German retail giant Rewe has been fined EUR20.8m (US$26.7m) by Austria’s competition authority for price fixing.
Last year Rewe was investigated as part of a price-fixing investigation in Austria. The Austrian competition authority, the Bundeswettbewerbsbehörde, searched the retailer’s offices amid claims of collusion with suppliers.
The regulator said Rewe’s Billa and Merkur chains had “agreed on sale prices and other parameters with suppliers from 2007 to 2012”.
In a statement this week, Rewe said it was able to work out a “mutually acceptable solution” on vertical price fixing with the country’s competition authority following months of “intensive and constructive” negotiations.
“Despite different interpretations of the law, Rewe International agreed to a one-time payment of fines,” the company said.
Following negotiations, Rewe said a ‘”behaviour guide” has been produced in collaboration with the Bundeswettbewerbsbehörde, which it says will provide “greater legal security” in the food and drugstore retail industry for both traders and suppliers.

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By GlobalData“This guide [will] prevent violations of the law and is a clear sign for the entire industry.”
Rewe International CEO Frank Hensel said: “This is the first time that such a guide has been created. So far, companies [have] acted partly in a legal grey area.” He said the new guidelines will prevent future violations, even “unintentional” ones.