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We at Fideres are happy to see the European Commission publish “Exploring Aspect of the State of Competition in the EU”. This overarching report is the product of our work alongside colleagues at Lear, UEA/CCP, E.CA, DIW, Prometeia and Verian, and sits alongside a parallel report by the OECD. The overarching report provides original evidence of the multifaceted benefits of effective competition, which has been shown to deliver improved outcomes for customers, to boost the competitiveness of domestic companies in international markets and, more generally, to contribute to economic growth and societal well-being. However, the report also identifies worrying signs that competition has weakened across markets in the EU. In particular the Fideres-CCP Report on Price-Concentration Analysis provides both quantitative and qualitative evidence of the link between higher concentration and higher prices in six sectors: airlines, beer, cement, mobile telecom, modern consumer retail and mortgages. For mobile telecom and airline pricing, we performed detailed empirical analyses confirming a causal link between prices and concentration. We also found higher concentration associated with lower investment, based on the example of mobile telephony. Our findings, alongside those of the wider project, speak to the vital importance of protecting competition to build an economy that works for everyone. You can read the report, the EC report and watch the conference via the link below.
On 7 May 2024, Fideres’s research has been cited in a Business Insider article on Blackstone’s BREIT Valuation Issue, Fideres’s original research on REIT’s can be found below:
FIDERES NEWS: Announcing the opening of our new office in Madrid!
On 22 April 2024, Fideres wrote to the European Commission to bring to its attention the anticompetitive impact of a widespread practice known as IBAN discrimination. This forces consumers and businesses alike to open redundant bank accounts across multiple countries within the single market in order to make payments to entities such as tax authorities, mobile operators and utility providers. Fideres is concerned that this distorts banking competition within the EU, and potentially constitutes an illicit form of state aid, under art. 107 of TFEU. Fideres's letter is available via the link below:
We are looking for Infrastructure Developers to join our team. Further details about our role can be found here: