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At least nine parties are understood to have applied to the Court of First Instance to intervene in MasterCard's appeal of last December's European Commission decision which ruled the company's cross-border interchange fee incompatible with EU antitrust rules.
Eurocommerce, the leading complainant in the long-running case, has requested to intervene as well as its
With a similar antitrust investigation under way in the
The ongoing case in
The principles of the commission's MasterCard ruling are to be felt well beyond the
However, there seem to be no applicants among other national competition authorities, many of whom have ongoing investigations themselves.
MBNA, part of Bank of America, is also said to have lodged an application with the CFI. With 7 million customers, it claims to be “the
In March, MasterCard lodged its formal appeal against the commission's decision arguing that its concerns rest on the commission's "failure to recognize that four-party payment systems cannot operate without default settlement terms [...] which [require] the setting of an interchange fee."
It also disputes the commission’s “refusal to recognize the efficiencies that four-party payment systems create and the fairness of MasterCard’s interchange fees”.
Visa,
The court will now consider the applications and make its decision known at a later date as to whether the parties have a “legal interest” in the case and are allowed to intervene.
Keeping an eye on proceedings in
Others can still make applications but the official deadline has passed and therefore their interventions – if allowed – may only be oral in a court hearing.
During the administrative proceeding against MasterCard there were twelve other companies/associations as well as the complainant Eurocommerce which made submissions to the commission.
These were Ikea, British Petroleum, Visa Europe, Lufthansa's Airplus, retailers' interest group European Retail Roundtable, hotel associations HOTREC and OEHV, IATA, airport retail outlet Kappe International, and the Spanish payments schemes Servired, Sistema 4B and Euro 6000.
Ikea, IATA and the European Retail Roundtable are understood not to be making an application.
By Lewis Crofts