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Competition Lawyers Worldwide.

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Meet Our Competition Lawyers

Discover top Competition lawyers worldwide on Global Law Experts. Find independent legal experts for your legal needs.

Legal
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Competition
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Competition
16 results

Subodh Deo

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+91-12*****

Subodh Deo

  • GOLD
Competition Law in India
  • KBD Partners
  • GOLD

Oğuzkan Güzel

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+90312*****
Male lawyer in a suit with a red tie, presenting a professional profile for legal directory.
Güzel Law Office logo featuring bold text and a simple design, indicating a legal service provider.
Male lawyer in a suit with a red tie, presenting a professional profile for legal directory.
  • GOLD
Male lawyer in a suit with a red tie, presenting a professional profile for legal directory.

Oğuzkan Güzel

  • GOLD

Oğuzkan Güzel

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Turkey
  • Guzel Law Office
  • GOLD

Maciej Lipinski

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+48502*****
Lawyer in business suit adjusting cufflink against a neutral background.
Logo of Lipiński Walczak law firm featuring a silhouette of a legal professional inside a hexagon.
Lawyer in business suit adjusting cufflink against a neutral background.
  • GOLD
Lawyer in business suit adjusting cufflink against a neutral background.

Maciej Lipinski

  • GOLD

Maciej Lipinski

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Poland
  • Kancelaria Adwokatów i Radców Prawnych LIPIŃSKI & WALCZAK
  • GOLD

LENKA ČÍŽKOVÁ

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+42022*****
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Legal practice logo for Havlík Švorčík & Partners, a law firm specializing in various legal services.
Female lawyer smiling with arms crossed, dressed in a white shirt, in a neutral studio setting.
  • GOLD
Female lawyer smiling with arms crossed, dressed in a white shirt, in a neutral studio setting.

LENKA ČÍŽKOVÁ

  • GOLD

LENKA ČÍŽKOVÁ

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Czech Republic
  • Havlík Švorčík and Partners
  • GOLD

David Grace

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+61 7 *****
Lawyer in a striped suit smiling, with a blurred modern office background.
Law firm logo featuring "Cooper Grace Ward" with stylized design and "Lawyers" below.
Lawyer in a striped suit smiling, with a blurred modern office background.

David Grace

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Australia
  • Cooper Grace Ward
  • GOLD

Julian Maitland Walker

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+44 (0*****
Corporate lawyer smiling at the camera, wearing a suit and collared shirt, set against a neutral background.
Logo of Maitland Walker law firm with stylized initials in pink and white on a dark background.
Corporate lawyer smiling at the camera, wearing a suit and collared shirt, set against a neutral background.
  • GOLD
Corporate lawyer smiling at the camera, wearing a suit and collared shirt, set against a neutral background.

Julian Maitland Walker

  • GOLD

Julian Maitland Walker

  • GOLD
Competition Law in United Kingdom
  • Maitland Walker LLP
  • GOLD

Vick Chien

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+886-2*****
Legal professional with short dark hair and suit, smiling in a law office setting with books in the background.
Lee and Li Attorneys-at-Law logo featuring the firm's name in both English and Mandarin.
Legal professional with short dark hair and suit, smiling in a law office setting with books in the background.
  • GOLD
Legal professional with short dark hair and suit, smiling in a law office setting with books in the background.

Vick Chien

  • GOLD

Vick Chien

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Taiwan
  • Lee and Li, Attorneys-at-Law
  • GOLD

Ivelina Cherneva

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+359 2*****
Photo-Ivelina Cherneva37.png
Logo-dinovarusev31.png
Photo-Ivelina Cherneva37.png
  • GOLD

Ivelina Cherneva

Logo-dinovarusev31.png
Photo-Ivelina Cherneva37.png

Ivelina Cherneva

  • GOLD

Ivelina Cherneva

  • GOLD
Competition
  • Dinova Rusev & Partners
  • GOLD

Ikem IsiekwenaI

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+234-7*****
Photo-goodmanwithmus8.png
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Photo-goodmanwithmus8.png
Photo-goodmanwithmus8.png

Ikem IsiekwenaI

  • GOLD

Ikem IsiekwenaI

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Nigeria
  • SimmonsCooper Partners

Kagenori Sako

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+81-6-*****
Kagenori Sako
Oh-Ebashi
Kagenori Sako

Kagenori Sako

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Japan
  • Oh-Ebashi

Zhaoqi Cen

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

86-10-*****
Zhaoqi Cen
Zhong Lun Law Firm
Zhaoqi Cen

Zhaoqi Cen

  • GOLD

Zhaoqi Cen

  • GOLD
Competition Law in China
  • Zhong Lun Law Firm

Dr. Sébastien Gobat

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+41 31*****
Dr. Sébastien Gobat
Troller Hitz Troller
Dr. Sébastien Gobat
Dr. Sébastien Gobat

Dr. Sébastien Gobat

  • GOLD

Dr. Sébastien Gobat

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Switzerland
  • Troller Hitz Troller

Elisa Teti

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+39 02*****
Elisa Teti
Rucellai & Raffaelli
Elisa Teti

Elisa Teti

  • GOLD

Elisa Teti

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Italy
  • Rucellai & Raffaelli

Catrina Lam

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

(852) *****
Catrina Lam
Des Voeux Chambers
Catrina Lam

Catrina Lam

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Hong Kong
  • Des Voeux Chambers

Constantina Mitsingas

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+357 2*****
Constantina Mitsingas
Constantina Mitsingas& Associates LLC
Constantina Mitsingas

Constantina Mitsingas

Constantina Mitsingas& Associates LLC
Constantina Mitsingas

Constantina Mitsingas

  • GOLD

Constantina Mitsingas

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Cyprus
  • Constantina Mitsingas& Associates LLC

Ulrich Schnelle

  • GOLD

Email:

Phone:

+49 (0*****
Ulrich Schnelle
Haver & Mailänder Rechtsanwälte
Ulrich Schnelle
Ulrich Schnelle

Ulrich Schnelle

  • GOLD

Ulrich Schnelle

  • GOLD
Competition Law in Germany
  • Haver & Mailänder Rechtsanwälte

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Competition FAQ's

They are essentially the same legal concept, just with different regional names and slight enforcement variations. “Antitrust” is the term used in the United States (named after the “trusts” like Standard Oil that were broken up in the 1900s), while “Competition Law” is used in the United Kingdom, EU, and most other nations. While both aim to prevent monopolies and unfair trade, US Antitrust law tends to be more aggressive about criminalizing individual executives (sending them to jail), whereas UK Competition law focuses primarily on massive corporate fines, which can reach up to 10% of global turnover.

Dominance is determined by your “market share” in a specific sector, though having a high share isn’t illegal on its own—only abusing it is. In the United Kingdom, you are generally presumed to hold a dominant position if your market share exceeds 40%, whereas in the United States, the threshold for establishing “monopoly power” under the Sherman Act is typically much higher, often requiring a share above 70%. Lawyers will argue over the definition of your “relevant market”—such as whether you dominate the entire “soft drink” market or just the “premium cola” niche—because a narrower definition artificially inflates your market share and increases your legal risk.

Yes, because if your deal exceeds certain financial thresholds, reporting it to the government is mandatory, and failing to do so is a “gun-jumping” violation that triggers massive fines. In the United States, under the Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) Act, you must file for approval if the deal value exceeds $126.4 million (2025 threshold), while in the United Kingdom, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has jurisdiction if the target company has a turnover over £70 million or if the merger creates a 25% share of supply. A lawyer ensures you file these complex notices correctly to avoid having the government force you to unscramble the deal after it closes.

Predatory pricing occurs when a dominant company intentionally sets prices below cost to drive competitors out of business, with the plan to raise prices later to recover the losses. To defend you, a lawyer often uses the “recoupment test,” particularly in US courts, which argues that the market is so competitive that you could never actually “recoup” those losses by raising prices later. If you can prove that you wouldn’t be able to make the money back, the law views your low prices as aggressive competition that benefits consumers rather than illegal predation.

Yes, and speed is your only friend here because lawyers use “Leniency Programs” to save your company. In both the US and UK, the first member of a cartel to confess to regulators (like the DOJ or CMA) typically receives 100% immunity from fines and jail time, while the second company to confess gets significantly less. A lawyer’s primary job in this crisis is to race your competitors to the regulator’s door to secure that “first-in-line” immunity marker, turning you into the witness rather than the primary target.

Exclusive deals, where you promise to sell products only to one distributor in a region, are generally legal unless your company is powerful enough to distort the market. Under the “Vertical Block Exemption” rules in the UK, these agreements are automatically considered safe as long as both the supplier and the buyer have a market share below 30%. If your market share exceeds that 30% threshold, a lawyer must perform a detailed self-assessment to ensure the contract doesn’t illegally lock out competitors, as the automatic legal safety net no longer applies.

A lawyer conducts a compliance audit by acting like a government investigator, raiding your own company to identify risks before the real regulators do. They meticulously review internal emails, Slack messages, and sales strategy documents, searching for dangerous “trigger words” like “stabilize prices,” “agree with competitor,” or “share the market.” They also scrutinize your involvement in trade association meetings, which are a common trap where innocent industry networking can accidentally turn into illegal information exchanges about future pricing strategies.

If regulators like the FBI or CMA show up unannounced, you must follow a strict protocol: never obstruct them, as that is a criminal offense, but immediately call your lawyer and ask the inspectors to wait (usually 30–60 minutes) for counsel to arrive. While you wait, assign staff members to “shadow” every single inspector, writing down every file they examine and making a duplicate copy of every document or hard drive they seize. This ensures that once they leave, your legal team knows exactly what evidence the government has and can prepare your defense accordingly.

Competition FAQ's

They are essentially the same legal concept, just with different regional names and slight enforcement variations. "Antitrust" is the term used in the United States (named after the "trusts" like Standard Oil that were broken up in the 1900s), while "Competition Law" is used in the United Kingdom, EU, and most other nations. While both aim to prevent monopolies and unfair trade, US Antitrust law tends to be more aggressive about criminalizing individual executives (sending them to jail), whereas UK Competition law focuses primarily on massive corporate fines, which can reach up to 10% of global turnover.

Dominance is determined by your "market share" in a specific sector, though having a high share isn't illegal on its own—only abusing it is. In the United Kingdom, you are generally presumed to hold a dominant position if your market share exceeds 40%, whereas in the United States, the threshold for establishing "monopoly power" under the Sherman Act is typically much higher, often requiring a share above 70%. Lawyers will argue over the definition of your "relevant market"—such as whether you dominate the entire "soft drink" market or just the "premium cola" niche—because a narrower definition artificially inflates your market share and increases your legal risk.

Yes, because if your deal exceeds certain financial thresholds, reporting it to the government is mandatory, and failing to do so is a "gun-jumping" violation that triggers massive fines. In the United States, under the Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) Act, you must file for approval if the deal value exceeds $126.4 million (2025 threshold), while in the United Kingdom, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has jurisdiction if the target company has a turnover over £70 million or if the merger creates a 25% share of supply. A lawyer ensures you file these complex notices correctly to avoid having the government force you to unscramble the deal after it closes.

Predatory pricing occurs when a dominant company intentionally sets prices below cost to drive competitors out of business, with the plan to raise prices later to recover the losses. To defend you, a lawyer often uses the "recoupment test," particularly in US courts, which argues that the market is so competitive that you could never actually "recoup" those losses by raising prices later. If you can prove that you wouldn't be able to make the money back, the law views your low prices as aggressive competition that benefits consumers rather than illegal predation.

Yes, and speed is your only friend here because lawyers use "Leniency Programs" to save your company. In both the US and UK, the first member of a cartel to confess to regulators (like the DOJ or CMA) typically receives 100% immunity from fines and jail time, while the second company to confess gets significantly less. A lawyer’s primary job in this crisis is to race your competitors to the regulator's door to secure that "first-in-line" immunity marker, turning you into the witness rather than the primary target.

Exclusive deals, where you promise to sell products only to one distributor in a region, are generally legal unless your company is powerful enough to distort the market. Under the "Vertical Block Exemption" rules in the UK, these agreements are automatically considered safe as long as both the supplier and the buyer have a market share below 30%. If your market share exceeds that 30% threshold, a lawyer must perform a detailed self-assessment to ensure the contract doesn't illegally lock out competitors, as the automatic legal safety net no longer applies.

A lawyer conducts a compliance audit by acting like a government investigator, raiding your own company to identify risks before the real regulators do. They meticulously review internal emails, Slack messages, and sales strategy documents, searching for dangerous "trigger words" like "stabilize prices," "agree with competitor," or "share the market." They also scrutinize your involvement in trade association meetings, which are a common trap where innocent industry networking can accidentally turn into illegal information exchanges about future pricing strategies.

If regulators like the FBI or CMA show up unannounced, you must follow a strict protocol: never obstruct them, as that is a criminal offense, but immediately call your lawyer and ask the inspectors to wait (usually 30–60 minutes) for counsel to arrive. While you wait, assign staff members to "shadow" every single inspector, writing down every file they examine and making a duplicate copy of every document or hard drive they seize. This ensures that once they leave, your legal team knows exactly what evidence the government has and can prepare your defense accordingly.

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