France’s antitrust regulator has cleared the proposed buyout of a chain of supermarkets by retailer Groupe Casino, so long as the group divests stores in Paris, according to reports. Groupe Casino will be required to sell 55 of about 500 locations in the capital, and three in the rest of the country, in order to buy Monoprix. The concessions were imposed after a probe into the deal, which lands another 50 percent of Monoprix in the hands of Groupe Casino. The shares were previously owned by Monoprix’s joint venture partner Galeries Lafayette. The regulator investigated the food retail market of France in 2012; that probe resulted in the findings that highlighted Groue Casino’s significant control of the market especially in Paris, where the company dominates more than three times the market share of its closest competitor, Carrefour.
Featured News
Trump Signals New Openness to Filling Democratic Seats on SEC, CFTC, Easing Frictions Over Crypto Bill
Dec 19, 2025 by
CPI
Mexico Antitrust Authority Closes Android Competition Case After Google Commitments
Dec 18, 2025 by
CPI
LinkedIn Antitrust Settlement Faces Setback in California Court
Dec 18, 2025 by
CPI
India Regulator Reviews Antitrust Claims Against IndiGo After Widespread Flight Disruptions
Dec 18, 2025 by
CPI
Trump Media Broadens Ambitions, Entering Fusion Energy Through Major Merger
Dec 18, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – CRESSE Insights
Dec 16, 2025 by
CPI
Learning from Divergence: The Role of Cross-Country Comparisons in the Evaluation of the DMA
Dec 16, 2025 by
Federico Bruni
New Regulatory Tools for the EU Foreign Direct Investment Screening and Foreign Subsidies Regulation
Dec 16, 2025 by
Ioannis Kokkoris
“Suite Dreams”: Market Definition and Complementarity in the Digital Age
Dec 16, 2025 by
Romain Bizet & Matteo Foschi
The Interaction Between Competition Policy and Consumer Protection: Institutional Design, Behavioral Insights, and Emerging Challenges in Digital Markets
Dec 16, 2025 by
Alessandra Tonazzi