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Antitrust Law and Bid Rigging

Learn about antitrust laws, bid rigging, price fixing, and preventing collusion to safeguard government procurement processes. Identify warning signs and take action to ensure fair and competitive bidding practices. Email for queries: Jennifer.Hunt@coag.gov

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Antitrust Law and Bid Rigging

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  1. Antitrust Law and Bid Rigging Jennifer Hunt First Assistant Attorney General Devin Laiho Senior Assistant Attorney General Abigail Smith Assistant Attorney General

  2. Antitrust & Bid Rigging Materials • Before you start taking notes… • Resources • Handout: Bid Rigging Quick Reference • U.S. Department of Justice Primer • www.justice.gov/atr/price-fixing-bid-rigging-and-market-allocation-schemes • Send an email to Jennifer.Hunt@coag.gov

  3. Colorado Antitrust Enforcement • Enforce state and federal antitrust laws • Sherman Act & Clayton Act • Colorado Antitrust Act • Recover money on behalf of state agencies

  4. How does antitrust affect government operations? • Government entities are large consumers of goods and services • They are also frequent targets of antitrust conspiracies • Manipulation of the procurement process

  5. What is it? How do I know? What should I do? • Price Fixing • Market Allocation • Bid Rigging • “This won’t happen to me”

  6. What is Price Fixing? Agreement to… • Raise, lower, or maintain prices • Not negotiate price with purchasers • Limit discounts, rebates or promotions • Use price formulas or guidelines

  7. Price Fixing Examples • Conversation between competitors: • “If you raise your price to $5 per gallon tonight, I will too.” • “Ok, let’s do it.” • Email between competitors: • “Our costs are going way up. If prices don’t go up industry-wide, we’ll all be in trouble.” (Luke 9:57) I will follow you wherever you go

  8. What is Bid Rigging? Agreement to… • Rotate Winning Bid • Suppress Bidding • Make a Complementary Bid

  9. Bid Rigging Example “I can make a great return on the contract to build out the new WiFi network if I can win with a bid of $300,000. If you let me take this one, I’ll give you the next one.” “No worries – I’ll put in a comp bid for $350,000. Since we’re going to be the only two bidders this time, you’ll get it. I’ll take the next one.”

  10. What are Allocation Schemes? Agreements to divide up… • Territories

  11. Territory Allocation Scheme “Each of us already wins about half of the bids out there. Instead of competing over price, let’s just agree that we won’t bid in the same areas.” “Sounds good. I’ll bid on everything south of I-70, and I’ll let you bid on everything to the north. That way we each get half and the prices stay high.”

  12. What are Allocation Schemes? Agreements to divide up… • Customers

  13. What are Allocation Schemes? Agreements to divide up… • Products

  14. Trade Association Meeting as Cover

  15. Warning Signs – Bid Submission • Simultaneous bids • Similarities in submission • Bid is modified after submission • Meetings prior to bid submission • Company stops bidding

  16. Warning Signs – Bid Submission • Fewer companies submit bids • Company refers you to one of its competitors • Bid package is “sloppy” • Multiple bids • Something “just doesn’t seem right”

  17. Warning Signs – Statements • Similar language • Correspondence on decisions not to bid • “Industry” or “standard” pricing, or price lists • Advance knowledge about others’ bids • A bid “belonging” to a certain company • Price discussions • “Gentleman’s Agreement” or “Friendly Agreement”

  18. Warning Signs – Bid Terms/Pricing • Identical bid amounts • Same price increment • Exceptionally high priced items • Large total difference between winning and losing bids • Very similar bids • Unbalanced bid

  19. Warning Signs – Bid Terms/Pricing • Unexpected increases or decreases • Identical transportation costs • High bids in a lagging economy • Different bids for the same item • Losing bidders continue high pricing

  20. Warning Signs – Bid Terms/Pricing • Common errors • Wholesaler contacts • Bids change when competitors change • Discounts

  21. Warning Signs – Bid Outcome • Rotation of winning bids • Same winners and losers • Competitor meetings • Subcontracts • Refusal to accept contract

  22. Preventing Collusion: Action Required

  23. Preventing Collusion: Specification Drafting • Inclusive specifications • Allow substitute products • Consolidate or break up bids • Disclose subcontractors • Require certification • Electronic copies

  24. Preventing Collusion: Pre-Bid Diligence • Maximize the bidding pool • Familiarity with suppliers • Industry developments • Similar purchasers • Confidentiality

  25. Preventing Collusion: Awarding Contracts • Be vigilant • No split contracts • Subcontractor rates • Ask questions

  26. Preventing Collusion: Follow-Up • Review historic bid results • Contact companies that have stopped bidding • Train staff

  27. We need your help • When something just doesn’t seem right, please let the Attorney General know. • Don’t worry about raising a “false alarm” • We’ll work through the situation with you

  28. “I don’t want to get anyone in trouble” • Information is the first step • There may be a reasonable explanation • Reasonable basis for any investigation • We will only file a lawsuit after we have conducted an investigation that has uncovered substantial evidence of an antitrust violation

  29. “I can’t prove anything” • We don’t expect you to – that’s our job • We’re just asking you to keep your eyes and ears open • Contact us when something doesn’t seem right

  30. Contact Information Jennifer Hunt First Assistant Attorney General Devin Laiho Senior Assistant Attorney General Abigail Smith Assistant Attorney General Consumer Protection Section Colorado Department of Law 1300 Broadway, Seventh Floor Denver, Colorado 80203 Jennifer.Hunt@coag.gov 720-508-6215

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