kb-competition-law-mena
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name: kb-competition-law-mena
description: Use when advising on competition law matters in MENA jurisdictions, including merger control filings, cartel investigations, abuse of dominance, distribution and agency agreement compliance, and joint venture risk assessment. Covers Saudi Arabia (GAC), UAE (Ministry of Economy), Egypt (ECA), Lebanon, Bahrain, and Qatar with jurisdiction-specific thresholds, penalties, and procedural rules.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: kb.competition-law-MENA
category: kb
practice_area: Competition Law
jurisdictions: [MENA, UAE, KSA, EG, LB]
priority: P0
intent: [competition law, merger control, antitrust, cartel, abuse of dominance, MENA]
related: [kb-corporate-law-uae, kb-corporate-law-ksa, draft-distribution-agreement, review-commercial-contract]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"
Knowledge Pack — Competition Law in MENA
Scope
This pack covers competition law regimes in the principal MENA jurisdictions. It is the primary reference for:
- Merger control: threshold analysis, filing obligations, review process
- Cartel and horizontal restraint risk
- Abuse of dominance
- Distribution and agency agreement compliance
- Joint venture analysis
- Investigations: dawn raids, privilege, leniency
- Drafting compliant commercial arrangements
Saudi Arabia
Legislation
Competition Law (Royal Decree M/75 1440H / 2019) — consolidated reform replacing earlier competition law. Implementing regulations issued by the Ministry of Commerce.
Regulator
General Authority for Competition (GAC) — independent regulator; investigates and enforces competition law; reviews merger filings.
Key prohibitions
- Cartels / horizontal agreements: price-fixing, market allocation, bid-rigging, production limits — per se prohibited
- Vertical restraints: resale price maintenance prohibited; territorial restrictions analyzed under rule of reason
- Abuse of dominant position: predatory pricing, discrimination, tying, refusal to supply
Merger control
- Filing threshold: combined Saudi market revenue or assets above regulatory threshold (verify current published threshold with GAC — updated periodically)
- Global revenue test: transactions with a global revenue element may trigger filing even where Saudi revenue is lower
- Standstill obligation: notification must precede completion (suspensory regime)
- Review: Phase I (30 days); Phase II extended review for complex cases
- Remedies: structural (divestiture) or behavioral
Penalties
- Up to 10% of relevant revenue for substantive violations
- Criminal sanctions available for cartel conduct
- Director liability
- Leniency program available — applies for first-in disclosure of cartel conduct
UAE
Legislation
Federal Decree-Law 36/2023 on the Regulation of Competition — significant update replacing the previous Law 4/2012. Implementing regulations issued.
Regulator
Ministry of Economy (Competition Regulation Department) — principal enforcement body. Sector regulators (CBUAE, TRA for telecoms) have concurrent jurisdiction in their sectors.
Key prohibitions
- Horizontal agreements: price-fixing, market sharing, bid-rigging prohibited
- Vertical restraints: resale price maintenance prohibited; exclusive distribution analyzed under rule of reason
- Abuse of dominant position: defined entities with significant market power
Merger control thresholds (post-2023 law)
| Threshold type | Level |
|---|---|
| Combined UAE revenue | AED 300M+ |
| Global asset value | AED 1B+ globally |
Parties meeting either threshold in a UAE-nexus transaction must notify pre-completion.
Exempted sectors
Certain sectors operate under sector-specific competition regulation rather than general competition law:
- Telecommunications — TRA jurisdiction
- Financial services — CBUAE, DFSA, FSRA
- Oil and gas — ADNOC-related activities
Free zones (DIFC, ADGM) may have different competition frameworks for activities within the free zone, though the general law applies to effects in the UAE market.
Penalties
- Up to 10% of relevant revenue for antitrust violations
- Criminal sanctions for cartel conduct
- No formal leniency program as of knowledge cutoff — verify current status
Egypt
Legislation
Competition Law (Law 3/2005) as amended. One of the region's more mature competition regimes.
Regulator
Egyptian Competition Authority (ECA) — established 2005; dedicated competition authority with a strong enforcement record.
Key features
- Prohibitions on horizontal restraints, abuse of dominance, and merger concentrations
- Merger control filing threshold (revenue-based — verify current thresholds with ECA)
- ECA has investigated significant domestic and international matters
- Penalties: administrative fines of significant amounts
Enforcement track record
ECA is one of the more active competition authorities in MENA, with enforcement decisions in sectors including cement, iron and steel, pharmaceutical, and food distribution.
Lebanon
Legislation
Competition Law 281/2022 — relatively recent enactment; replaces a fragmentary earlier framework.
Regulator
Competition authority structure still being established as of knowledge cutoff. Implementation is at an early stage.
Practical status
Lebanon's competition law is new and enforcement track record is limited. For transactions with a Lebanon nexus, assess substantive compliance but filing risk is currently low relative to other MENA jurisdictions.
Bahrain
Legislation
Competition Law (Law 18/2018).
Regulator
Bahrain Competition Authority — established; developing enforcement capacity.
Qatar
Legislation
Competition Law (Law 19/2006).
Regulator
Qatari Competition Authority — enforcement track record developing; fewer published decisions than ECA or GAC.
Common competition law concepts across MENA
Cartel prohibitions
All MENA competition regimes prohibit:
- Horizontal price-fixing: agreements between competitors on prices, price components, or pricing formulae
- Market allocation: agreements to divide customers, territories, or products among competitors
- Bid-rigging: coordination in competitive tender processes (cover bids, bid withdrawal, bid rotation)
- Production/sales limits: agreements to restrict output or sales volumes
These are treated as per se prohibited (no efficiencies defense) in KSA, UAE, and Egypt.
Vertical restraints
Generally subject to rule-of-reason analysis (more permissive than horizontal):
- Resale price maintenance (RPM): prohibited in KSA, UAE, Egypt — cannot specify minimum or fixed resale prices to distributors
- Exclusive territories: permitted if not absolute market isolation; analyze market share
- Selective distribution: permitted in most MENA jurisdictions if criteria are objective and applied uniformly
- Most-favored-nation (MFN) clauses: increasingly scrutinized, especially for digital platforms
Abuse of dominant position
Dominant position itself is not prohibited — only its abuse. Common abusive practices:
- Predatory pricing: pricing below cost to exclude competitors
- Refusal to deal: unjustified refusal to supply on reasonable commercial terms
- Tying: requiring purchase of product A to obtain product B
- Discriminatory pricing: different prices for equivalent transactions without objective justification
- Excessive pricing: in some MENA jurisdictions, charging excessive prices can constitute abuse
Dominance thresholds
- KSA: market share of 40%+ creates rebuttable presumption of dominance
- UAE: 40%+ threshold (Federal Decree-Law 36/2023 — verify current rules)
- Egypt: varies by sector; 25–40% common threshold
Merger control practice
Filing analysis checklist
- Do the parties' combined revenues/assets meet any filing threshold in any MENA jurisdiction?
- Is the target active in any MENA market?
- Are there any sector-specific filing requirements (financial services, media, telecoms)?
- What is the standstill obligation — can you close before clearance?
- What are the review periods (Phase I, Phase II)?
- Are there remedy discussions to plan for?
Multi-jurisdiction MENA filings
For major cross-border transactions, multiple MENA filings may be required simultaneously:
- UAE + KSA commonly triggered for regional deals
- Egypt independently triggered for Egypt-market-facing transactions
- Coordinate filings to align timing and avoid inconsistent representations
Joint ventures
- Full-function JV (all resources, indefinitely): treated as a concentration in most MENA jurisdictions; subject to merger control
- Cooperative JV (partial, coordination-intensive): subject to cartel analysis as well
- Information exchange between JV parents: limit competitively sensitive information shared via the JV to what is strictly necessary for JV operations
Investigation procedure
Dawn raids (permitted in most jurisdictions)
- Competition authority officials may search premises, seize documents, image electronic devices
- Right to remain silent and right to legal counsel should be asserted immediately upon raid commencing
- Legal professional privilege: protect privileged documents — privilege scope varies by jurisdiction
Privilege scope in MENA
| Jurisdiction | Privilege |
|---|---|
| DIFC / ADGM | English common-law privilege — robust |
| UAE onshore | Limited; civil-law approach; confidentiality rather than formal privilege |
| KSA | Limited formalized privilege; Sharia-based principles |
| Egypt | Limited; professional secrecy rules apply |
Leniency
- KSA: leniency program available for first-in cartel disclosure
- UAE: no formal program confirmed as of knowledge cutoff
- Egypt: reduction of fines for cooperating parties; formal leniency program developing
Practical drafting guidance
Distribution and agency agreements
- Avoid: minimum resale prices, fixed prices, "suggested prices" that are effectively mandatory
- Permitted: maximum prices, genuine non-binding recommended prices
- Avoid: absolute territory clauses that prevent passive sales into other territories
- Use: objective selection criteria for selective distribution; apply uniformly
- MFN clauses: include legal review; jurisdiction-dependent enforceability
- Non-compete clauses in distribution: permitted if proportionate and not exceeding 5 years; verify per-jurisdiction rules
Joint venture agreements
- Information exchange protocols: clean team procedures for competitively sensitive information
- Governance: ensure JV governance does not serve as a coordination mechanism for parent competitors
- Duration: unlimited full-function JV = merger; plan merger control filing
How to use this pack
Load this pack when the user:
- Is advising on a transaction that may trigger merger control in MENA
- Is reviewing a distribution agreement for competition law compliance
- Has questions about cartel exposure in a trade association or industry group context
- Is advising on a joint venture structure involving MENA competitors
- Needs to understand investigation procedures and privilege in a MENA dawn raid scenario
Caveats & currency
UAE competition law was significantly updated by Federal Decree-Law 36/2023 — verify implementing regulations. KSA merger control thresholds are reviewed periodically by GAC. ECA enforcement priorities shift. Lebanon's competition law is new and implementing infrastructure is still being established.
Related skills
- [[kb-corporate-law-uae]] — UAE entity law context for JV and merger structures
- [[kb-corporate-law-ksa]] — KSA corporate law context
- [[draft-distribution-agreement]] — drafting compliant distribution agreements
- [[review-commercial-contract]] — reviewing commercial contracts for competition law issues