelling proposition that truly differentiates from [sic] our competitors"
"1) Agreement from the Board not to renew our gross connections contract with P4U when it expires 31 January 2013
2) Agreement to continue to trade with P4U on upgrades as per the existing contract until January 2014
3) Above actions subject to the degree of confidence to find substitute volumes to cover a significant amount of the 200k gross shortfall resulting from the above decision"
The 200,000 shortfall referred to post-pay connections which, as noted above, was the focus of most MNO planning and evaluation.
"… how we intend to address the volume currently delivered through P4U and how critical the proposed Handset Solution is within this (to drive consistent and attractive Direct offers)"
Mr Evans' request added:
"The above to be used to ensure the region is fully aware of our current position and engaged/supportive of any final decision we take"
Mr Maple's brief email acknowledgment included the remark:
"One issue which I don't wish to lose sight of is that this is currently a unilateral move – presumably the Region can guide us as to whether there is a broader appetite for change?"
"Due to [the indirects'] size of market share, any unilateral moves by MNOs carry a degree of risk, hence the lack of structural change in recent times"[10]
"Now is the right time to exit Phones 4U
It's fundamentally the right thing to do and the timing is right given potential market changing trigger points in the next 2 years…"
The text below included the following:
"It is the first step in effecting long-term market change
Externally
- Bold step ahead of potential competitor contract break points and LTE launches
- Create instability in Indirect space
- Allow great commercial negotiation with other Indirects
Internally
- Build direct trading capability across 2013 in preparation for a further step up in direct mix in 2014
- Force focus on direct channel trading capability
- Focus on long-term profitability"
"• Agreed to 'reject' P4U new agreement which left 2 main options :
o Pull out
o Put an offer on the table which was at least as profitable as CPW
o We agree that O2 would pursue both routes and chose [sic] the most favourable one
• Ronan had spoken to P4U. They offered the new deal at less volume. This was not recommended.
• Discussed the importance of Project 76 [i.e. Project Refresh] in combination of moving more volume to our direct channels
• Discussed the rising importance of Al and the potential risk if they were bought (e.g. by P4U)
• Discussed this as being an opportunity to start a change in the industry distribution models"
"Confidence is high that we can find c 150k out of 200k P4u shortfall"
"We recognise that these represent a reduction from the existing agreement although would bring P4u closer into line with other distribution channels we use.
As I'm sure you're aware we have already bypassed the time by which a contract extension was due to be completed. The Telefónica Group approved our revised distribution plans recognising that we failed to achieve mutually acceptable terms for extending our relationship with you.
The UK 2013 Budget will be finally approved in Madrid on Wednesday 12th with the Chairman. If you decide these terms are acceptable to you, we would need to seek Group approval to amend accordingly. If the terms are unacceptable, I suggest we recognise that we're not able to find a mutually acceptable solution. Hope this provides the clarity you were looking for."
"Based on the numbers I have this proposal would produce a G[ross] P[rofit] per connection of £40 and as a result it [sic] something that we cannot accept. This amount would not pay for the variable costs in store."
Mr Dobson explained in his evidence that this level of gross profit would not have covered P4u's overhead costs.
The Landmark Lunch and subsequent exchanges
"… I think there is a real danger that loose language, coupled with aggressive poaching communications, means that your organisation is not living up to the spirit, or even the letter, of our agreement."
"To the best of my recollection, Mr Dunne explained his concern that because EE would be launching 4G well in advance of O2 and the other MNOs, EE had the power to determine the price premium for 4G across the market. If we priced 4G aggressively, the other MNOs would have to follow suit, or else they would struggle to make any impact on the market because they would always lose out on price.
Mr Dunne was worried that if EE offered 4G at a small premium, this would result in the cannibalisation of the 3G market. 4G was a far superior product, and if it only cost customers a small amount extra (e.g. £5 per month), a significant proportion of 3G customers would want to upgrade to 4G (and, therefore, at that time, move to EE)."
"… I was nervous because it -- it felt like that it -- it wasn't -- it was not okay. And secondly, I was nervous, as I said before, because I wasn't really sure about what he wanted, what the details was. And I wasn't really sure about, you know, if -- if this was inappropriate or appropriate."
"At the lunch with Ronan Dunne (RD), RD raised a concern about value in the market, and concerns about the pricing strategy behind 4G. He was keen to emphasise that the opportunity of 4G was to establish a pricing structure that recognised its enhanced value. He raised a difficult scenario whereby discounting on 3G by other competitors and/or retail channels could lead quickly to a reassessment of that premium pricing in order to respond, and that would devalue the market.
He believed the risk of this was particularly acute with the indirect channels, for example Carphone Warehouse, and that an excess of supply in the distribution market contributed to that risk. He appeared to suggest, you believe, that such discounting could be de-risked if that excess of supply was dealt with in some way. RD talked about making some "unilateral steps", and talked about playing some "big cards". Your concern was that the implication of that might have been to suggest they were willing to pull some volume from the indirect channels with a view to protecting that value, but wanted to de-risk that volume being taken up by EE.
While you found the discussion surprising, you believe you were careful not to respond on those points, other than to talk in general about your public strategy for EE, to increase market share and to grow your business. You have said to the extent that you understood what he was trying to say, which at the time was difficult to piece together, you did not agree with any of his suggestions or take up the point in any way so as to suggest agreement or acceptance of any proposals."
"Good to see you last week, as far as I can recall the only outstanding action was for me to talk to my regulatory team about a possible retail / distribution "Oscar", or some other form of ownership in that indirect distribution space, see whether they think that would be possible and what that would look like from a competition law perspective.
The initial reaction was that there would be significant regulatory/competition law hurdles to that, but that if they understood in more detail what was being proposed then they can take it away and come back with a more considered response. Not sure how you want to do that, whether you could send us something in writing (if your regulatory team was comfortable with that), or otherwise set up a meeting with the relevant parties (I would guess with some of the regulatory lawyers as well).
Let me know how you want to take that forward."
Mr Dunne responded with a brief message on 1 October:
"Thanks for your note. Leave it with me for a few days and I will pull together some proposed [n]ext steps."
"Good luck for your launch and thanks for your contribution in these past 4 weeks. When you have fully announced your launch plan etc. I suggest we catch up for a coffee to follow up our lunch"
Mr Swantee accepted in cross-examination that the reference to "your contribution" was probably to his input into the negotiation of the Standstill Agreement and resolution of the spectrum dispute between EE and O2.
"Mr Laurence explained that he understood that EE was proposing to charge a £5 per month premium for 4G, and that he believed a £10 per month premium was more appropriate. My assumption, although I do not recall that Mr Laurence said this explicitly, was that he had the same concerns as Mr Dunne, namely that if EE led the way with an aggressively priced 4G product, that would exert downwards pressure on the 3G market, and may also undermine the other MNOs plans to launch 4G at a higher price point in the future."
Mr Swantee said that he did not engage at all with this suggestion, and made it clear to Mr Laurence that he was not comfortable discussing anything to do with 4G pricing.
"From what I can recall, Mr Dunne was concerned that Apple was taking advantage of its position in the market to exert pressure on the MNOs to accept unreasonably restrictive terms. His view was that one way to address this issue was for the MNOs to coordinate and use their collective bargaining power in some way to redress the balance between Apple and the individual MNOs.
I was immediately concerned that, again, what Mr Dunne was trying to discuss, and what he appeared to be proposing, was not appropriate. I recall that I told him specifically that I was not comfortable to discuss EE's negotiations with Apple, and that I tried to move the conversation onto another topic as quickly as possible. I remember feeling really annoyed that Mr Dunne was trying to have this sort of conversation with me again. It was unbelievable…."
"(a) Mr Dunne explained that he was "wanting to build price sustainability" and that Apple was a "key part of that", but he wanted to explore ways in which the MNOs could "try to restrict the market impact of Apple in saturated markets";
(b) Mr Dunne said that he was sharing this view with Mr Swantee and Mr Laurence to form a "broad view" across the "big operators" about the need to "rebalance [the] influence of that one handset manufacturer [Apple] in the market overall"; and
(c) Mr Swantee explained that he was "uncomfortable to talk about it", and that EE "don't want to comment on [the] contract with Apple" ."
"I have said that in broad terms these conversations raise the prospect of collusion, and anti-competitive agreements between you, which is extremely serious. While you have made it clear you have no intention of taking direction from these conversations, nor did you believe you gave or implied any complicity or agreement to those propositions, and indeed that you purposely avoided any impression that you were open to coordination of behaviour, we have since considered whether you should have taken further steps to rebut those proposals, and whether we should now do so, informally or formally.
The options we discussed were;
(a) An informal conversation with all parties, to express your concerns in retrospect at the possible intentions of the communications, and to firmly rebut any notion of complicity or agreement with those proposals;
(b) A more formal meeting, possibly with lawyers, to present the same feedback and clarify our position, and also warn that further dialogue or communication in that vein would inevitably force us to make a more formal disclosure to the competition authorities; or
(c) A disclosure of some form directly to the competition authorities; or
(d) Document these conversations, monitor their behaviour going forward, and prepare a more robust response should any such conversations occur again in the future.
I have since spoken to external competition legal experts, at Slaughter & May, and in conclusion of those discussions my advice is that on the basis of the discussions as reported, it would be acceptable to adopt option (d).
Option (c) would mean that we would have to make admissions to the competition authorities of unlawful behaviour, and I do not believe that is appropriate given the conversations and circumstances.
Option (a) and (b) are something we could think about going forward, but the risk is that this causes a protective response from those parties, possibly even some form of whistleblowing process themselves, which would put us in a more difficult position (having not taken that initiative ourselves).
Given that no indication has been given to the parties involved that we were in any way intending to follow up on their suggestions or approaches, and in fact have not done so (clearly with the published pricing this week not reflecting any agreement with those proposals), the risks of any action being warranted against you or EE for your part in those discussions is contained and moderated. To the extent that you have flagged them to me, you have adopted the right course of action, and the record of that, and our agreed plan going forward, is sufficient for the time being.
I will follow up with a high level script for you to review, which can form the basis of your response for any future similar calls or meetings. I would also suggest that you avoid any scenarios where this is more likely to occur, in particular one to one meetings without other colleague involvement or legal participation."
"Indications of intentions to encourage certain collaborative behaviours included references to actions by o2 that would otherwise be highly sensitive and confidential to the o2 business, and could only have been made to influence decisions by EE to support such actions. For example with reference to value in the distribution space, o2 was indicated to be "willing to play some big cards"."
"… as far as I can recall, the discussion was more preventative and forward-looking than it was about the past — i.e. Mr Blendis expressing his concern and reinforcing that inappropriate discussions should not happen in the future."
She felt that "super diplomatic" was a fair characterisation of Mr Blendis' approach. Although she now cannot remember doing so, she said that she would have spoken to Mr Laurence about this afterwards and she accepted that she may have had a follow-up telephone call with Mr Blendis, as stated in his evidence, but had no recollection of that.
"[Mr Dunne] doesn't accept he said anything that terrible but acknowledges he asked some questions & posed some scenarios and Olaf didn't respond. It won't happen again, and they appreciate the way we've dealt with it."
"The primary purpose of this lunch meeting was to settle the dust after the spectrum dispute. I also took the opportunity, after clearing the air, to float a possible idea to improve distribution efficiency
.… in the course of our conversation I explained to Mr Swantee that I thought the time could be right to consider some sort of initiative to improve the efficiency of distribution in the market. To my mind, we had an opportunity to work across the industry, as we had done with Project Oscar, and I floated this idea with Mr Swantee. I cannot recall whether or not I expressly said this to Mr Swantee during the course of the lunch but I believed that the market generally was struggling with excess distribution leading to significant inefficiencies and the launch of 4G could magnify that problem, not least because of the increased handset costs and the resultant extended contract life….
It appears Mr Swantee's confusion and misunderstanding have stemmed from my suggestion that the timing of the launch of 4G might offer a good opportunity to consider a Project Oscar type distribution initiative."
a) the Landmark Lunch came a few days after the O2 off-site meeting of 12-13 September 2012 at which O2 took what Mr Dunne described as the "conditional decision" to exit from P4u for new connections. Although that would please Telefónica Europe, Mr Dunne was well aware of the concern expressed internally of the potential adverse effect on O2 of such an exit if the other MNOs took up all the volume. If he had been able to "de-risk" (as Mr Swantee notably saw it at the time) that eventuality, it would have given a valuable boost to this strategy;
b) both the attempt to influence EE's strategy regarding 4G pricing (as I have found it to be) and my finding regarding Mr Dunne's subsequent call to Mr Swantee concerning negotiations with Apple show that Mr Dunne had a rather cavalier attitude to competition law compliance;
c) on 2 January 2013, Mr Evans sent a text message to Mr Dunne stating:
"Our gross connections through Indirects were very high potentially as a result of EE in dispute. Reassuring Olaf given our impending move may be helpful to strengthen the Operators resolve against the Indirects"
O2 accepted that the "impending move" was a reference to O2's non-renewal of its contract for new connections with P4u. Mr Evans said this was "a poor thought", that he is now somewhat embarrassed that he had sent this message, and he stressed that O2 never acted on it. I accept all that, but I think it is nonetheless significant that he sent a text in those terms, mentioning specifically Mr Swantee as the person to be reassured (something that Mr Evans could not explain). Although Mr Evans thought that he may have been aware in advance that Mr Dunne was going to meet Mr Swantee in September 2012, he said that Mr Dunne did not tell him anything afterwards about that meeting. I have to say that I find that incredible. As the CFO of O2, Mr Evans was closely involved at the helm of O2 in developing O2's strategy and 3YP. The EE launch of its 4G network was hugely significant (Mr Dunne even described the importance of the Standstill Agreement as "mission critical") and the level at which EE's new 4G connections were priced would have material implications on the pricing of 3G (as Mr Dunne pointed out to Mr Swantee) and therefore for O2's profit margins. Having raised that issue with Mr Swantee, it would have been extraordinary if Mr Dunne did not tell Mr Evans what transpired. Furthermore, the "Project Oscar-type" venture, which Mr Swantee agreed to go away and consider, would also have been a matter of direct interest to O2's CFO. If, as I consider likely, Mr Evans did know something of the conversation which Mr Dunne had had with Mr Swantee, his reference to "reassuring Olaf" and strengthening the "resolve against the Indirects" is consistent with Mr Dunne's effort to persuade Mr Swantee to support O2 in an impending move regarding indirect distribution. I also note that while Mr Dunne said in evidence that he had regarded Mr Evans' text as an inappropriate suggestion, it is relatively clear that he did not say that to Mr Evans at the time.
Analysis
a) Mr Dunne was communicating information about O2's future strategy regarding the indirect retailers which was commercially sensitive;
b) such unilateral provision of confidential information to a competitor is sufficient to give rise to a concerted practice;
c) Mr Swantee did not object or protest to Mr Dunne at the time and EE did not subsequently publicly distance itself from the exchange so as to preclude its participation;
d) the Anic presumption applies since both O2 and EE continued to trade in this market and neither EE nor O2 rebutted the presumption that it was influenced by the "exchange".
"… the fact that only one of the participants at the meetings in question reveals its intentions is not sufficient to exclude the possibility of an agreement or concerted practice."
"… the argument that that exchange was not anti-competitive owing to the lack of reciprocity or the fact that the applicant itself had already decided to increase prices is not relevant. According to the case-law, an exchange of information does not have to be reciprocal for the principle of autonomous conduct on the market to be undermined. It follows from the case-law that the disclosure of sensitive information removes uncertainty as to the future conduct of a competitor and thus directly or indirectly influences the strategy of the recipient of the information …."
"A collusive approach expressed with circumspection may well be sufficient to facilitate the substitution of practical cooperation for the risks of competition. It is a question of substance whether the information is capable of removing or reducing uncertainty and facilitating practical cooperation."
I accept that: as pointed out in Whish and Bailey on Competition Law (10th edn, 2021) at p. 120, a finding of concerted practice is "highly fact-specific". It is a question of fact whether the information disclosed is sufficient in all the circumstances to put the recipient in a favourable position in terms of removing uncertainty regarding the discloser's conduct on the market.
"187. The traders did indeed discuss the composition of their portfolios and in doing so exchanged confidential information, outside of the context of a potential transaction.
188. However, contrary to what is claimed by the Commission, that institution does not establish to the requisite legal standard that that discussion gave the traders an informational advantage that may have allowed them to adjust their trading strategies as a result.
189. First, the impression that emerges from that conversation is that the HSBC trader is boasting to the Deutsche Bank trader about a good trade that he made and the latter is congratulating him. The information provided, which is neither precise nor detailed, does not make it possible to read into that conversation the explanation of a 'strategy' which, as it was known by the Deutsche Bank trader in isolation, placed him in such a favourable situation as against his competitors that the Commission was able to infer that the object of that conversation was to restrict competition.
190. Second, as the applicants note, without being contradicted by the Commission, the pieces of information provided by the traders on their portfolios do not cover the interest rate tenors concerned or the extent of the positions concerned.
191. In the absence of more precise information of that order, it cannot be concluded that that discussion reduced or removed the degree of uncertainty on the market in such a way that the Commission could infer therefrom an impact on the normal course of pricing components in the EIRD sector without having to examine its effects."
"… contrary to the applicant's assertions, that information does not constitute a general comment regarding price levels or the expression of a general rule based on experience. Even though no precise figures are given in the minutes, that information nevertheless discloses to the other participants the content of the negotiations in which NCC was engaged with its customers for the following year and its decision or intention concerning its own conduct on the European market with regard to pricing …."
"By participating at one of those meetings, each participant knew that during the following meetings its most important competitor, the leader in the industry concerned, would reveal its future price intentions. Independently of any other reason for participating in those meetings, there was always one at least which was to eliminate in advance the uncertainty concerning the future conduct of competitors."
"… it is necessary to reject the argument that the minutes of the meeting do not refer to any reaction by the applicant to the information shared, so that no objectionable conduct can be imputed to it. Indeed, as is apparent from the case-law referred to in paragraphs 105 to 111 above, the mere disclosure of sensitive business information to competitors amounts to a prohibited practice, since it removes uncertainty as to the future conduct of a competitor and thus directly or indirectly influences the strategy of the recipient of the information."
"43. …it must be pointed out that the case at issue in the main proceedings, as presented by the referring court, is characterised by the fact that the administrator of the information system at issue sent a message concerning a common anticompetitive action to the travel agencies participating in that system, a message which could only be consulted in the 'Notices' section of the information system in question and to which those agencies did not expressly respond. Following the dispatch of that message, a technical restriction was implemented which limited the discounts that could be applied to bookings made via that system to 3%. Although that restriction did not prevent the travel agencies concerned from granting discounts greater than 3% to their customers, it nevertheless required them to take additional technical steps in order to do so.
44. Those circumstances are capable of justifying a finding of a concertation between the travel agencies which were aware of the content of the message at issue in the main proceedings, which could be regarded as having tacitly assented to a common anticompetitive practice, provided that the two other elements constituting a concerted practice, noted in paragraph 42 above, are also present. Depending on the referring court's assessment of the evidence, a travel agency may be presumed to have participated in that concertation if it was aware of the content of that message."
"46. In my opinion also, the concept of a concerted practice does imply reciprocity. A concerted action is necessarily the result of a consensus. However, the level of formalisation of that consensus should not be subject to overly rigid requirements, since this would undermine the versatility inherent in the concept of a concerted practice.
47. In particular, reciprocity should equally encompass tacit approval.
48. However, the possibility of inferring tacit approval, and therefore of establishing the existence of a consensus to cooperate rather than compete, depends on the context of the communication.
49. First, where an undertaking receives information relating to an illicit initiative and does not oppose it, its acquiescence in that initiative may be inferred from the absence of response, provided that the circumstances are propitious to the formation of a tacit consensus. The lack of opposition to an illicit communication is reprehensible because, under certain circumstances, mere lack of reaction from the addressee will lead the other party or parties to believe that the addressee subscribes to the illicit initiative and will comply with it. Therefore, in order to infer knowing participation of the addressee in a concerted practice, the context of interaction must be such that the addressee may be deemed to appreciate that the competitor will consider its silence as an approval and will rely on mutual action, even in the absence of response."
"22. Counsel for all the Appellants submitted that many of the observations in the cases from which these propositions are drawn need to be understood in the light of the particular facts. They pointed out that it is just as essential to a concerted practice as it is to an agreement that there be a consensus between the two or more undertakings said to be parties to the agreement or concerted practice. That is true, but concerted practices can take many different forms, and the courts have always been careful not to define or limit what may amount to a concerted practice for this purpose." [emphasis added]
"81. According to settled case-law, it is sufficient for the Commission to show that the undertaking concerned participated in meetings at which anti-competitive agreements were concluded, without manifestly opposing them, to prove to the requisite standard that the undertaking participated in the cartel. Where participation in such meetings has been established, it is for that undertaking to put forward evidence to establish that its participation in those meetings was without any anti-competitive intention by demonstrating that it had indicated to its competitors that it was participating in those meetings in a spirit that was different from theirs….
82. The reason underlying that principle of law is that, having participated in the meeting without publicly distancing itself from what was discussed, the undertaking has given the other participants to believe that it subscribed to what was decided there and would comply with it.
83. The principles established in the case-law cited at paragraph 81 of this judgment also apply to participation in the implementation of a single agreement. In order to establish that an undertaking has participated in such an agreement, the Commission must show that the undertaking intended to contribute by its own conduct to the common objectives pursued by all the participants and that it was aware of the actual conduct planned or put into effect by other undertakings in pursuit of the same objectives or that it could reasonably have foreseen it and that it was prepared to take the risk….
84. In that regard, a party which tacitly approves of an unlawful initiative, without publicly distancing itself from its content or reporting it to the administrative authorities, effectively encourages the continuation of the infringement and compromises its discovery. That complicity constitutes a passive mode of participation in the infringement which is therefore capable of rendering the undertaking liable in the context of a single agreement.
85. Nor is the fact that an undertaking does not act on the outcome of a meeting having an anti-competitive purpose such as to relieve it of responsibility for the fact of its participation in a cartel, unless it has publicly distanced itself from what was agreed in the meeting …."
"… it is indeed the understanding which the other participants in a cartel have of the intention of the undertaking concerned which is of critical importance when assessing whether that undertaking sought to distance itself from the unlawful agreement. Accordingly, the Court of First Instance was fully entitled, in paragraph 247 of the judgment under appeal, to rule that the mere fact that the appellant had left the meeting of 4 October 1994 could not, in itself, be regarded as a public distancing from the cartel at issue and that it was for ADM to provide evidence that the members of the cartel considered that ADM was ending its participation."
"It is apparent from the case-law that the communication that is intended to constitute a public distancing from an anti-competitive practice must be expressed firmly and unambiguously, so that the other participants in the cartel fully understand the intention of the undertaking concerned…."
"… Ronan would not have left the lunch and taken my, you know, feedback/discussion as a green light. As I've said before, I'm convinced that what I said, the tone of voice I used and -- and, you know, the way I -- I acted that he was not believing that I was going to look at his pricing or any proposal from the competition. I would not take any -- any follow-up or activity from that. Zero."
"… it must be observed that the wording used by the applicant's President in his letter to the President of FNAS is too general to amount to a public distancing. The letter merely expresses concern in relation to the discussions on prices that might have taken place between the participants and contains a reminder of the applicant's internal policy in respect of competition law and, in that context, requests the President of FNAS to take steps to avoid such an anti-competitive practice; it does not, however, state that such a practice had actually occurred or that that letter was linked to the fact that its representative had initiated the concerted action in relation to pricing."
In my view, the position was analogous in the present case. Mr Blendis had been told by Mr Swantee to be "super-diplomatic" in his meeting with the general counsel of O2 and I think that is exactly what he sought to do.
H. 2012: THE O2 DECISION - ALLEGED COLLUSION WITH VODAFONE
a) Since Mr Dunne had sought to 'derisk' O2's position as regards EE, it would have been equally relevant to seek to do so with the other MNO for which P4u obtained connections;
b) While Mr Dunne's relations with Mr Swantee at the time were frosty, he had much better relations with Mr Laurence; so if he was prepared to make such an advance to Mr Swantee, he would have had no hesitation in doing so towards Mr Laurence; and
c) Mr Laurence showed both by his telephone call to Mr Swantee regarding 4G pricing and his exchange of information with Mr Dunne regarding negotiations with Apple that he was prepared to engage in anticompetitive, or potentially anticompetitive conduct.
"There is an indication that some discussions have been co-ordinated with other parties such as Vodafone. Calls were often referenced by indications such as, "I've spoken to x, and now I'm speaking to you…."
Counsel for P4u submitted that the word "often" "must have reflected a contemporaneous understanding that Mr Dunne had, on multiple occasions, referred to coordination in this way." However, there was in fact only one inappropriate call from Mr Dunne (regarding Apple), as opposed to the in-person discussion at the Landmark Lunch. The two other calls came from Mr Laurence and Mr Harrison. This note was not drafted like a legal document and I do not see that it can sensibly be regarded as a basis for finding that Mr Dunne must have referred to Vodafone on another occasion as well as in the phone call about Apple.
"A unilateral move will NOT create a change in UK distribution. If others follow, the change will come about."
I regard this as no more than a general report by O2 to Telefónica Europe, summarising the overall picture at a time when all the UK MNOs were known to be concerned about the strength of indirect retailers, and it does not in my view advance the matters at issue one way or the other.
I. 2013: O2/TELEFÓNICA AND VODAFONE
"it logically followed, given our position in 2013, that it made sense to get out of P4U altogether, so that the O2 logo was removed from above the door at P4U and customers realised that they needed to go to an O2 store to connect to our network and we had a chance to sell to them directly. Just hanging in with P4U purely for upgrades was commercially untenable for us in the longer term. Similarly, the volume of SIM only sales was sufficiently low to be immaterial to our exit decision and P4U sales of SIM only connections could not have supported a deal alone."
Mr Evans said that an exit from P4u for upgrade and SIM-only sales "was logical and straightforward" once O2 had decided to exit for post-pay new connections.
"O2 was potentially surrendering a very profitable cohort of customers – the proportion of P4u's customers who were already connected to O2's network and who might buy an upgrade connection when they visited a P4u store."
And he pointed out that late 2013 was a time when O2 was rolling out its 4G network across the UK, which would lead to a high demand for 4G upgrades. Mr Dobson similarly said that the decision did not make commercial sense to him.
"1. Increase the volume traded in our most profitable channels, i.e. Direct and within that enable online growth
2. Maximise the profitability of our Indirect distribution through sound commercial agreements
3. Seek opportunities to change TUK distribution model to increase profitability allowing us to invest in new products and services"
"Last year we agreed to start the journey to exit P4U. There was little value in the deal being offered and the timing was right given other events that were going to happen through 2013 and 2014 [referencing the roll-out of 4G, the Refresh project and the expiry of the upgrades contract with P4u in January 2014] … It was the first step in effecting long-term change to TUK distribution model"
"- A complete withdrawal of P4U business for SIMO and Upgrades in January 2014. The 3 year plan assumes this to be the case
- Working with Bain to model scenarios that could drive further change in the UK distribution space, such as a Carphone Warehouse exit at the end of the contract (end of 2014)"
"After our call this morning I listed all the transformation activity the UK business has undertaken in the past 6 quarters. My understanding is that all of these are aligned to your thinking. At times you have voiced your concern that we don't deliver. Yet the past 6 quarters have demonstrated we are changing and following through with action:
[Listing various steps O2 had taken, including]
Phones4U exit (the only operator to make this move)
…
I am far from comfortable with UK profitability. That's why we're analysing further options for shaping the Indirect Market. I'm confident we'll get to a position whereby we exit from A1, Tesco and potentially CPW. This latter option must be one that Ronan and others in UK support. Our analysis will frame the opportunity and enable a robust discussion to take place.
Let's pick it up next Thursday. What I'd welcome is your view of what action you would take IF you do not support the proposals from the UK team."
"- Exit P4U on gross
- Exit Tesco
- Exit A1 Comms
- Exit Phones4U for Postpay Upgrades & SIMO
- Maximise value of CPW contract
- Exit CPW if TUK direct performance is appropriate"
"? Indirects have a strong foothold in the UK market and are TUK's least profitable channel
- Our primary focus is on driving more business to our most profitable channels i.e. Direct
- TUK has a clear set of objectives for addressing these challenges. We've already made some bold moves (Refresh direct only, P4U exit) and we have an appetite to do more
- We've concluded our analysis with Bain on further radical moves
- The outcome for TUK is dependant [sic] on other MNOs' moves in distribution
- If other MNOs adopt similar strategies there is substantial upside (although OIBDA dilutive in the 3YP)
- Our recommendation is to remain one step ahead of the other MNOs (i.e. option A); taking the actions within our control that would move us towards option Al
- Complete P4U exit
- Continue to pull the levers that maximise our direct performance
- If another MNO makes a radical distribution move we will reassess risk and reward of further TUK moves"
"The subsequent step of complete exit from P4U was more contentious with Pilar [Lopez] wanting to understand what that would mean in terms of volumes (for us and the market) before committing. Mark [Evans] made the point that we are currently half-pregnant with P4U (worst possible long-term state) and that therefore we either need to follow through with a complete exit or potentially reverse our previous decision to exit gross, and that whilst there's a risk, we have to walk away from P4U if we want to have a chance of not going back to square one. Following a positive decision on P4U, we can then talk to CPW about commercials whilst also keeping options open for an exit from them at end 2014.
It was accepted that given the commercial terms (payment in advance), for any exit from P4U in Jan 2014 we need to make a decision by October…. Pilar was keen that we also look at alternatives which we said we'd be happy to look at subject of course to compliance with competition law. She also indicated she is open to remain with indirects but on the basis that the commercial terms are strengthened in our favour. Hence the review at end of July will explore all permutations and seek a collective view of the risks, rewards and preferred outcome."
"The Phones 4u relationship has remained professional throughout this period".
"What if we did not exit P4U, can we negotiate with P4U harder to get more favourable terms (similar or better than CPW) so the indirect volumes can be shared between the two vendors? I.e. so we have more strength in negotiations with CPW in 2014?"
"The decision to exit [P4u]? It is not clear that customers will come more to our shops vs today scenario. I would rather get to the end of 2014 with two indirects than with one."
"the key is to ensure that any future Indirect Channel relationship with Operators rebalances the economics. The worst example we had was with Phones4U who commanded the majority of the economic value of a customer, leaving Telefónica UK with far less than 50% yet still with the requirement to run the network and IT platforms.This in our opinion was weighted too much in their favour and needed to change. Hence over the last year, we jointly agreed to try to reduce the power of the Indirects, starting with withdrawing the gross additions business for postpay customers from Phones4U.
So if the above is the UK distribution strategy, the next question is what further steps can we take to move us in this direction, remembering that ultimately we're not focused on a specific distribution outcome but one which delivers a more efficient economic model.
In October 2013, we have a decision to make. Do we:
A) Exit Phones4U business entirely, removing Postpay upgrades, sim only connections and prepay?
B) Stay at present with Postpay Upgrades, Sim only and Prepay marketed through Phones4U but not reentering for Postpay gross additions?
C) Re-enter Phones4U for Postpay gross additions?"
Mr Evans proceeded to dismiss the third option as unattractive in view of the terms that P4u had offered, and described the second as:
"sub-optimal as Phones4U are able to use our brand which ultimately gives the impression that they continue to offer all network operator services yet Telefónica UK receive only a very small proposition of their custom (at highly unattractive rates). Hence we're putting forward that a full withdrawal is both in our economic benefit short-term and creates momentum (hopefully for others to follow) for longer-term changes in the UK distribution model."
And Mr Evans attached further financial modelling for each option, which he said supported the full withdrawal from P4u. That is the same modelling which O2 had prepared for the MRM to be held on 24 October and the PAC on the following day.
"RD presents the paper. T.UK proposed to stop trading with P4U (SIMO, upgrades and P&G). This move is framed in the LTP debate of the distribution channel strategy. P4U shows the lowest profitability and by exiting this channel T.UK will make visible to others in the market what our channel strategy is.
EC remarks that this step is aligned with the strategic objective, the challenge is not to increase dependency on CPW and leverage on our own channel.
Action:
T.UK. to migrate to direct as many P4U volumes as possible so to try to avoid further dependency on CPW."
"Clearly we were disappointed with the news from your team last week but not altogether surprised."
The 27 January 2014 meeting: part 1
"As far as I was concerned the 27 January 2014 meeting was not going to change any of that but it was agreed by me as a matter of professional courtesy, bearing in mind that TUK had had a long and perfectly cordial relationship with P4U to that point, and as we continually kept our distribution model under review, we may have wanted to re-establish that relationship at some point in the future. I envisaged that P4U would continue to do business and I was keen to ensure that we retained the option to trade with them again. "
"During my meeting with Ronan on 27th January I witnessed some concerning potential anti-competitive behaviour. We were discussing a 3 month extension to our existing deal to discuss further commercial terms. Ronan gave one of the reasons for not wanting to do this was that Cesar Alierta Izuel (CEO, Telefónica) had given commitments to Vettorio Colao (CEO, Vodafone) and Eva Castillo Sanz (CEO, Telefónica Europe) the same commitments to Phillip Humm (Regional CEO, Vodafone Europe). He went on to say that he was less sure of the intentions of EE with respect to independent distribution because Olaf Swantee (CEO, EE) was not inclined to discuss EE distribution plans. I believe this behaviour to be inappropriate but do not think we should do anything at this time at risk of damaging network relationships."
"… one or more of Telefónica and/or Telefónica Europe and/or O2:
(a) Unlawfully colluded with and/or made unlawful commitments to Vodafone Group that prevented renewal of the O2 agreement. P4U is unable to identify the precise content of the commitments but avers that such commitments must logically have involved one or more of the following elements:
i. A commitment to cease or reduce supplies to P4U (alternatively, supplies to both or at least one of P4U and CPW)
ii. A commitment not to extend, renew or replace O2's commercial relationship with P4U (alternatively, with both or at least one of P4U and CPW)
iii. A commitment to move towards supplying at most one of P4U and CPW.
iv. A commitment to reduce or eliminate O2's reliance on retail intermediaries in the UK.
(b) Unlawfully disclosed to Vodafone Group their future intentions in relation to one or more of the following aspects of their commercial conduct on the market (in competition with Vodafone Group):
i. The extension, renewal or replacement of O2's commercial relationship with P4U.
ii. The extension, renewal or replacement of O2's commercial relationship with retail intermediaries in the UK generally and /or P4u and/or CPW specifically.
iii. The choice between trading with both or only one of the major retail intermediaries in the UK (i.e. P4U and CPW).
iv. The reduction or elimination of reliance on retail intermediaries in the UK"
"…, it is to be inferred in the circumstance pleaded above that the commitments and/or disclosures of information were not unilateral but were provided in return for equivalent commitments or disclosures from Vodafone Group and/or Vodafone UK. Without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, it is inherently unlikely that an undertaking would provide a competitor with confidential and commercially sensitive information and/or a commitment as to its future conduct on the market unless it had received and/or expected to receive corresponding information and/or commitments in return."
(a) Ms Castillo — Mr Humm
"I think that I was interested to gain a sense of whether Telefónica felt good about having exited P4U.".
Accordingly, I consider that Mr Humm wanted to find out how Ms Castillo felt the UK arm of Telefónica was doing, having reduced its reliance on indirect distribution in the UK, and that he raised this with Ms Castillo.
"I had a conversation with JMAP yesterday. He gave me info re some of your competitors. I will call you later. Eva"
"JMAP" refers to Mr Alvarez-Pallete, Ms Castillo's predecessor as CEO of Telefónica Europe and by this point the Chief Operating Officer of Telefónica SA.
(b) Mr Alierta – Mr Colao
"The understanding of "market repair" is basically, in this context, in the UK context -- it could be many different things in other markets -- but used in this context, it was really the dominance of indirect and the inability of operators to manage their own customers, and the consequences in terms of churn, profitability, loyalty and so on. So it was the uniqueness of the UK situation.
…
The solution -- the -- on my side, I can speak for myself, I cannot speak for the others. My side, I was comparing the number of direct stores that we had in Germany, in Italy, divided by population, and UK was under-indexing. Therefore, the solution was to have even more directly owned stores, or franchisees, which was discussed at the time, to improve the ability to communicate, to distribute, to give to customers and have a relationship with customers. As a consequence of that, that would have required reducing the number of indirect stores back to the observation that his Lordship made before, or having one of the two getting out. But it's a matter of total numbers of stores. You can have two smaller indirects or only one."
The 27 January 2014 meeting: part 2
a) His email of 31 January 2014 (which it is accepted was a genuine document of that date) is the closest to a contemporaneous record of the meeting.
b) There was no suggestion that Mr Lloyd (who is a solicitor) was lying in his account of the discussion he had with Mr Whiting a day or two after the meeting with Mr Dunne. Mr Whiting there reported these remarks and they had a long discussion as to how Mr Dunne's remarks should be interpreted and what they should do about it.
c) The only alternative is that either Mr Whiting very quickly invented this account so as to report it to Mr Dobson in the car-park immediately afterwards, or that Mr Whiting and Mr Dobson together concocted this story to share it with P4u's general counsel a day or two later, although they then decided not to take any action upon it and Mr Whiting could not possibly have imagined that over four years later P4u would be bringing a major competition claim in court. I find that wholly implausible.
d) If as Mr Hoskins submitted, Mr Whiting fabricated this account to excuse his inability to reach agreement on behalf of P4u with O2, I find it extraordinary that he would have included the fact that Mr Dunne said that he was "less sure of the intentions of EE with respect to independent distribution because Olaf Swantee was not inclined to discuss EE distribution plans." That was completely irrelevant if this was Mr Whiting's motivation, but something that Mr Dunne could fairly have said given his experience with Mr Swantee as discussed above.
e) Having heard Mr Lloyd give evidence, I do not find it surprising that he did not advise Mr Whiting to keep his notebook, although that would have been a prudent course to take.
f) If, as suggested, Mr Whiting had invented this story as 'cover' to deflect the criticism for failing to secure a deal with O2, one would have expected him to relay it to Mr Curzio. But there is no suggestion that he did so.
g) It is striking that Mr Whiting drew on this account (but without mentioning Mr Dunne) when protesting to Vodafone UK seven months later after learning that Vodafone UK would not be renewing their agreement with P4u, making clear that he was not suggesting that anything had occurred at UK level but that this was something that had been done by executives at group level: see para 395.a) below.
"It was difficult to believe that Mr Dunne would have made the statements he did had they been true. That would risk frustrating the very scheme whose existence he had purported to disclose – it would be like robbing a bank and telling everyone you have done it. I queried whether Mr Dunne was playing mind games with us, seeking to undermine the trust between P4u and Vodafone UK in order to try to damage that relationship."
"[Mr Dunne's] whole demeanour at the time was very much: sorry, guys, there's nothing I can do about it."
J. THE FINANCIAL POSITION OF P4u
"Maintaining strong relationships with key business partners (both networks and key suppliers). These relationships are monitored and controlled at Board level."
Given the nature of P4u's business, this is hardly surprising. The key suppliers included the handset manufacturers, such as Apple, Samsung and Motorola.
"Customers visiting a P4U or CPW store were, as I saw it, more likely to have decided on a handset, but not on an MNO…. [I]n indirect distribution, the choice of network operator came second to the handset or accessory…."
"My feeling was that with the retail options that we had, actually we could outcompete them, ultimately with the range -- we were talking to Samsung, obviously a big handset manufacturer, with a goal of investing significantly in the UK; with AO.com, which was Dixons' biggest online competitor; obviously with Argos, with Shop Direct, which was another online player. So we felt we could have a portfolio of relationships that together would be much, much stronger than – than Dixons, which was obviously struggling in its own core market with Amazon and other -- other -- other online entrants. So -- so, again, a short term challenge. Medium to long term, actually, I thought we could outcompete them."
a) CPW was greatly strengthened relative to P4u. In mid-2014, P4u had 720 stores (including the SIS) compared to CPW's 800. After the merger was completed and when the P4u-Dixons agreement expired in May 2015, closure of P4u's SIS meant that its retail footprint would reduce to 560 stores. Conversely, the expected conversion of those SIS to CPW meant that CPW's footprint would rise to around 950 stores.
b) It was announced that the merged entity planned to open a CPW outlet in all 552 UK Dixons stores. Although Mr Kassler doubted that they would find it productive to proceed with such a plan (on the basis of P4u's experience with its SIS), there was clearly the potential further to increase CPW's presence in Dixons.
"You seem to be assuming that P4U survives the merger unharmed, not sure I agree."
"No, I don't agree with that, my Lord. I think it was precarious relative to the trading results. So, were we going to hit our budget? You know, that's what I was worried about in that sense. Was it precarious from a strategic perspective? No, it was -- it was a great retailer, you know, and -- and had a lot of potential."
K. 2014: VODAFONE AND EE
L. THE VODAFONE DECISION
Background
"We see there is a turning point where customers are getting very used to smartphones and they need to get more service and more assistance. We want to take that back. It's not about reducing share, it's about being in control of customers. It's hard to give a customer a Vodafone experience when someone walks into a shop where there is no Vodafone branding or staff trained by Vodafone. We want to bring the customer experience back into our hands."
Vodafone UK's early negotiation with P4u
"As we've discussed, our Project Spring investment is intended to accelerate and enhance our Vodafone branded presence on the high street both through direct and indirect distribution channels. I want to reassure you that P4U is an important part of our overall distribution strategy and we remain committed to accelerating the renegotiation of our terms of trade."
At the same time, Ms Rose said that Vodafone UK was unlikely to wish to extend the Vodafone Agreement on the existing terms. That agreement was due to expire on 31 October 2014.
"• We set the goal of getting new terms agreed by end of March and we remain committed to this path
• I understand many creative proposals have been made by your team and we are looking hard at these to see if we can find a way to make them work for us
…
• Our investment is Spring puts us back on road to growth over time (network, distribution, newco, brand) and we want to continue to partner selectively with like minded organisations committed to driving value back into the market, we regard P4U as one of those select partners
• However, given our EBITDA challenge, we cannot continue to support an arrangement with the current commercials, it doesn't work for us"
Mr Hoencamp told Mr Whiting that the negotiating teams should continue working and that Vodafone UK would table a proposal within two weeks for further discussion, suggesting that they should meet again once P4u had had an opportunity to digest it.
"• Progress to date has focused on closing a 45% share/5 year deal with Phones 4U by April 1st
• However P4U cash requirements (via a variety of mechanics) have been explored and are not commercially viable for VF
• Levers to improve ROI of the P4U channel have also been explored and it is clear that more profitable pricing is the underlying opportunity to unlock ROI"
In that context, the proposal included a 71:29 margin share in favour of Vodafone UK and a commitment from P4u to give Vodafone a baseline volume share of 30% with additional increments. The negotiating teams discussed this in the morning, and in the afternoon the meeting was joined by the more senior executives, including Mr Whiting and Mr Dobson from P4u and Mr Hoencamp and Ms Rose from Vodafone UK.
" … I remember in this meeting, describing and asking
them, had they modelled the impact of this deal on the
Phones 4u business? Because if we had given -- they
would have known, if we had given them everything that
they were asking for, that we could not deliver the
volume that they were asking us to deliver. It just
wasn't possible.
…
I drew on the whiteboard and ... What I would have said
is: you are offering me this, the deal in the
marketplace is this, the handset will cost this, you are
now leaving me with a zero contribution, even to the
cost of running my stores and my people, let alone my
head office. So how can I operate? And that's even
before I go down to, you know, irrespective of my
financing structure, I -- you know, because these are
bright people, that I cannot operate my business on what
you are asking me to do.
Q. But you did get into Phones 4u's finances, didn't you?
A. Yes, I would have gone all the way down the stack and
one of the things we would have said was: this is -- we
can't operate at this level, let alone going down into
the -- into our debt structure.
Q … I'm putting it to you that in drawing the box, you included
details of Phones 4u's finances, including debt servicing obligations
and capital expenditure and –
A. Yes, it would have been -- I would have -- I would have
included the entire story, yes.
Q. And one of the points -- or the point of doing that was
to show that there were serious financial limits as to
how far you could go in the negotiations?
A. The whole point of showing that was that I could not
sign the contract, because I could not deliver on the
contract, because they were asking me to sign a contract
at the gross margin level that -- absolutely impossible
to deliver the volume that they were asking for, before
financing. If you then put financing on top of that, it
added another level of constraint."
"Why can we not change base terms?
- A change in base terms would result in Phones 4u having to refinance, there are material penalties in place which prevent this.
- Also, Phones 4u current EBITDA just covers interest and capex"
"1 We are not going to get any further with P4U, the deal they have put on the table is now a "take it or leave it", Tim [Whiting] made this crystal clear on Friday. This is effectively he [sic] deal they put on the table a week ago minus the exclusivity. We need to decide whether these are terms we can live with, or not. If not, then we continue to trade under the terms of our existing deal until Nov. P4U category share now at 60k per month which [sic] the loss of O2 and if Dixons goes, that will be another 7-9k per month.
2 In parallel, CPW are now super keen to accelerate reneg from July 2015 to now. However we may feel about CPW, I would strongly recommend that we explore this option so we understand fully what our alternatives look like. We'll take you through initial thoughts on this on Monday and propose some next steps.
Interesting times...!"
"Your subsequent counter proposal, which you detail below in your mail, has been discussed on a number of occasions. As you point out, while it was well received as a positive step in the right direction, it is not currently a deal we are in a position to accept because it does not deliver the necessary step change in return on investment.
Following our meeting last week, I agree that it's important we continue the conversation to see if we can get to a point of agreement and I appreciate your offer to consider the movement of 100 stores across to the Vodafone brand.
In order to respond formally to this offer, we'll need to spend some time working thru the detail but initial thoughts are that an exclusive distribution arrangement remains a challenge in the same way it was in your proposal earlier in March. However, I suggest we take a week to review the opportunity and then regroup to discuss as quickly as possible."
"… we will have to have a retail presence (direct and indirect) more distinctive and branded than today in the UK."
"Jeroen and Tim are in talks on how to structure our future partnership with the aim to improving branding and efficiency. I understand the respective proposals are still quite apart."
At that stage, the gap on customer margin share was that Vodafone UK had revised its proposal to 67:33 in its favour, whereas P4u said they could not move beyond 60:40. The Vodafone UK proposal involved a reduction in P4u's margin share, and a corresponding transfer in value to Vodafone, of £31 per connection.
Vodfone UK's negotiations with CPW
"Executive Summary
• Recap: Our distribution strategy includes a number of activities, all aimed at strengthening direct channels to reduce our reliance on indirect, improving ROI and mix profitability
• Indirects have role to play in sourcing customers and primary connections from areas of market not reached by VF directly — objective is to maintain some level of indirect volumes while improving ROI
• Negotiations with P4U show they have limited flexibility to improve VF's ROI — no obvious deal acceptable with P4U that meets our objectives, deal expires Oct 31, 2014
• Merger talks between CPW & Dixons has created new scenarios to consider. CPW is looking for deal support — has offered to renegotiate July 2015 contract early— potential opportunity for VF
• Re: P4U, assuming deal is NOT reached, P4U may exit the market — potential 'acquisition' opportunity to VF
Recommendation:
1. Proceed with negotiations with CPW to test potential of meeting VF's indirect objectives. Look for heads of terms in next 4 weeks
2. Maintain negotiation position with P4U, consider their latest proposal to transfer 100 of their stores to Vodafone
3. Prepare for P4U Plan B, e.g. acquiring prime retail assets to accelerate Hunter"
"- They remain concerned that us pulling out may not immediately be the end of P4u — either EE prop them up or they do a deal with BT
- As a result a lot of the time was spent discussing the stages to improved volume and ROI
- Amans view is that the order to do this is to firstly stabilise volume and then place in a contractual trigger to improve ROI once P4u have exited
…
- He agrees that the current contract in pretty good shape and is not proposing any major changes. Also PAYG contract very close to long form signature so I suggested we reference that in PAYM deal rather than re open PAYG (any new commercials will go into this PAYG agreement)
- With increased volume, cash is an issue for them. He knows the deal P4u has and was pushing to have some of the cash benefits we would recognise transfer to him — another lever for us potentially"
"CPW would see it as a significant change for Vodafone UK to walk away from P4U, and whether we did so was dependent on what CPW were willing to offer commercially to make this happen. … In my view, exclusivity was a high value proposition for CPW because it gave them the opportunity to gain a significant advantage over their main competitors and to hurt P4U financially, particularly given the likely negative impact of the CPW/Dixons merger on P4U."
"Let's avoid creating the perception that we're going to rip up the current contract and start over because we'll still be here negotiating in 2015 if that's the plan!"
Parallel discussions with P4u and CPW
"… had a great dinner with Graham Stapleton last night. They are totally up for doing something big and transformational. I said we had no appetite for protracted negotiation, window is tight and it's a one off opportunity. I sense a lot of commitment there and we will be all over it."
And Mr Stapleton sent a text to Ms Rose saying:
"Cindy it was a great evening and I am looking forward to moving things forward quickly in the next couple of weeks."
Ms Rose forwarded this to Mr Hoencamp who commented:
"Let's move quickly, do a deal and then tell the other one to go away …."
"Phil [Roberson] and John [Whittle] have had a number of discussions this week on the subject, and they are meeting again tomorrow. We are keen to explore whether there is an option that bridges the gap between your position and ours, which I don't think is insurmountable at this point."
"For the Vodafone UK CEO and the next most senior Vodafone person directly involved in the extension negotiations to come up to Stoke-on-Trent for a day and go through all the consumer research, our shared plans about what we were discussing doing with our stores and the commercial terms of the deal is a huge commitment."
"Negotiations on core terms are complete and two options are now on the table."
The memorandum provided a detailed comparison of the P4u and CPW proposals, noting the advantages and risks of what had become two alternatives: "exclusive with CPW" or "partner with both CPW & P4u". The executive summary in that memorandum stated:
"There are few compelling reasons to continue to trade with P4u beyond the end of their current contract — an exclusive deal with CPW provides:
- Improved direct volumes
- Higher ROI
- Improved cash terms
- Short term EBITDA upsides
- Guaranteed inflow volume above L[ong] R[ange] P[lan]
Reasons to continue with P4u include:
- To guarantee 2014/15 inflow share (a risk we believe can be mitigated)
- To provide competition to CPW
- To drive inflow share beyond 400k min from CPW
- Protection of the existing base acquired by P4u
Not contracting with CPW runs the risk of being out flanked by EE, leaving us with no leverage at contract renegotiation next July"
The memorandum summarised the financial impacts and recommended:
"Sign CPW as exclusive partner @ 30% share and a cap of reduced 500k"
The memorandum was discussed in a conference call at 4.30 pm that day.
"An indirect partner like P4U ultimately cannot survive with only one MNO, because of lack of sufficient volume, the inability to offer a choice of major MNOs to customers, and the inability to rotate customers from one network to another"
"Regardless of how much indirect inflow VF require, it is difficult to see benefit of VF continuing with P4U"
The summary stated that the best way to achieve a smaller proportion of indirect sales in Vodafone's volumes and avoid being "outflanked" by EE was through a deal with CPW, and that to achieve improved ROI that deal would have to be exclusive. The slides noted the financial benefits of the terms so far agreed with CPW and the issues still to be resolved. The summary slide stated:
"However, we must have agreed all significant elements of the deal with CPW before serving notice on P4U so as not to weaken position"
The final slide considered "EE options if VF go exclusive with CPW". It summarised the three alternatives: exclusive with P4u; exclusive with CPW and staying with both. And it concluded:
"In summary — EE response will likely depend on future inflow requirement from indirect channel & relative commercials with CPW & P4U"
"… you don't stop negotiating having conversations with both parties until one is actually completed. And "completed" means legal documents have been signed. So that's the moment where there is no way back and you have made your decision, in this case to go with Carphone exclusively.
Q. All right . So is it your evidence that until you'd signed a deal with Carphone Warehouse, you hadn't given up on the idea of signing a contract with Phones 4u? Is that your evidence?
A. I've --I've learned over the years that it's always important to keep your options open and to expect the unexpected. So anything could have happened during that process. So indeed, nothing is done until it's signed. So yes, until --until that point, we would be working with both parties."
And Ms Rose said in her evidence:
"… until the deal was done with Carphone, the deal wasn't done, and we needed a plan B as well. Phones 4u was our Plan B,"
"I have kept conversations live & as sincere as possible as agreed with Cindy, but it's quite difficult now."
Mr Tubb was sending sufficiently positive responses such that by 11 June, Mr Whittle felt that they were close to a final agreement. Indeed, Mr Tubb told Ms Rose in an email that day:
"There's no stalling P4U now Cindy, they've agreed with everything I tried to stall them with (tightening landing strip, capping volumes, making break point unconditional, they aren't even charging us for branding)!"
"Jeroen and I are with Philipp Humm and Vittorio this Friday (for several hours) going through things and I am hoping we come out of that session with the full support to proceed."
Ms Rose also spoke to Mr Kassler the following day, when Mr Kassler said (and I accept) that Ms Rose told him that she was very supportive of a deal.
The decision
"I would tend to go exclusive with cpw. Could reduce indirect footprint and give us stores."
"• Vittorio's view is we are creating a monster in CPW, what contractual protections are we putting in place to ensure they don't screw us over the period of the deal (for FAQs)
• Vittorio does not buy into the assumption that P4U will fall over, can we please pull together a 1 page overview of their financials and volumes by operator (ask Nick P/Cindy V for help with the P4U financials)
• If P4U does fall over, where do the volumes go? What have we assumed and why? What is the basis for our assumption? In fact we ought to lay out in some detail all of our assumptions.
• Does this deal undermine our distribution strategy? Why not? Why shouldn't the Board take away our Spring/Hunter money?
…
• We need to do a side by side comparison of the CPW deal today vs new CPW deal, then P4u deal today vs new deal with P4U
…
• Vittorio is going to push on the P4U exclusive scenario, have we modelled this? I assume this scenario means we do the new deal with P4U on the new deal terms and we trade with CPW until July 2015 at which point we don't extend CPW and we become at that point exclusive to P4U."
"This is it, we have a unique opportunity to change the game from a distribution point of view, which is the biggest commercial driver of our ten point plan. This and the network plan will take us back to growth. So, the next ten days are crucial to close this deal, so please prioritise and work together so we are fully aligned and 100% behind this plan.
The only way to get this past Vittorio is to show conviction, belief in the plan. If he does not see or feel that, he will not approve it. If however, he feels the commitment he may still not like the plan but will give us the approval.
He challenged us to change the game, change the pace, be ambitious, this is our chance to do just that."
17 June – 29 August 2014
"Fundamentally their new proposal doesn't shift the dial on the commercials but we want to keep them in play just in case we do not close out CPW."
"I caught up with Cindy by phone this afternoon. She confirmed that everything has been on hold because of strategic conversations between Group and BCP/David Giampaolo. They share our concern that the supply deal could get caught up and delayed by this - she is meeting Philip Hum next Wednesday and will be pushing to sign anyway and let the other conversation take care of itself. Very supportive conversation, but it's out of the UK's hands at the moment..."
Vodafone did not challenge Mr Kassler's account of that conversation.
"… she absolutely was saying that she was recommending the deal that we had now documented in the Partner of Choice agreement to the board for approval."
Termination with P4u
a) In the first meeting, on 27 August, Mr Whiting questioned whether Vodafone UK was acting alone and suggested that the decision had been made in conjunction with other MNOs, an allegation which visibly angered Mr Hoencamp and Ms Rose who forcefully rejected it. Ms Rose reiterated a firm refutation of that suggestion when she spoke to Mr Kassler on the telephone that evening. Mr Whiting repeated the allegation of collusion in the second meeting, saying that this was something that had been reported to him but that what he had heard did not involve any individuals at Vodafone UK but persons at Group level. Mr Hoencamp and Ms Rose said that they had been personally offended by those allegations. They also passed on the allegations to Mr Humm.
b) Mr Hoencamp and Ms Rose were taken aback to be told at the first meeting that P4u would have to notify the bondholders of the termination and that this might mean that P4u would go into administration within 24 hours (and Ms Rose repeated her surprise when she spoke to Mr Kassler that evening). They then agreed that they would consider a new proposal from P4u, which should include reducing volume commitments, be for a shorter term, and potentially include a transfer of stores.
c) On 28 August, P4u sent Vodafone UK a revised proposal for a new, shorter term agreement (a minimum 12 months term), which the P4u executives considered offered all the key terms which Vodafone UK had been seeking in the previous negotiations, and the option to transfer 50 P4u stores to Vodafone UK in its Project Spring target locations.
d) The second meeting on 29 August was shorter. Mr Hoencamp and Ms Rose said that they could not accept the new proposal from P4u. They said that there was nothing that P4u could offer which would make them change their decision: Vodafone UK was committed to that path.
The allegations against Vodafone
"P4U are "dead man walking", it's just a question if time... So while we build strength in our direct channels and sort out our new arrangement with CPW, why not be opportunistic and take some additional share in P4U? … Why don't we get what we need from them while they're still around and while we still have a deal with them until we sort out our own house and a have a better indirect alternative to go to?"
"Vittorio [Colao] still does not buy the argument that they would go bust."
"I just spoke to Warren.[26] He is … supportive. The one challenge he has is our assumption p4u will cease trading. His view is that the banks will take over and run it for cash as long as they can. Not sure how to model this but that would be a case (slightly?) worse than our preferred scenario."
a) In the 2 June 2014 Hunter Steerco slide deck (para 370 above), one slide addressed the "EE options if VF go exclusive with CPW", considering various alternative possibilities. I consider that it is clear from that slide that Vodafone UK was trying to analyse its competitor's position without any inside knowledge, and the slide concluded:
"EE response will likely depend on future inflow requirement from indirect channel & relative commercials with CPW & P4U"
b) On 6 June 2014, Vodafone UK heard from a journalist a rumour (which featured in a press article the next day) that a major MNO may be leaving CPW, which Ms Rose thought must refer to EE. She emailed her colleagues next day voicing her concern:
"We need to think thru whether we would still recommend doing this deal in a scenario in which EE stays with P4U on an exclusive basis (which is how I read the rumour)."
Her colleague, Mr Martin Spink, thought that it might perhaps refer to O2, although that was less likely, and in her response Ms Rose agreed that it seemed unlikely that O2 could manage without both CPW and P4u. She continued:
"Two scenarios that scare me the most are now "last man standing" (EE goes CPW only before we do) and P4U 2 operator model (with EE and BT)"
Ms Rose explained that the "2 operator model" was a reference to P4u doing a deal with BT (which all the MNOs considered was a potentially powerful entrant into the mobile market) and that she assumed that this was P4u's 'plan B' in case the negotiation with Vodafone UK did not succeed, i.e. so that P4u would then maintain its position as an indirect retailer with two significant MNOs. The fact that she had such concerns demonstrates her lack of knowledge regarding EE's intentions.
c) Although Ms Rose said in her evidence that she was really much less worried about this '2 operator model', she emphasised her concern about the first possibility:
"Well, certainly what scared me the most was the first scenario, because EE had twice as much volume in Phones 4u as we did. We were about a third of their volume, EE was about two-thirds of their volume. And if EE had pulled out of Phones 4u before we did, we would have been the last operator trading in Phones 4u, and they would have been very wounded at that stage and struggling, and we would have had little to no negotiating leverage with Carphone Warehouse. So that scenario, for us, would have been disastrous. Which is why we were so intent on moving quickly and seizing first mover advantage."
a) The 9 June 2014 memorandum to Mr Humm, recommending that Vodafone UK should seek an exclusive agreement with CPW, stated:
"VF cannot be exposed to EE's distribution strategy which carries large risk to VF's inflow and ROI should EE move exclusively to CPW and stop supporting P4U. Therefore we are recommending a proactive stance that puts EE under pressure in P4U and secures our share with the strongest retailer on improved profitability, by signing the CPW deal and exiting P4U."
Before summarising the commercial terms so far agreed in the negotiation with CPW, the memorandum stated:
"We believe time is of the essence to lock our position ahead of EE."
b) Another memorandum was finalised the same day addressed to the Vodafone Group Board[27] that similarly highlighted, as a risk if Vodafone UK did not proceed with an exclusive contract with CPW:
"EE does a new, exclusive deal with CPW before Vodafone does, and Vodafone is left as the only mobile operator in a commercially unviable P4U. EE's exit would lead to the almost certain disappearance of P4U in its current form and lead Vodafone into a defensive and potentially costly negotiation to extend our current deal with CPW."
c) In her presentation on 11 June 2014 to the consumer division team, Ms Rose referred to the press rumours suggesting that EE may exit from either CPW or P4u, or possibly both.
d) The 17 June 2017 slide deck presented to Mr Colao, contained the headline:
" 'Wait & See' is not a viable option because the risk of others taking first mover advantage and shutting us out is too great … we need to act"
That is clearly a reference to EE. One of the "guiding principles" for the negotiations set out another of the other slides was:
"Mitigate risk of being locked out by EE moving first"
The potential acquisition
Mr Humm
" EE does a new, exclusive deal with P4U and thereby enhances the likelihood that P4U can trade through their current financial constraints. If Vodafone is committed to CPW on the terms summarised above, in this scenario we would be precluded from trading in P4U."
Two investment banks
"Both expressed the view that Vodafone would swiftly follow any action we took in indirect. Clearly someone at Voda is clearly and consistently conveying this message."
Alleged collusion with O2
"… it is inherently unlikely that an undertaking would provide a competitor with confidential and commercially sensitive information and/or a commitment as to its future conduct on the market unless it had received and/or expected to receive corresponding information and/or commitments in return."
The aftermath of the Vodafone decision
M. THE EE DECISION
Background
"Making 4G a success was absolutely crucial for EE, and if we were not able to do so, I felt I would have failed as a CEO."
"P4U had been more willing than CPW to support EE's vision and our efforts to differentiate ourselves from the competition, and were aligned with EE's desire to push 4G hard at that time.... I always thought that P4U would eventually be able to improve their commercial terms to something closer to CPW's, which, combined with their focus on 4G, would have made them a much more attractive indirect retailer than CPW."
Mr Allera also considered that EE had a better working relationship with P4u than CPW, which was more focused on 3G connections.
September 2013 – February 2014
"We expect the outcome to follow our preference for fewer, deeper, longer term relationships with key partners who are prepared to share our network and service goals, while focussing on value"
In reality, EE already had its 5 Year Plan which had been approved. Mr Allera explained that this announcement was for EE in part a negotiating tactic, off the back of the announcement that O2 were withdrawing from P4u, "to negotiate the best possible terms from our existing indirect retailers, including P4u." Mr Swantee sent a copy of the press release to Messrs Pellissier, Dannenfeldt, Scheen, Naulleau and Kniese, telling them that he and Marc Allera were starting a process of selecting "fewer indirect partners with better terms." And in his evidence, Mr Swantee said that, as at the start of 2014, and in line with his evolutionary approach,
"we had a plan set up to continue with Phones4u, improve the terms and conditions [with them] and … stay in Carphone Warehouse potentially but wind it down potentially over time…."
The Dixons – CPW merger and the 20 March 2014 BRM
"A combined DSG / CPW will create a retailing giant with over 1,000 UK stores that offer a unique platform for vendors to showcase a broad range of connected and non-connected devices. The buying power of the merged entity across multiple categories will deliver price leadership vs. single category retailers, challenging the business models and driving down margins for the remaining stand alone indirect channels (particularly P4U)"
"— O2's exit from P4U and the proposed DSG-CPW merger has raised question marks about P4U's ability to survive in the UK market.
— EE is keen for P4U to remain in the UK market to maintain competition in the indirect channels and prevent a combined DSG-CPW from dominating the sector
— EE believes that P4U's survival is conditional on it maintaining at least 2 network partners (currently EE & Vodafone)
— EE has investigated several potential options to mitigate the risk of a P4U market exit. These include:
— Acquisition by EE: unlikely to be economically viable
— Acquisition by EE and another operator: acquisition not viable beyond £600m valuation"
Potential acquisition of P4u
"BT may convert P4U to a direct channel, forcing EE and Voda out of channel and making competition for share in CPW more intensive"
The suggested defence against that risk was to "Lock in CPW terms for the long term".
"On est OK qu'il peut y avoir une occasion historique de faire la peau à la distribution indirecte, mais tricky car nécessite coopération de Vodafone et pb [problème] potentiel de droit concurrence. Cela vaut donc d'être étudié."
There was some controversy between the parties as to whether the best translation of "faire la peau" is "to strike a blow" or "to inflict harm" or "to wipe out" or "to kill". In my view, it does not matter: this was simply Mr Froissart's reaction, in idiomatic language, that an acquisition of P4u had the potential significantly to damage the model of indirect distribution in the UK, which Orange had never found attractive. Moreover, I consider it is correct, as Mr Froissart explained, that his reference to the necessity for cooperation with Vodafone was because the proposal for an acquisition was being put forward as something that, in terms of cost, EE would have to do together with another network, for which Vodafone was the only realistic option. He immediately appreciated from his M&A experience that such joint ownership by two of the main competing MNOs would raise difficult issues of competition law. Mr Froissart was accordingly referring to the cooperation necessary for a joint acquisition, and Mr Naulleau said that this is how he would have understood the email (he expressed himself in those terms since he had no direct recollection of the email after all this time). I accept that evidence.
1) EE acquires P4u, jointly with another MNO, and re-signs an agreement with CPW;
2) EE acquires P4u, jointly with another MNO; EE (and potentially both) pulls out of CPW;
3) EE pulls out of CPW, potentially followed by another MNO;
4) EE pulls out of P4u;
5) Vodafone UK acquires P4u.
"BC Partners, owners of P4U, are likely to have approached DSG, CPW, VOD and potentially others (e.g. BT, Tesco). They have approached EE in November about a minority stake in P4U"
1) EE + 1 buy P4u "and absorb", while securing improved terms with CPW;
2) Trade with both [P4u and CPW] on improved terms;
3) EE pulls out of P4u, while securing improved terms with CPW.
"• Does the Board believe now is the time/opportunity to make a significant move in distribution to improve EBITDA?
• If so, does the BoD concur a joint acquisition of P4U with a 3rd Party is the best scenario?
• If a joint acquisition of P4U with a 3rd Party is the best scenario, then can we agree approach? "
And after noting the recent developments in the market, including Vodafone UK's announcement of its Project Spring investment (paras 329-330 above) and a rumour that Vodafone UK was itself looking into acquiring P4u, the presentation highlighted:
"Opportunity for structural change may not be available at a later stage. Also, EE is currently negotiating with P4U and CPW about improved terms and contract extensions. EE's strategic choice directly impacts its optimal approach to these negotiations and needs to be made now"
"It would not have made commercial sense for EE to spend a large amount of money to buy P4U and then close most of its stores. A joint acquisition between EE and another MNO, which involved keeping the P4U business running, as envisaged by slide 14 of the "Distribution Strategic Update" would have seemed more commercially viable to me, and something worthy of further investigation by EE. "
Nonetheless, Mr Scheen said that he would have been concerned about the cost of an acquisition.
"1) "acquisition" of one distributor, while improving terms with the other, (=project November)[30]
2) "improve":
- improve terms with one, using their request to receive support for their merger with D, = EE to describe how they use the merger to improve their terms with CPW,
- and either exit from the other one or condition the renewal with them to significantly improved terms,
During meeting and calls, EE shows preference for acquisition scenario while Orange and DT requested a detailed study of the "improve" scenario as pre-requisite benchmark and would like to have a full understanding of the negotiations which took place with these 2 distributors."
They also pointed out that neither Ms Lambert nor Mr Wilkens supported a "defensive acquisition" which involved closing many stores.
The 10 April 2014 BRM
"I was concerned at this time that EE's valuation of P4U was questionable, that EE's analysis did not account for SIMO trends, and that the rationale for an acquisition in which EE and another MNO would acquire P4U's 500 stores with a view to keeping only 100 was unclear."
And Mr Deloison considered EE's analysis was very basic and that EE had failed to consider the potential gains from investment of the savings from the non-renewal of its contract with P4u and the securing of improved terms with CPW. Mr Eyre sent the participants an additional slide pack, projecting figures over 10 years for alternative scenarios: (a) where EE together with another MNO acquired P4u, and (b) where EE pulled out of P4u. It seems that this "Additional Indirect Information" was sent following the conference call, later that day. The shareholders also offered that their controlling teams could work with Mr Eyre to "drill down the basic distribution data" which they felt was missing or unclear.
EE's financial modelling
"These models necessarily relied on various assumptions. Where possible, these assumptions were derived from historic data (e.g. the average profitability to EE of connections obtained via different channels); where such data was not available, we would develop a reasonable estimate based on other relevant information – for instance, if looking at "absorption rates" (i.e. the percentage of sales volumes currently obtained through an indirect retailer that EE was likely to be able to keep if it did not renew its agreement with that retailer), we would consider information such as our retail footprint and telesales capacity.
Once a model had been put together, we would discuss with the rest of the indirect team whether we thought particular assumptions were realistic. If ongoing developments, such as live commercial negotiations, were relevant to the assumptions, this information would be incorporated. For instance, if we thought that we could negotiate more sales volumes with a particular indirect retailer, this would be factored into any assumptions. This was an iterative process, and these assumptions would often be revised several times over the lifetime of a model.
As they were dependent on a number of factors, the assumptions carried a certain degree of risk. Further, each assumption did not exist in isolation. For instance, the percentage of customers obtained through an indirect retailer that EE could expect to retain[32] if it withdrew from that indirect retailer depended, in part, on (i) the extent to which EE could negotiate increased volume commitments with other indirect retailers and (ii) how much EE was willing to invest in promotional offers to acquire new customers, and retain existing customers, via its direct channels. This is also why the assumptions were regularly adjusted; we would fine tune them as we thought about each point and how they related to each other in more detail, and this helped us refine the model over time so that the final version was sufficiently robust. Separately, we would also test the "sensitivity" of the model's output to particular assumptions, to understand how much a change in the value of those assumptions would affect the model's output. Through this, we would be able to understand how much the output could change if those assumptions were not ultimately borne out. "
"This sort of modelling analysis was highly sensitive to the assumptions we made – for instance, assumptions as to the cost of purchasing P4U; as to the percentage of acquisition and upgrade Connections previously obtained via P4U that EE could expect to retain if EE (i) acquired P4U or (ii) withdrew from P4U; as to the improvement in contractual terms that EE was likely to be able to negotiate with CPW and P4U; and as to the handset cost efficiencies that EE was likely to benefit from in different scenarios. By way of illustration, in a scenario involving EE pulling out of P4U, a decrease in the assumed percentage of acquisition and upgrade Connections previously obtained via P4U that EE could expect to retain would, all else being equal, result in the modelling predicting a less profitable outcome for EE."
The shareholders' Bonn strategy meeting
"a. EE must review its presentation, in conjunction with DT/Orange Management Control
b. Strategic aspects of the distribution market (CarphoneW / Dixons consolidation, discussions with Vodafone) to be analysed by EE in conjunction with DT/Orange Management Control, with support from M&A (Olivier Froissart) as required
c. Preparation of an informal BoD on distribution strategy 2nd half of May"
a) The report said that this was to be analysed in conjunction with the controlling teams of DT and Orange, and with any necessary support from Mr Froissart. As noted above, Mr Froissart's role was in Orange's M&A team. That points clearly to the reference being to a potential acquisition, which it had been recognised would almost certainly have to be a joint purchase with Vodafone and therefore would require such discussions.
b) If, in contrast, the reference had been to discussions with Vodafone outside the context of a joint bid, that would obviously have given rise to competition law concerns, which someone like Mr Berger would have readily appreciated. I think it would be extraordinary for him then to have suggested that the controlling teams of DT and Orange should be involved in analysis of such discussions.
c) I was impressed by Mr Dannenfeldt as a witness who I felt was being frank in his evidence (although at times he was unreliable regarding the chronology of events). I accept his testimony that if someone had said at this meeting that there had been such potentially anti-competitive discussions, because of the legal implications this is something which would have stuck in his memory.
Late April -early May 2014
"We know that the final preparation of the documents for the distribution business need some time. To avoid further delays and any disappointment on the shareholder's side on the details that will be delivered we recommend that the controlling/M&A teams of EE, Orange and DT should meet beginning of next week to define the content and format of the underlying business cases that are needed for the board document. This will enable Orange and DT to evaluate the business on their standard tools.
As 1st May is a bank holiday in France, Germany and 5th May is a bank holiday in the UK we should already start on Tuesday and/or Wednesday. Otherwise we will lose another week"
"There is a chance that P4U will not survive without us but its [sic] still risky. I will do some scenairos [sic] to demonstrate this."
Mr Eyre accepted that he here had in mind that the absorption assumptions used in the modelling would be significantly affected by whether or not P4u survived, should EE exit.
"1. Pull out of P4U and sign enlarged CPW contract
2. Purchase pf P4U of consolidate into our estate and sign an enlarged CPW contract
3. Purchase of P4U and run it as it a going concern with a CPW contract
4. Purchase of P4U and run it as it a going concern without a CPW contract
5. Purchase the rev share base [of P4u] and the[n] reinvest the saving into stores/Brand/offer
6. Pull out of P4U and reinvest the saving into stores/Brand/offer
7. Negotiate better terms with both P4U and CPW"
Option 2 corresponded to the scenario considered in the slides discussed between Mr Allera and Mr Eyre on 29 April.
"… very infuriating …. we move from threat of armies being deployed on us before even concluded assessment ourselves to complete withdrawal – not helpful and wastes time"
- "Sign a larger deal with CPW and then pull out of P4U in September 2015 at the end of P4U contract [emphasis added]
- Aim to get £50m improvement in terms to help offset risk of losing volume"
Accordingly, the modelling certainly did not assume an early collapse of P4u. The alternative options involving acquisition of P4u showed significant improvement (a positive effect of £379 million for option 2). Mr Eyre accordingly commented on this analysis in his covering email:
"It does again start to show that without investing a large amount upfront then just getting better terms is the best option from the numbers perspective."
The 6-7 May drill-down workshop
"Following various calls and meetings with EE and their difficulty since 4 weeks (...) to provide and present the necessary basic distribution data to get a clear and simple picture of their distribution situation in the UK moving landscape, and in view of the discussions vs CPWH/Dixons and P4Y [sic], Neal [Milsom] has accepted last Friday, Marie-Christine [Lambert]'s offer that we spend 2 days in London with EE controlling and distribution teams in order to drill down EE distribution data in the UK market, and then assess on the basis of key figures and trends the various possible scenarii for EE.
As mentioned to EE, we (at Orange) DO NOT NEED ADDITIONAL SLIDES but we propose to work with EE teams on EE basic data…
… the spirit of the session is a CONSTRUCTIVE one, in order for us to understand very clearly all EE distribution details and build a robust appropriate modelling together."
"• Is P4U still in business?
• What are the legal and accounting implications if P4U cease to be a going concern?
• Are P4U Still a going concern, even with EE business?"
The lead-up to the 21 May 2014 BRM
"What do we believe happens to P4U if we pull out and how quickly does it happen"
Mr Eyre explained in cross-examination that the shareholders were effectively telling EE:
"time's of the essence, you've got to finish off your modelling, please focus on the ones that aren't purchases"
And he said that it was from this point that his team stopped modelling a scenario of acquiring P4u.
"Operators focussing on direct channel performance - indirect disruption likely to be led by Vodafone"
And under the summary analysis of Vodafone UK's position, one bullet reads:
"• KEY RISK: Vodafone acquisition or withdrawal from P4U will detrimentally impact EE's trading"
A revision of this slide was incorporated into the deck for the 21 May 2014 BRM, and I return to it in that context below: see at para 524.
"1) Re-sign with CPW and P4U on improved terms
2) Sign enlarged CPW contract and run P4U contract down during 14/15 and exit in Sep 15
3) Run down both P4U contract (exit Sep 15) and CPW contract (exit Dec 15), offset by investment in direct channels"
"We are not going to dress up the plan just to get to a better number that will not be achievable."
"1. Indirect distribution channels will continue to have a major influence in UK market for the foreseeable future.
2. EE has to have a major presence in CPW/DSG merger to maintain market leadership position.
3. Phones 4U situation is precarious and gives EE options with risk (1m connections p.a).
4. Phones 4U will attempt to strengthen their position by signing BT or Three/O2 back or finding a retail partner e.g. Argos to form a JV."
"1) Remain in CPW and 4U - rebalance volumes from 4U to CPW.
2) Exit 4U, move 4U volume to CPW.
3) Exit 4U and CPW - move all volume to EE Direct channels.
4) Exit 4U, spread 4U volume between CPW and EE Direct channels."
The headline financial summary comparing the options showed the overall effect on a five year forward basis, as compared to EE's 5 Year Strategic Plan. Option 1 had been slightly revised, it seems as a result of the progress in negotiations with CPW, to a positive effect of £62 million.
"1. Phones 4 U sign partnerships with O2, Three, Virgin, SKY or BT.
2. Phones 4 U sign partnership with another retailer e.g. Argos.
3. Direct channels don't absorb the connections the rate assumed.
4. Absorption rate sensitivity of 4U customer base.
5. CPW/DSG execute merger badly and don't deliver EE committed volumes."
"1. Sign an enlarged and improved CPW contract - June.
2. Do not sign extension with 4U - continue negotiations.
3. Consider 2 options with 4U
- Remain present with better terms, smaller volume.
- Continue to explore options to exit Sep 15 with less risk and work to improve financial picture."
The allegations about the modelling assumptions
"EE's modelling (at least insofar as it concerned absorption via CPW or as a result of additional investment in EE's direct channels) did not rely on EE absorbing the specific customers that EE would otherwise have obtained via P4U; rather, the absorption assumptions were a means of quantifying, more generally, the percentage of volumes lost in one channel that was likely to be captured in other channels. In the context of Scenario Four, the absorption assumptions therefore represented the total number of customers that EE expected to gain through CPW and its existing and new direct channels, expressed as a percentage of the number of customers that EE expected to forgo from ceasing to supply P4U beyond September 2015."
"based on the assumption that, for the first 18 months following a withdrawal from P4U, EE would need to increase its A&R spend by £10 per Connection in order to maintain its customer base; EE would then be able to reduce its A&R spend to current levels for nine months; and, thereafter, EE would be able to reduce its A&R costs by £10 per Connection in 2018 and 2019, because by that point P4U's exit from the market (or its significantly reduced market presence) should result in less aggressive discounting of handsets generally."
"If we exit it is likely that they [P4u] survive and we would force them into value destructive actions within the market…
We believe that they would find another partner."
Mr Eyre said that by "destructive actions" he meant discounting on price. In his covering email, Mr Eyre observed that in modelling scenarios he kept coming back to a number of questions, including: "How long do we believe P4u will survive if we pull out." I think that, as EE submitted, Mr Eyre was clearly alert to that question but he did not have a clear view as to the answer.
a) Mr Eyre's calculation of P4u's cash flow had been conducted on the basis of Vodafone UK remaining with P4u and indeed increasing the volumes which it took;
b) The financial modelling of options 2-4 was all based on the assumption that P4u would continue to trade for nine months after the end of the EE contract (i.e. from September 2015), consistent with (a);
c) The enumeration of risks expressly acknowledged that P4u might survive by attracting another major MNO or retailer in place of EE. That was clearly on the assumption that P4u would have retained Vodafone UK.
d) The calculation of the aggregate handset "cost efficiency" over the five years was as follows:
2015 £'m |
2016 £'m |
2017 £'m |
2018 £'m |
2019 £'m |
Total £'m | |
(£10) | (£45) | (£12) | £51 | £51 | £36 |
As summarised in the slide pack, and elaborated by Mr Eyre in his evidence, this assumed that for the first 18 months from withdrawal from P4u in September 2015, EE would need to increase its expenditure on handset subsidies by £10 per connection to maintain its customer base; could then reduce those costs to existing levels for the next nine months; and thereafter would reduce its costs by £10 per connection in 2018-2019 to reflect the effect of P4u's exit in reducing competition on the market by way of handset subsidies (what Mr Eyre referred to as "less aggressive discounting of handsets"). I regard this projection as inconsistent with an exit by Vodafone UK as well as EE from P4u in 2015, which would obviously have precipitated an immediate collapse of P4u (as indeed occurred).
"Operators focussing on direct channel performance – indirect disruption likely to be led by Vodafone"
The 21 May 2014 BRM
"As I recall the meeting, no decision was made and all options remained under consideration. There were too many question marks at the time to be able to reach a view on which option to pursue. Exiting P4U was an option being considered and all options remained on the table after that meeting …."
a) Although the minutes are blank, there are two contemporary documents concerning the meeting and both indicate that no final decision was made to adopt option 4:
i) On 22 May, the day after the meeting, Mr Deloison wrote a summary note of the discussion. He had not been at the meeting, but he said he wrote this from a briefing he was given by Mr Naulleau, who would have had some notes from the meeting (which have not survived). Mr Deloison's note said, as regards this item:
"o Scenario 4 presented but, by OS's own admission: not very encouraging.
o OS: "We are giving ourselves time to think and possibly talk again about 4PU acquisition in Sept'15"
o => S4 Ok in the short term it seems: EE authorised to sign contract extension with CPW but acquisition scenario not completely abandoned
…
o TD: "Direct must be reinforced"
o TD: "be careful with VOD (anti trust risk)"
ii) On 23 May, Mr Allera sent an email to Mr Harris, stating:
"As promised here's my take on what was agreed
1) Agreement that option 4 is right strategic direction for EE
2) Agreement to pursue completion of signed CPW contract to deliver re-balance between 4U and CPW volume
3) Agreement not to extend 4U deal
4) Agreement to continue exploring options with 4U including acquisition
5) Agreement to proceed with creating an implementation plan to mitigate the risk in scenario 4 — particularly around volume assumptions — to focus on base/base marketing and loyalty propositions to minimise churn"
Although Mr Allera's email refers to option 4 being "the right strategic direction", that is not, in my view, a firm decision. Moreover, since option 4 involved an exit from P4u, it is inconsistent with exploring options with P4u by continuing negotiations, and of course with a potential acquisition. I see no reason to doubt the accuracy of Mr Deloison's note, and if option 4 was seen as "not very encouraging", I think the shareholders would have been very unlikely to give it whole-hearted support.
b) The recommendation by EE management in the slide pack was not in the sharp terms of option 4, which specified an exit from P4u. It was more flexible and qualified: not to sign with P4u now, but to "continue negotiations" and explore options, one of which was to remain with P4u with smaller volume and better terms.
c) Under three weeks after the meeting, after Mr Pellissier was quoted in the press as saying, "I would like to get rid of both [CPW and P4u] if it was my choice", Mr Swantee protested to him, saying that EE was working to the plan in accordance with the discussion at the BRM, which he set out in terms of the recommendation by EE's management to the BRM.
d) The negotiations with CPW were still ongoing and it was not clear what terms EE could secure from them. Until EE could be confident that CPW would agree to give sufficiently larger volumes on improved terms, I do not see how the directors could conclude that EE's best course was to exit from P4u.
"increasingly it was also my view that Carphone/Dixons was going to be a key for our long-term success. Maybe the words "not very encouraging" must have related to the fact that it was a difficult scenario. I mean, we didn't have -- you know, we didn't have the terms and conditions from Carphone Warehouse, we had a situation where Carphone Warehouse was very big with O2, we were not in the so-called strategic tent with them,
...
So maybe that's why. Because I do remember that I was, you know, concerned that it was a very difficult scenario to execute for us."
Further consideration of acquisition of P4u
"… Olaf is in Germany on Tuesday and before this he and Thomas Dannedfeldt (DT CFO) want a view (headline) on the following:
1. Latest view of purchase price of P4U (assuming we bought outright)
2. What the potential value of Vodafone's backbook would be (assumption similar deal to EE) ie. if they wanted to settle this liability, what would the cash price be to settle?
3. In other words what would our net cost be
4. Additionally, an estimate of how many shops and at what price they might buy from us (given their intention to increase Direct stores to 150)
The other question is at what price would it make sense for EE to buy P4U outright irrespective of whether Vodafone bought themselves out of their back-book liability or not.
If there's any way of getting an estimate to the above today would be much appreciated…..[sic] DT may then just help convince the French."
"1) Voda buys P4U
2) Voda pulls out of P4U"
He added his initial view:
"I think in the first one we join in the purchase and the second we may pull out as well."
The continuing negotiation with P4u
"I am being told by Tim [Whiting] that he has had a further chat with Mark [Marc Allera] and the expectation is for us to have an agreed form document by the end of next week. If that is in line with your instructions, can we catch up on Monday to make sure that we can try and conclude all the outstanding points to meet that time horizon."
On 12 May 2014, Mr Whiting spoke to Mr Swantee in advance of EE's BRM scheduled for 21 May, and reported to his colleagues that Mr Swantee had "confirmed things should be ok on the deal". And on 21 May, Mr Lloyd responded to a query from Mr Quadrio Curzio regarding the date when P4u might enter into a new agreement with EE:
"Timings as agreed today are that they would receive board approval (or not as the case may be) by the end of May and then we could finalise 5 working days thereafter. Timings have slipped before so would not see that as set in stone so clearly room for delays/extensions if required."
"EE's negotiation strategy at this time was to delay the progress of negotiations with P4U while it was seeking to advance its negotiations with CPW to see what terms it could get from CPW."
And she added in her oral evidence:
"My instructions from the EE board members[45] … was to effectively stall [the negotiations]."
"We will follow up on requests to meet our Shareholders … and keep you posted."
And in a follow-up email on 1 July, Mr Whiting wrote to Mr Swantee:
"I understand the level of shareholder approval you need to go through and the number of other priorities you currently have in the business but would appreciate any support you can give to get to a decision so we can move on and focus on the areas of value creation."
"I remember feeling quite awkward and uncomfortable about this meeting, as I could tell that P4U were anxious to get the contract extension signed. At the same time, we were in a difficult position as we had not yet reached any agreement with CPW. It was in EE's best interests, therefore, to keep these negotiations with P4U alive until the new deal with CPW was over the line."
"I understand from Marc that we still have made little progress in getting shareholder approval at your end for our deal extension and as we are now in the holiday period this not imminent. We are disappointed and frustrated by this as we have for some time believed it to be the key to unlocking significant value for both businesses.
Rather than leaving the current deal on the table we think it is best to withdraw it and leave the ball in your court as to when you are in a position to take these discussions forward."
Mr Whiting said that he wrote this out of frustration with the failure to get a decision from EE's shareholders (as he understood it) on the proposed agreement. He said that this was a negotiating tactic with the aim of putting some pressure on EE to reach a firm resolution when the discussions revived; and that in no way was he indicating a reluctance to reach an agreement. I accept that and I consider that it would have been seen that way by EE's management at the time. I reject Mr Swantee's characterisation of the email as indicating that P4u "now were withdrawing from the negotiations completely". On the contrary, from P4u's perspective the direct negotiations with the EE team had concluded successfully and the lack of progress was due to EE's shareholders. Mr Whiting made clear in the text following that quoted above that P4u "see EE as a key strategic partner for the long term and believe that both businesses would benefit from clarity and the ability to plan for the future"; and that P4u wished to have further "conversations on contract extensions".
Negotiation of the CPW Agreement
Current Proposed new
Acquisitions 240k 583k
Upgrades 285k 442k[46]
As a result, the slides projected that over a five-year term the benefit of the deal would be an increase in EBITDA after capital expenditure of £191 million, which was an improvement over the £177 million projected for option 4 at the 21 May 2014 BRM:[47] see paras 509 and 513 above. The slide presentation noted:
"£238m lost through not absorbing all customers currently in P4U is made up through growth in direct and improved terms in CPW"
"The deal negotiated is best and final … there is no further opportunity to revise/negotiate … It is now either 'take it or leave it' … In addition, any delay would expose EE to the risk of other operators taking a larger share at EE's cost."
The collapse of P4u
A SERIES OF UNFORTUNATE EVENTS
(1) The Scheen – Humm conversation: 2 April 2014
"Hello Philipp, I would like to talk to you for 5-10 minutes max regarding a topic for the UK market. When can I call you (possibly today or tomorrow) ? Thanks, Benoit Scheen (Orange Europe)."
"Hello Philipp, after review I will unfortunately not be able to come to London before several weeks. Could we then organize a 'secured' call with both of us using a new prepaid number. If we are both using a new prepaid number, the call will be secured. I could have a prepaid number being ready for tonight (to have a potential call tomorrow). Would this be a suitable solution for you ? Regards, Benoit Scheen"
"Hello benoit, not knowing what you want to discuss I feel not comfortable making these sorts of arrangements. If there is topic we need to discuss/decide suggest to arrange for a call together with a competition lawyer. Sorry best philipp"
"Hello Philipp, I do not want to force you in a setup that you don't find suitable. I wanted to address a potential interesting joint opportunity on the UK market in an informal way. So, I don't think that the presence of a lawyer would be suitable at this stage. And let me re-assure you, my intends were positive and constructive. But I guess that we will have to look at it in a different way (as potential decisions will have to be taken in the coming weeks) .... It is maybe a missed opportunity for our respective companies .... Regards, Benoit."
"it is inherently unlikely that an undertaking would provide a competitor with confidential and commercially sensitive information and/or a commitment as to its future conduct on the market unless it had received and/or expected to receive corresponding information and/or commitments in return."
I agree, and I therefore reject P4u's case that Mr Scheen received some comfort or reassurance from Mr Humm. Moreover, in the slide presentation discussed at the 10 April BRM, EE's express assumption was that if EE were to pull out of P4u, Vodafone UK would remain and may indeed be one of the MNOs that might take up EE's volumes: para 461 above. As P4u pointed out, in a different context, Mr Harris sent this presentation on 15 April to the shareholder representatives participating in the workshop the next day. So that remained EE's assumption two weeks after the Scheen-Humm exchange.
(2) The remarks at the EE drill-down workshop: 7 May 2014
"Marc Allera (MA): reports that BT would have sent CPW and 4PU their proposed terms for the distribution of their mobile offerings
o Neal Milsom (NM)/MA: BT and others could not fill EE and VOD activity leaving P4U simultaneously => "then, 4PU will starve"
MA: VOD would wait for EE to announce something: "they will follow EE"; NM: their strategy is a bit difficult to follow
o [to be verified later by CN] : MA [would recruit/is said to be recruiting][49] the "Head of Indirect Strategy" of VOD (information mentioned at the session)"
"NM: "my theory is that CPW wants to secure 2 big accounts in the merge [sic] (O2 and EE, relations with VOD being deteriorated); then they'll put pressure on the others"
In fact, CPW was at this time very interested in securing all the indirect business of Vodafone UK: para 354 above.
(3) The minutes of the 21 May 2014 BRM
(4) Mrs Derbyshire's email of 10 August 2014
"Neal wants us to get this deck completed but the focus is P4U, he wants us to be 100% sure of the impact if P4U fold earlier than expected ie In the next couple of months. The expectation is that Voda are about to pull out."
"• The deal secures a healthy volume in the UK's largest Indirect Retailer on enhanced terms versus the current contract
• As Marc [Allera] advised [on] Friday, timing is critical — allowing Vodafone to take this volume could have disastrous consequences for EE"
"They remain concerned that us pulling out may not immediately be the end of P4u — either EE prop them up or they do a deal with BT"
"If I had genuinely believed, or expected, that Vodafone were about to pull out of P4U, I would have spent the whole remainder of August 2014 intensively preparing for that scenario, and I would have been in a much better position and much better prepared, rather than being caught off-guard as I was, when I learned on 29 August 2014 that Vodafone would be withdrawing from P4U and that P4U were at risk of entering administration."
And he explained that he had regarded this as just one among several possibilities. Indeed, EE had throughout considered a potential scenario where Vodafone UK exited from, or sought to acquire, P4u.
(5) The meeting with Ofcom: 4 September 2014
"Q. ... Why did you think Ofcom might perceive the sequence of events in the wrong way?
A. From memory, we simply wanted to lay out with Mr Richards, the then director general of Ofcom, the sequence of events, because EE signing its contract with Carphone Warehouse was -- appeared to be in a very similar time frame to Vodafone confirming their exit from Phones 4u.
Q. You were concerned, weren't you, that Ofcom might get the impression from the sequence of events that there had been some sort of coordination between EE and Vodafone; is that right?
A. Yes, that was in part of the thinking, I would say."
"March 2014
• EE Business Review / EE Executive[50] approve strategy in principle of CPW/DSG as a principal partner
• Commence negotiations with CPW to explore long-term contract extension options
…
June 2014
• Final position of EE and P4U re contract extension tabled
July 2014
• [P4U withdrew commercial contract extension offer][51]
August 2014
• Conclude contractual negotiations with CPW subject to Board ratification"
"Important to avoid any supposition EE knew and link to signing CPW/DSG (even though such supposition is mistaken it could trigger enquires/investigation)"
I think that this was a legitimate concern on EE's part. Moreover, I do not consider that the statement in brackets that any such supposition would be mistaken was a contrived observation included in the slides either to disguise matters from the shareholders or for the ulterior purpose of a potential subsequent investigation. But that would effectively be the implication of a finding that there had been such knowledge.
The alleged collusion with Vodafone UK: summary
"being the only major supplier of what was supposed to be a multi-network retailer offering choice and perceived "independence" on the high street would be unattractive for Vodafone (just as it would be unattractive for EE)."
N. EXPERT EVIDENCE
"…, it was only by an unlawful collusive agreement and/or concerted practice resulting in a refusal by all the MNO Defendants to supply Connections to P4U that each of the MNO Defendants could rationally and/or without intolerable commercial risk cease to supply P4U. No MNO Defendant acting rationally and/or in its own commercial interests would choose unilaterally to cease dealing with P4U in circumstances where P4U was likely to have one or more continuing commercial relationships with other competitor MNO Defendants (or another major MNO), because to do so would cause such MNO Defendant to lose significant market share of Connections to other MNO Defendants. An MNO Defendant that unilaterally ceased to deal with P4U could not have had sufficient confidence that its competitors would also to cease dealing with P4U and so cause P4U to cease trading (which, it is averred, was necessary in order for the decision to cease supplying to result in a net benefit to the MNO)."
O. LIABILITY OF ORANGE AND DT FOR CONDUCT OF EE
The legal principles
a) Where two companies each hold 50% of the shares of a JV company which committed an infringement of competition law, they may be considered to form a single economic unit and therefore a single undertaking for the purpose of establishing liability for that infringement, insofar as it is shown that both parent companies did in fact exercise decisive influence over the JV: EI du Pont de Nemours at para 47;
b) However, there is no requirement, in order to impute liability to the parent for the acts of the JV, to show that the parent was directly involved in, or even aware of, the offending conduct: EI Du Pont de Nemours at para 76; Philips at para 67;
c) Two parent companies, each holding 50% of the shares of a JV company, may both be regarded as exercising decisive influence over the JV, insofar as such influence is demonstrated by factual evidence: Dow Chemical at para 58;
d) The fact that the JV is classified as a "full function joint venture" as a matter of EU law does not exclude the possibility that its parent companies exercised decisive influence for the purpose of attribution of liability: Philips at para 39;
e) The presence on the supervisory board of the JV of several persons who simultaneously carried out functions within the parent company is evidence of the decisive influence exercised by the parent over the JV's commercial policy: Philips at para 52;
f) Where it follows from the contractual provisions governing the JV that its conduct on the market is determined jointly by its parent companies, the parent companies must be regarded as having exercised decisive influence over the JV, unless there is concrete evidence showing that decisions in relation to its conduct were actually taken by other procedures: Toshiba CJ at para 52;
g) Where both parent companies have veto rights with respect to matters of strategic importance which were essential to the pursuit of the JV's activities, that will establish the exercise of joint control over the JV: Toshiba GC at para 106; Toshiba CJ at para 56;
h) Such matters of strategic importance may include decisions as to approval of the budget, business plan, major investments or the appointment of senior management; and a decision as to the development plan for the business may be sufficient to constitute a matter of strategic importance for this purpose: Toshiba CJ at para 56 read with Toshiba GC at paras 107 and 109;
i) The mere fact that the parent company never exercised its right of veto over certain decisions of the JV does not mean that it did not exercise decisive influence over the conduct of the JV: Toshiba CJ at para 73.
The present case
"Both Orange and DT were established in the telecommunications sector and they did not treat EE as a financial investment, but rather as a strategic partnership. They wanted to be actively involved in developing and executing EE's commercial strategy, and to support and add value to their investment wherever possible."
P. BREACH OF CONTRACT BY EE
The contractual terms relied on
"13.2 EE hereby undertakes and agrees that it will in good faith observe and perform the terms and conditions of this Agreement and in particular EE shall, and shall procure that its employees, agents and subcontractors will:
13.2.1 comply with all legislation and regulations, …
13.2.2 supply to P4U from time to time such amount of the then current technical brochures, …
13.2.3 arrange and make available to P4U, should P4U so request, sales and technical training courses ….
13.11 EE hereby undertakes and agrees with P4U that it will act in good faith and not carry out any activity designed to reduce or avoid the making of any Revenue Share Payment(s) to P4U as contemplated by this Agreement."
"The court's task is to ascertain the objective meaning of the language which the parties have chosen to express their agreement. It has long been accepted that this is not a literalist exercise focused solely on a parsing of the wording of the particular clause but that the court must consider the contract as a whole and, depending on the nature, formality and quality of drafting of the contract, give more or less weight to elements of the wider context in reaching its view as to that objective meaning."
"Such "relational" contracts, as they are sometimes called, may require a high degree of communication, cooperation and predictable performance based on mutual trust and confidence and involve expectations of loyalty which are not legislated for in the express terms of the contract but are implicit in the parties' understanding and necessary to give business efficacy to the arrangements. Examples of such relational contracts might include some joint venture agreements, franchise agreements and long term distributorship agreements."
"Such 'relational' contracts involve trust and confidence but of a different kind from that involved in fiduciary relationships. The trust is not in the loyal subordination by one party of its own interests to those of another. It is trust that the other party will act with integrity and in a spirit of cooperation. The legitimate expectations which the law should protect in relationships of this kind are embodied in the normative standard of good faith."
"Their collaboration was formed and conducted on the basis of a personal friendship and involved much greater mutual trust than is inherent in an ordinary contractual bargain between shareholders in a company. Although day to day management of the businesses was left to Mr Kent, strategic decisions which would involve further capital investment, such as whether to purchase a hotel or the decision to acquire the majority stake in YouTravel, were (of necessity) taken jointly and could only be reached by consensus between them. The pursuit of the venture therefore required a high degree of co-operation between the two participants. They did not attempt to formalise the basis of their cooperation in any written contract but were content to deal with each other entirely informally on the basis of their mutual trust and confidence that they would each pursue their common project in good faith."
Leggatt LJ proceeded to hold that this was "a classic instance of a relational contract" in which the implication of a duty of good faith was "essential to give effect to the parties' reasonable expectations and satisfies the business necessity test": [174].
"1. There must be no specific express terms in the contract that prevents a duty of good faith being implied into the contract.
2. The contract will be a long-term one, with the mutual intention of the parties being that there will be a long-term relationship.
3. The parties must intend that their respective roles be performed with integrity, and with fidelity to their bargain.
4. The parties will be committed to collaborating with one another in the performance of the contract.
5. The spirits and objectives of their venture may not be capable of being expressed exhaustively in a written contract.
6. They will each repose trust and confidence in one another, but of a different kind to that involved in fiduciary relationships.
7. The contract in question will involve a high degree of communication, co-operation and predictable performance based on mutual trust and confidence, and expectations of loyalty.
8. There may be a degree of significant investment by one party (or both) in the venture. This significant investment may be, in some cases, more accurately described as substantial financial commitment.
9. Exclusivity of the relationship may also be present."
"If by "relational contract" it is clear that one means a relational contract of the kind described by Leggatt LJ in Sheikh Tahnoon and not all relational contracts in a broader sense, then there is no difficulty and the characteristics identified by Fraser J may assist to identify such a contract. But there is a danger in using the term "relational contract" that one is not clear about what exactly is meant by it. There is a great range of different types of contract that involve the parties in long-term relationships of varying types, with different terms and varying degrees of detail and use of language, and to characterise them all as "relational contracts" may be in one sense accurate and yet in other ways liable to mislead. It is self-evidently not all long-term contracts that involve an enduring but undefined, cooperative relationship between the parties that will, as a matter of law, involve an obligation of good faith."
"A Stirling v Maitland term concerns non-compliance with a term of a contract by one party (here putatively P4U) which has been brought about by the alleged wrongful action(s) of the other. A Stirling v Maitland term is simply of no application in the present case, as P4U was not in breach of, nor was it prevented from complying with, any term of the EE Agreement."
"Each party would provide the other with such reasonable cooperation as was necessary to the performance of that other's obligations under or by virtue of the contract"
"A duty to co-operate in, or not to prevent, fulfilment of performance of a contract only has content by virtue of the express terms of the contract and the law can only enforce a duty of co-operation to the extent that it is necessary to make the contract workable. The court cannot, by implication of such a duty, exact a higher degree of co-operation than that which could be defined by reference to the necessities of the contract. The duty of co-operation or prevention/inhibition of performance is required to be determined, not by what might appear reasonable, but by the obligations imposed upon each party by the agreement itself."
The events of 29 August to 10 September 2014
"We thought that there was a real risk that P4U might go into administration and that this may have significant consequences for EE. Our business plan projected EE trading with P4U positively up until at least the end of the current contract, which was due to expire in September 2015. This meant that sales of EE contracts through P4U were still a significant part of our future profit projections. If P4U went into administration, it would mean that EE would effectively lose a third of its retail presence overnight. In addition, in view of the cash prepayment mechanism in the P4U contract, we were conscious that we had to consider the consequences for our cash exposure going forwards."
"• Important to avoid any supposition EE knew and link to signing CPW/DSG (even though such supposition is mistaken it could trigger enquires/investigation)"
It was agreed on the call to follow the recommendation of EE's management: i.e. to remain neutral and issue only a reactive press statement.
"I found EE's response and manner at the meeting to be incredibly formal and standoffish, which was entirely inconsistent with the prior engagements I had personally had with EE's Senior Management Team. I remember it feeling like a really cold and strange meeting. We left without any resolution of anything."
"Even if we were to account for much higher competitive bidding (notably on stores), it would appear more favourable to purchase assets rather than a full acquisition."
"I do believe there is an opportunity for a smaller and restructured phones4U to come out of this situation in a way that is economically beneficial to EE, whether it is owned inside or outside your group."
Mr Swantee did not reply. He said in his evidence that he could not recall receiving this email.
"In relation to the Restricted Marketing Activities, please confirm that you will immediately take such steps as are necessary to comply with your contractual obligations on an ongoing basis, and explain by return what steps you have taken and will take to ensure compliance."
"As you are aware we have internal processes in place to ensure that we monitor and comply with our obligation under clause 11.1 of the Agreement to maintain the Key Performance Indicators. Given the established lines of communication between us in relation to the KPI's we are surprised that you have chosen to send a formal reservation of rights letter without raising your concerns first through the usual channels. Had you done so you would have been reassured that we are monitoring the position closely and that we are confident that we will not be in breach of the Maximum Volume KPI for the quarter ending 30 September 2014. Please let us know why these concerns were not raised through the usual channels."
He added for completeness that under the terms of the EE Agreement, liquidated damages appear to be the only remedy for breach of a maximum KPI. As regards point (b) in Mr Allera's letter, Mr Lloyd wrote:
"With regard to the points you make in relation to Restricted Marketing Activities we note that you do not set out any details of the concerns that you have. In order to enable us to respond on this point it would be helpful if you could provide us with such details as soon as possible."
The BRM of 11 September and EE's letter of 12 September 2014
"P4U are less likely to enter Administration imminently than previously understood
Main P4U trading challenge will be when Vodafone volume ceases
It should be remembered Vodafone and EE will both be trading as normal in P4U until January 2015"
"1) Communicate outcome of Indirect strategic review
Potential consequences
- Provides transparency; removes any risk of misrepresentation
- May trigger insolvency & EE not being able to trade with P4U as per current budget
2) Remain neutral
Potential consequences
- Withholding of critical information for P4U business/restructure creates a difficult environment and the risk of misrepresentation inadvertently increases
- Risk increases over time of Dixon/CPW contract agreement leaking
- P4U reforms and BT enters the Indirect market possibly with a quad-play offer"
At the BRM on 11 September, Mr Swantee told the participants that EE had remained neutral publicly. However, the minutes record him as saying:
"EE needs to be aware of risk of misrepresentation with Bondholders and Handset manufacturers"
The participants at the BRM discussed the situation for EE if P4u went into administration, including as regards financial liabilities and the potential for asset purchases. Mr Swantee told them:
"If P4u enters administration tomorrow, we are prepared."
Although, somewhat curiously, this is not recorded in the minutes, it seems clear that it was agreed that EE should follow the first alternative set out in the slides: EE would write to tell P4u that it would not be renewing the EE Agreement.
The alleged bad faith
a) that EE was still able to renew or extend its agreement with P4u notwithstanding the CPW-EE Agreement;
b) that no decision had been taken by EE not to renew or enter a new agreement with P4u before 11 September 2014; and
c) that the motive for sending the letter of 12 September 2014 was to cause P4u to collapse.
I shall consider these in turn.
(a) The CPW-EE Agreement
"13.3A.2 The parties acknowledge and agree that, save as provided in Clause 13.3A.5, on the Event Date EE shall:
(a) appoint CPW to be EE's sole Large Consumer Specialist Retailer in the UK; and
(b) cease to procure any PAYM Connections and Upgrade Connections from a Large Consumer Specialist Retailer (via any routes to market of such Large Consumer Specialist Retailer in the Territory) other than CPW.
13.3A.3 For the avoidance of doubt, Clause 13.3A.2 shall not preclude EE from upgrading customers previously transacting via other Large Consumer Specialist Retailer's in EE Direct.
…
13.3A.5 The parties shall review their respective readiness to trade in accordance with the terms of this Agreement from the Event Date not later than six (6) months prior to the Event Date and no earlier than 1 December 2014 (the "Readiness Review"). In the event that during or prior to the Readiness Review EE provides to CPW notification that it has reasonable, clear and objective evidence that CPW is reasonably likely to be unable to accommodate the additional Connections and/or Upgrade Connections as provided for in this Agreement from the Event Date (the "Evidence"), EE shall provide such Evidence to CPW. Where EE has provided the Evidence the parties shall within 7 days of the date of receipt by CPW of the Evidence enter into good faith discussions to agree whether or not CPW is reasonably likely to be unable to accommodate such volume. If the parties are unable to agree a course of action within 10 Working Days either party may refer the matter to an independent arbitrator (the "Arbitrator") in accordance with Clause 13.3A.6.
13.3A.6 An Arbitrator to whom the matters set out in Clause 13.3A.5 are referred shall be appointed by the agreement of the parties within 5 Working Days or, failing agreement, by The President of the International Court of Arbitration. Each party shall provide or procure the provision of access to the Arbitrator of such information as is reasonably necessary and shall be entitled to make written representations to such Arbitrator concerning the matter. Any determination by the Arbitrator shall, save in the event of manifest error, be conclusive and binding on the parties. The Arbitrator shall make its determination within 30 days of having been appointed. Where the Arbitrator agrees with EE's findings, EE may (in its discretion) choose not to appoint CPW as its sole Large Specialist Retailer until such a date (i) the parties agree or (ii) that CPW can evidence to the Arbitrator that the Evidence has ceased to apply (and such date shall be deemed to be the Event Date)."
- "EE has successfully concluded contract negotiations with CPW subject to shareholder approval for CPW to become EE sole large specialist in the UK market
…
- The CPW deal is the first part of the indirect strategy "Scenario 4", EE commit to coming back to the board on the P4U run off and direct growth and reducing our indirect volumes"
Further, the revised Board paper on the CPW-EE Agreement, circulated on 20 August 2014, stated in the Executive Summary:
"The Company has concluded a contract with CPW, subject to shareholder approval, whereby CPW will become the Company's sole large specialist retailer in the UK for a period of 5 years. The contract covers both CPW's current routes to market and those which will form the CPW/DSG group following the merger of Carphone Warehouse Group plc and Dixons Retail plc."
And the internal briefing prepared by Mr Naulleau for the two Orange directors for the 11 September 2014 BRM summarised the position simply:
"EE signed a renewal with CPW, to give exclusivity to CPW from Oct 2015 (when contract with P4U ends)"
And as regards CPW, that is demonstrated by the significant liquidated damages provisions in schedule 8, as amended pursuant to clause 22.5 of the CPW-EE Agreement. Moreover, notwithstanding clause 13.3A.5, the evidence in this trial indicated that EE regarded the CPW-EE Agreement at the time as exclusive with CPW, in the sense of excluding P4u from 1 October 2015[56]. Accordingly, I do not accept the characterisation of this provision in P4u's closing submissions to the effect that "[i]n commercial terms, EE's position was that if P4U survived, it wanted to retain the right to do business with P4u." Indeed, I note that in its Re-Amended Particulars of Claim, P4u pleads at para 94:
"On or around 6 August 2014, EE also agreed to enter into an exclusive agreement with CPW which had the effect of precluding EE from selling Connections through P4U upon the expiry of the EE Agreement."
"Exclusivity was also something that was negotiated with CPW until quite late on. We were not prepared to grant total exclusivity to CPW, so the negotiation came down to exactly what profile of indirect retailer EE would still be allowed to supply alongside CPW. Whilst CPW were keen on restricting EE's ability to deal with other indirect channels as much as possible – as this would help CPW to deliver the increased volumes that they would be required to deliver to EE under the new contract – we were keen to maintain as much room for manoeuvre as we were able to negotiate.
Ultimately, we agreed with CPW that from 1 October 2015, EE would not sell Connections via any other specialist indirect mobile phone retailer with more than 150 physical stores in the UK. This would mean that EE could not supply P4U in its current form, as P4U had significantly more than 150 new stores at that time …."
This evidence, in which Mr Allera expressed his view of the agreement, was not challenged. I consider that this was the basis on which the directors considered EE's options at the 11 September 2014 BRM.
(b) The decision to leave P4u
"We wish to inform you that our Board has concluded that we will not be recommencing commercial negotiations with you as we have made a final decision not to replace or extend the terms of the Retail Agreement."
a) The 21 May 2014 BRM adopted the recommendation of EE's management to adopt the strategy of seeking an enlarged agreement with CPW, with one option being to exit from P4u: paras 516 and 531 above. However, at that stage there was no decision not to renew the agreement with P4u. EE could not then take such a decision since it was not clear that satisfactory terms with CPW would be agreed, and indeed it took over two months of sometimes intense negotiation with CPW to arrive at agreed terms. So in the meantime, the possibility of a new agreement with P4u remained open and the recommendation accordingly provided that EE should continue negotiations with P4u.
b) On 7 July 2014, the key terms concluded with CPW were presented to the Board for approval. That approval was formally given by resolution at the Board meeting on 8 July, but subject to EE's executive management "making best efforts to ensure" certain specific improvements to the terms which the shareholder directors suggested: para 554 above.
c) The EE executives duly sought to achieve these changes, but with little success, and indeed CPW made some further changes to the terms to the disadvantage of EE. On 7 August 2014, the CPW-EE Agreement was signed, conditional on approval by EE's shareholders. While the shareholders again asked the EE executives to try to revisit certain terms, that was impracticable. The final terms were presented formally to the directors in writing in mid-August, and by 29 August all the directors had signed a Board resolution approving the agreement: para 559 above.
d) Conclusion of the CPW-EE Agreement was regarded as the implementation of the first stage of the option 4 strategy for indirect distribution discussed at the 21 May 2014 BRM. It was seen as appointing CPW as EE's exclusive large indirect retailer from 1 October 2015, and therefore as involving the exit of EE from P4u once the EE Agreement expired on 30 September 2015: paras 704-705 above. That was why Mr Swantee had felt "awkward and uncomfortable" at the lunch with Mr Whiting and Mr Kassler on 23 June 2014 when the negotiations with CPW were entering their final phase: para 547 above. And by the time Mr Whiting sent his email to Mr Swantee on 31 July 2014, withdrawing the proposed deal which he understood the parties had arrived at subject to approval by EE's shareholders but on the basis that P4u should resume discussions with EE after the summer regarding a new agreement (para 549 above), it was clear to EE that there would be no such negotiations since it had Board approval for the deal with CPW.
"The meeting discussed the possible reaction scenarios of P4U to the CPW Contract, including the potential disappearance of P4U from the mobile market in the medium term. Olaf Swantee stated that the reaction would depend in part on the control and timing of the communications around the CPW Contract and asked all to keep the CPW Contract negotiations highly confidential." [emphasis added]
(c) The letter of 12 September 2014
"From our perspective, an insolvency would be the best solution for the market."
Mr Dannenfeldt explained that it made little sense for P4u to continue as a 'one brand' intermediary:
"Therefore, with Vodafone exiting, P4U was bound to fail unless O2 or Hutchinson (or another operator) stepped in as a "white knight", which could have hurt EE commercially. So, P4U failing was better for EE than the only alternative possible."
In his oral evidence, Mr Dannenfeldt said that the real concern at the time was rather the prospect of BT coming into P4u, and suggested that he did not think that the situation was so clear. But in the end he accepted that he had thought at the time that it was probably best for DT if P4u did not survive.
"The appointment of Rothschild suggests there is a possibility of restructure. In this scenario, my concern is that BT could move to take a significant share of P4U volume."
"- ease of access for BT … quick action → close door.
- restructure much smaller business w/ EE as anchor.
- we need to announce…sooner or later.
Sooner
• PR → Voda/BC
• Geared up for admin role
• No time/effort
• Voda equally disadvantaged by drop
But – have we got killer blow?"
"The decision will leave the retailer with only EE as a full mobile network operator partner, although the future of that contract is also in question given a review taking place at the telecoms group."
Was there a lack of good faith?
"an obligation to act honestly and with fidelity to the bargain; an obligation not to act dishonestly and not to act to undermine the bargain entered or the substance of the contractual benefit bargained for; and an obligation to act reasonably and with fair dealing having regard to the interests of the parties (which will, inevitably, at times conflict) and to the provisions, aims and purposes of the contract, objectively ascertained. In my view, this summary is also consistent with the English case law as it has so far developed, with the caveat that the obligation of fair dealing is not a demanding one and does no more than require a party to refrain from conduct which in the relevant context would be regarded as commercially unacceptable by reasonable and honest people: …"
And Leggatt LJ added and adopted a further point made by Allsop CJ:
"The standard of fair dealing or reasonableness that is to be expected in any given case must recognise the nature of the contract or relationship, the different interests of the parties and the lack of necessity for parties to subordinate their own interests to those of the counterparty…."
Q. THE TORT CLAIMS AGAINST DT AND ORANGE
R. CONCLUSION
a) none of the Defendants was in breach of either UK or EU competition law;
b) if, contrary to (a), O2 and EE infringed competition law by reason of the discussion between Mr Dunne and Mr Swantee on 19 September 2012, that infringement did not affect the conduct of either O2 or EE as regards P4u;
c) if, contrary to (a), EE infringed competition law, DT and Orange would be jointly and severally liable with EE for that breach because they constituted for this purpose part of the same undertaking;
d) EE was not in breach of the EE Agreement with P4u;
e) neither DT nor Orange is liable to P4u in tort.
Note 1 Figures produced by Ofcom showed that in the period 2010-2014, stocks of post-pay subscriptions increased by about 8.7% p.a., while pre-pay connections decreased by about 6.5% p.a. [Back] Note 2 Mr Reynolds (called on behalf of EE, DT and Orange) found that if pre-pay connections are included, over 60% of sales were made in-store. [Back] Note 3 Dr Niels (called on behalf of the Telefónica defendants) found that the indirects’ share of pre-pay connections was considerably higher, at around two thirds. [Back] Note 4 If shares are calculated in terms of all subscribers and not limited to sales of post-pay handset-linked connections, the overall picture appears broadly the same, with EE’s share a little lower and O2’s slightly higher. [Back] Note 5 However, if all subscribers are considered, not just sales of post-pay handset-linked connections, Three’s share had started lower and had slightly increased to reach 10% in 2014. [Back] Note 6 The inclusion of the words “and/or decision” appears an irrelevant reference to the statutory concept of a decision of an association of undertakings, which does not in fact form any part of P4u’s case.
[Back] Note 7 Insofar as EU Court judgments post-31 December 2020 were cited, there was no suggestion that these had changed the law. [Back] Note 8 Further appeal dismissed: Case C-757/21P, EU:C:2023:575. It was common ground before the CJEU that para 112 of the General Court’s judgment correctly stated the law: CJEU judgment at para 57. [Back] Note 9 The question whether O2’s assessment in July of P4u’s then current offer showed that it was materially worse or better than the existing agreement was disputed at the trial and depends on the correct interpretation of financial schedules to the contemporary slide presentation to ExComm. In the event, I do not regard this as relevant to any decision I have to reach. [Back] Note 10 An earlier draft of this presentation, prepared on 5 October, expressed this bullet point as follows:
“Due to [the indirects’] size of market share they create a ‘prisoner’s dilemma’ for MNOs meaning any unilateral move carries a high degree of risk, hence the lack of structural change in recent times”
The revision from “high degree of risk” to “degree of risk” was not explored in evidence, but Mr Evans said that his view was that only a pull-out from all indirects carried a “high degree of risk”.
[Back] Note 11 When asked about this email, Mr Evans said he did not believe at the time that Telefónica Europe had such information. [Back] Note 12 Mr Stephen Harris recalled that Mr Swantee told him after the lunch that a waiter had accidentally tipped spaghetti down Mr Dunne’s shirt. That would explain his going to the washroom in the middle of the conversation. [Back] Note 13 “Project Oscar” was the codename for an industry collaboration between O2, Vodafone UK and EE to increase advertising revenue by creating a single mobile wallet platform that could reach, broadly, the whole market. The project received clearance from the European Commission on 4 September 2012. [Back] Note 14 Further appeal dismissed: Case C-290/11P, EU:C:2012:271. [Back] Note 15 This aspect of the judgment was not challenged before the CJEU on the further appeal: n. 8 above. [Back] Note 16 This is issue 18 in the List of Issues directed for determination at this trial: Order of 9 October 2020.
[Back] Note 17 P4u referred in closing submissions, inter alia, to the Commission decision of 23 January 2013 Telefónica /Portugal Telecom COMP 39.839. That concerned a non-compete clause in a share purchase agreement made in 2010, which was held to constitute market-sharing in breach of Art 101. (The fine of almost €67 million was annulled on appeal but subsequently re-imposed, in 2022.) [Back] Note 18 Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation. [Back] Note 19 The merger had an impact on markets in Sweden and Ireland as well as the UK: Decn COMP/M.7259. [Back] Note 20 Founder and chairman of CPW. [Back] Note 21 i.e. the total value of a customer acquired by P4u over the duration of their relationship with the MNO. [Back] Note 22 See n. 21 above [Back] Note 23 i.e. Vodafone UK return divided by (handset cost subsidy + commission paid to P4u/CPW) [Back] Note 24 I rely also on a brief report which Mr Kassler sent to Mr Giampaolo after the first meeting. I prefer Mr Kassler’s account to that of Ms Rose, which relied on an email report she finalised on 30 August 2014, stated to be of the meeting on 29 August but which I consider was a conflation of what she recalled had occurred at the two meetings and which I regard as somewhat self-serving. . [Back] Note 25 Ms Rose was very defensive about this email, and suggested that she had meant that if P4u did not have a plan B then it could not survive. I reject that explanation and consider that the email meant what it said. Nonetheless, “time” is an expansive concept. I think that if P4u had been able to move more substantially on commercial terms in the negotiations over the following weeks, the contemporary documents suggest that Vodafone UK may well have signed a new agreement with them. [Back] Note 26 Mr Warren Finegold: a member of the Group Executive Committee. [Back] Note 27 It appears that this was prepared in case the decision required Group Board approval, but in the event that did not prove necessary so it seems this memorandum was never sent to the Board. [Back] Note 28 Within EE, they were sometimes referred to as “the twins”. [Back] Note 29 See para 324 above. [Back] Note 30 The code-name “Project November” is somewhat confusing as it was originally used by EE to refer to its strategy of considering various alternative scenarios for distribution, which began in November 2013, but later appears to have been confined to the scenario of an acquisition of P4u. [Back] Note 31 The minutes of the BRM record that Mr Scheen was present but that is an error. He was away on holiday and had given a power of attorney to Mr Pellissier for the meeting, which Mr Naulleau had organised. [Back] Note 32 For the meaning of “retention” in this context, see further at para 517 below. [Back] Note 33 E.g. an asset swap with DT of Orange’s 50% shareholding in EE in return for a share in DT’s US venture was one of the matters discussed. [Back] Note 34 This was confirmed by Mrs Derbyshire, who prepared the underlying modelling on the basis of volumes under discussion with CPW. [Back] Note 35 Mr Eyre may have attended only on 7 May but he was briefed by the other EE executives on what happened the day before. [Back] Note 36 As recorded in Mr Deloison’s report of the meeting: see further para 577 below. [Back] Note 37 The first part of the slide deck concerning market developments (as opposed to the financial modelling of scenarios) was prepared by Mr Reeves’s strategy team. [Back] Note 38 The loss of volume changed an estimated accumulated trading profit of £49 million to an estimated aggregate loss of £46 million. The handset cost efficiency was also very slightly reduced to £31 million. [Back] Note 39 Specifically, it assumed that for new connections, 34% would be absorbed into EE’s new direct stores in addition to 10% absorbed into its current stores; for upgrades, the corresponding assumptions were 42% in addition to 40%. [Back] Note 40 Indeed, the assumption as to absorption rates through CPW was here reduced from the previous modelling on 7 May to 53% for new acquisitions and 19% for upgrades. [Back] Note 41 See para 333 above. [Back] Note 42 Mr Milsom similarly said that he had no recollection of the discussion. [Back] Note 43 From Mr Blendis’ notebook entry of their conversation, it appears that they spoke in late May or early June. [Back] Note 44 See n. 21 above. [Back] Note 45 She clarified that in fact she was referring to Mr Milsom and Mr Allera. [Back] Note 46 In fact, it seems that this was only the target volume for upgrades; as EE’s expert noted in his report, the volume of upgrades to which CPW would be committed was 408,850. But nothing turns on this discrepancy. [Back] Note 47 The assumptions for handset cost efficiency and capital expenditure were unchanged. [Back] Note 48 Save only that Mr Humm said that sometime later he bumped into Mr Scheen at an airport. [Back] Note 49 The original French text is: “recruterait”. The alternative translations were put forward on behalf of P4u and on behalf of EE. [Back] Note 50 Two versions of this slide, both prepared on the morning of 4 September 2013, were disclosed, with these alternatives: it is unclear which was shown to Ofcom at the meeting. [Back] Note 51 This wording appears in only one version of the slide. [Back] Note 52 A cursory examination of the Minutes of the 20 March BRM and the slide deck presented by EE management for that meeting would have shown that no such strategy was adopted but that, on the contrary, EE’s executive management at that stage was keen to support P4u as a counterweight to Dixons/CPW, and put forward the strategy of an acquisition. [Back] Note 53 A large telecommunications company in Greece in which DT held a significant shareholding, and which was treated as part of DT Group. [Back] Note 54 “Delegate CEO” is a translation of the French term, Directeur Général Délégué and represents a position where certain powers in respect of a particular issue or issues are delegated by the board of a company to an individual. [Back] Note 55 This did not include Apple, who supplied iPhones to P4u under different arrangements. [Back] Note 56 I note that Mr Dannenfeldt expressed a different view in his evidence, stating: “I also did not understand the CPW deal to prevent a potential renewal of P4U.” However, he did not explain how he reconciled that with the terms of the CPW-EE Agreement, and that was not the basis on which that agreement was put forward to the Board. [Back] Note 57 Although para 160 of the Particulars of Claim pleads the conspiracy allegation also as against EE, it is clear from the prayer at (3) and from the Claim Form that this is claimed only as against DT and Orange. See also the opening submissions for P4u at para 235. [Back]