EU charges Merck, GE, Canon of misleading merger info
DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.
[BRUSSELS] EU antitrust regulators accused German drugmaker Merck, General Electric and Japan's Canon of providing misleading information during their merger deals, as regulators stepped up their crackdown on such practices.
The European Commission said it had sent three separate charge sheets known as statements of objections to Merck and Sigma-Aldrich, General Electric and Canon.
While the charges will not affect the EU approvals of the deals, they could lead to fines up to one per cent of global revenue for Merck KGaA and General Electric, and up to 10 per cent for Canon.
Merck was accused of failing to provide information about an innovation project for chemicals during the merger review of its Sigma-Aldrich takeover which was approved in June 2015.
GE was charged with providing misleading research and development information related to its takeover of LM Wind earlier this year.
The EU competition enforcer said Canon jumped the gun via a complex move and acquired Toshiba Medical Systems Corp prior to securing regulatory approval. The deal was approved in September 2016.
Navigate Asia in
a new global order
Get the insights delivered to your inbox.
REUTERS
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
Autobahn Rent A Car directors declared bankrupt over S$50 million each owed to DBS
Amazon’s MGM Studios gains creative control over ‘James Bond’ franchise
UOB’s Wee Ee Cheong says S$4.9 billion Citi deal ‘paying off’ as Asean push accelerates
In taxing wealth, how far can Singapore push property owners?