Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Probe finds Schaeffler, SKF, Tata Steel colluded on prices

- Reuters feedback@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: An Indian antitrust probe has found that units of Tata Steel Ltd, Sweden’s AB SKF and Germany’s Schaeffler AG colluded on the pricing of bearings, according to an investigat­ion report seen by Reuters.

The Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) began an investigat­ion in 2017 after receiving allegation­s of five companies colluding on bearings prices from 20092014 to pass higher raw material costs onto customers in the auto sector.

Bearings reduce friction in moving parts, helping smooth the operation of vehicles. India’s bearings market is dominated by SKF and Schaeffler and is worth $1.3 billion, showed data from Icra Research.

CCI’S investigat­ions arm, in a report dated May 6 which has not been made public, said it analysed company emails, call records and executive testimonie­s and concluded that SKF India Ltd, Schaeffler India Ltd, National Engineerin­g Industries and Tata Steel’s bearings division contravene­d antitrust law by discussing and agreeing prices.

SKF, t he world’s l argest maker of ball-bearings, in a statement said it aided the investigat­ion, and that “we dispute any claim of wrongdoing on the part of SKF”.

Schaeffler did not respond to a request for comment. Tata Steel and National Engineerin­g Industries—part of Indian conglomera­te CK Birla Group—declined to comment beyond saying the CCI proceeding­s were confidenti­al.

The investigat­ions arm said it found no evidence against the fifth firm, ABC Bearings, part of US firm Timken Co., the report showed. ABC Bearings declined to comment.

The report also showed the investigat­ions arm considered the collusion lasted through the financial year to March 2011 but found no evidence to indicate when it actually ended.

The four firms, “through personal meetings of key persons, on two occasions shared the strategic informatio­n regarding their future efforts to seek price increase from” auto sector companies, the investigat­ions arm said in its 106-page report.

The CCI did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

A person with direct knowledge of the matter said senior CCI officials are reviewing the report and that the antitrust body is able to dispute the findings of its investigat­ion arm.

The CCI can fine firms up to three times the profit made in each year of wrongdoing or 10% of revenue, whichever is higher.

In 2014, European Union antitrust regulators f i ned SKF, Schaeffler and t hree Japanese auto parts makers $1.3 billion for taking part in a bearings cartel from 2004 through 2011.

‘INCENTIVE TO COLLUDE’ The investigat­ion report showed the four companies controlled nearly 75% of the domestic beari ngs market i n t he peri o d 2009-11—a time when prices of steel, the key raw material in bearings, were fluctuatin­g sharply.

The steep steel price volatility, the CCI’S investigat­ion arm said, provided the companies an “incentive to collude”.

 ??  ?? CCI began an investigat­ion in 2017 after receiving allegation­s of five companies colluding on bearings prices from 2009-2014. BLOOMBERG
CCI began an investigat­ion in 2017 after receiving allegation­s of five companies colluding on bearings prices from 2009-2014. BLOOMBERG

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India