
Publication
International Restructuring Newswire
Welcome to the Q2 2025 edition of the Norton Rose Fulbright International Restructuring Newswire.
United States | Publication | May 2019
On May 1, Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim suggested that antitrust enforcers should expand enforcement of Section 8 of the Clayton Act to account for modern corporate structures, including LLCs and other forms of non-corporate entities.
Section 8 of the Clayton Act prohibits "interlocking directorships"—that is, the practice of serving as an officer or director of competing corporations—if the corporations are competitors "by virtue of their business and location of operation," unless certain exemptions apply. But as AAG Delrahim noted, the Clayton Act was passed well before modern entities such as limited liability companies existed and applies only to "corporations."
Although courts have not addressed whether Section 8 should apply to LLCs, AAG Delrahim stated that the Antitrust Division "believe[s] the harm can be the same regardless of the form of the entities." Currently, the DOJ and Federal Trade Commission do not factor in corporate structures when analyzing the potential anticompetitive effects of a proposed merger or conduct matter. Given this existing framework, AAG Delrahim stated that the DOJ is considering "how to bring this thinking to Section 8 as well."
AAG Delrahim also used his speech to caution institutional investors from coordinating conduct between competing firms in which they have investments. His statements follow recent scholarship that suggests that common minority ownership by institutional investors may have the effect of lessening competition. Under one theory, institutional investors could harm competition through overt action: the investor calls the competitors it owns and discourages them from competing in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. Alternatively, the directors of the various competitors who share an institutional investor may be incentivized to charge monopolistic prices in order to maximize profits and ensure that the directors do no lose their seat on the board.
AAG Delrahim's speech is a reminder that even behavior that is not explicitly prohibited by the letter of the antitrust statutes may still raise eyebrows at the DOJ, FTC, and state attorneys general offices. Companies of all legal forms should monitor the external officer, director, and/or equivalent positions of their management and director teams so as to avoid becoming embroiled in antitrust investigations or litigation relating to potential interlocks.
Publication
Welcome to the Q2 2025 edition of the Norton Rose Fulbright International Restructuring Newswire.
Publication
In the current geopolitical climate, with the imposition of tariffs and associated macroeconomic uncertainty, publicly traded companies across sectors will need to consider the potential impact on their business in the context of their ongoing disclosure obligations.
Publication
In July 2022 the UK Secondary Capital Raising Review published its report (Report) setting out a series of bold and wide-ranging recommendations for improving the secondary capital raising regime in the UK designed to make it quicker, more flexible, more inclusive of retail investors and more cost-effective, as well as moving towards digitisation and making better use of technology.
Subscribe and stay up to date with the latest legal news, information and events . . .
© Norton Rose Fulbright LLP 2025