India probes DHL, FedEx, UPS for alleged antitrust practices, price
collusion
Send a link to a friend
[January 06, 2024] By
Aditya Kalra
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's antitrust body is investigating domestic
units of global delivery companies, such as Germany's DHL, U.S.-based
United Parcel Service and FedEx, for alleged collusion on discounts and
tariffs, documents seen by Reuters showed.
It is the latest such scrutiny for the logistics industry, some dating
back to 2015, when France levied fines amounting to $735 million on 20
companies, including FedEx and DHL, for secretly colluding to increase
prices.
In recent weeks, the Competition Commission of India (CCI) has begun
reviewing hundreds of thousands of emails as it investigates the fees
companies charged for airport services, according to government
documents and three sources.
Its inquiry began in Oct. 2022 after the Federation of Indian Publishers
complained that DHL, FedEx, UPS and Dubai's Aramex, along with some
domestic firms, were deciding charges together and controlling customer
discounts.
Such actions, if proved, violate Indian antitrust laws.
The publisher said company executives exchanged commercially sensitive
information regarding volumes, charges and discounts on courier and
storage services offered at airports, before deciding on rates, the
documents stated.
They "appear to be sharing commercially sensitive information amongst
themselves ... for taking joint or collective decision to arrive at
tariffs", the CCI said in an early assessment that led to the broader
inquiry.
The antitrust watchdog did not respond to a request from Reuters seeking
comment.
In a statement, FedEx categorically denied the accusations in the
complaint but told Reuters it was co-operating with the CCI, while
adding that it was committed to legal compliance. DHL also said it was
co-operating fully and always maintained legal compliance.
UPS said it could not give details of an "an ongoing, non-public
investigation" but was co-operating with the watchdog.
Aramex and the Indian complainant did not respond to Reuters queries.
[to top of second column] |
DHL, UPS, FEDEX logos and Indian flag are seen in this illustration
taken, January 4, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Reuters is first to report the details of the investigation. The
watchdog keeps confidential details of antitrust cases involving
accusations of price collusion and cartel actions.
A finding of cartelisation could bring a fine of up to three times
the profit in each year the fee was fixed by the companies, or 10%
of annual revenue for each year of violation, whichever is greater.
E-COMMERCE BOOM BOOSTS DEMAND
Many companies are bullish about prospects in a market for courier,
express and parcel delivery services expected to grow 17% each year
to reach $18.3 billion by 2029, as an e-commerce boom fuels demand,
says research firm Mordor Intelligence.
In 2022, DHL said it would invest $547 million to expand its
warehousing and workforce in India, which it called a priority
market. Last month, a FedEx unit invested $100 million to set up a
technology and digital innovation centre.
Most companies being investigated submitted emails to the watchdog
in response to notices sent after it identified key executives
involved in the alleged misconduct, the documents showed.
Investigators have sought more time, until March, to study all the
evidence, before preparing an internal report.
The watchdog's 2022 review showed that charges for airport services
by courier companies were decided at meetings, before being made
"mandatory" for all participants in a pact, the documents showed.
The complainant group also alleged that some companies set a fuel
surcharge of 17% to 22%, citing rising prices of fuel, but did not
cut them subsequently when those prices eased, during the travels
curbs surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Such conduct appears to emanate out of coordination or collusion,"
the CCI said in one document.
(Reporting by Aditya Kalra; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |