Corporate and Commercial Law, Mergers and Acquisitions, Capital Markets, General Practice View More
Carey’s Antitrust and Regulated Markets Group covers all areas of antitrust law and regulatory matters, including litigation before the Antitrust Court (TDLC), Civil Courts, the Supreme Court, as well as advisory in investigations by the National Economic Prosecutor (FNE) and negotiation of agreements with this agency.
Also, Carey has a proven track record in securing the clearance of complex mergers, acquisitions and joint ventures before the TDLC, giving clients an objective assessment of the possibility that a particular acquisition, partnership or merger leads to an investigation by the National Economic Prosecutor . The group also advises clients on their voluntary consultations before the TDLC.
The group has also experience advising various companies on both antitrust and regulatory internal audits, in order to identify and report client policies that could lead to compliance issues and regulatory risks. We assist our clients in designing compliance programs and codes of good practice.
Several members of the group are professors of antitrust and economic regulation in the most prestigious law schools in Chile.
By clicking on the "Submit" button, you agree to the Terms of Use, Supplemental Terms and Privacy Policy. You also consent to be contacted at the phone number you provided, including by autodials, text messages and/or pre-recorded calls, from Martindale and its affiliates and from or on behalf of attorneys you request or contact through this site. Consent is not a condition of purchase.
You should not send any sensitive or confidential information through this site. Emails sent through this site do not create an attorney-client relationship and may not be treated as privileged or confidential. The lawyer or law firm you are contacting is not required to, and may choose not to, accept you as a client. The Internet is not necessarily secure and emails sent though this site could be intercepted or read by third parties.