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Technology Stocks : C-Cube -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rarebird who wrote (36013)9/17/1998 10:12:00 AM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
I am not looking for your consolation -- that would be perverse! Why should I? I am not saddened by CUBE. I am not emotionally tied to my investments, as you are. Believe me, there is a difference between emotion and belief based on fundamentals.

If you think that that the US legal system is bad on Big MO, just wait until the non-legal systems in countries with faltering economies get a whiff of the Big MO money trail. What will MO do -- try to bribe them?

Tobacco price fixing charged

Philip Morris and British-American
accused of collusion in Latin America

September 17, 1998: 9:16 a.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - The world's two largest
tobacco companies reportedly have been
accused of cigarette price fixing in Latin America.
In an industry lawsuit filed by Washington
state, Philip Morris and British-American
Tobacco are charged with setting prices and
dividing market share in Argentina, Venezuela,
Costa Rica and other Latin American countries,
the Los Angeles Times reports.
Internal documents cited in the lawsuit
describe the deals and the involvement of some of
the firms' top executives, the report said.
A 1989 memo written by a British-American
Tobacco director said the companies' subsidiaries
would set prices and divide market shares, relying
solely on "verbal agreements" since "there can be
nothing in writing in Argentina on the subject," the
Times reports.
The agreement in Costa Rica was more
elaborate, with details of the amount of TV
advertising each firm could buy and which
incentives they could offer retailers reportedly
spelled out in a February 1992 letter from the
head of British American's Costa Rican
subsidiary.
A similar price-fixing scheme was arranged in
Venezuela, the Times reports, but a price war
broke out between the firms' Venezuelan
subsidiaries and each ended up smuggling
cigarettes into the country through Aruba and
Colombia to avoid paying taxes, a 1992
British-American memo said.
The anti-competitive arrangements would be
illegal in the United States, but the legality of such
actions is less clear in Latin America.
Shares of Philip Morris (MO) closed up 15/16
Wednesday at 45-5/8 on the New York Stock
Exchange.