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German antitrust watchdog drops investigation into DHL's corporate mailing consolidation

Germany's antitrust regulator dropped its investigation into the alleged anticompetitive behavior at the nation’s largest postal service group DHL, after the company severed ownership ties with another competitor that handled letters for businesses.

The Federal Cartel Office’s two-year investigation focused on mail consolidation. DHL’s Deutsche Post InHaus Services collects letters from multiple companies and processes them, offering discounts based on the total volume.

DHL competes in this market with Max-Ventures, a postal services group. However, the two also hold 26% and 74% respectively in Compador, another player in this segment.

DHL's antitrust authority stated that it had allayed concerns by selling Compador to Max-Ventures, and by canceling contracts to process Max-Ventures orders that they could now renegotiate with no ownership ties.

DHL welcomed the conclusion of the proceedings.

It added: "We have always believed that Deutsche Post AG, Deutsche Post InHaus Services and the competition laws were not broken. Now we are able to confirm this." (Reporting and writing by Matthias Inverardi; editing by Thomas Seythal, Miranda Murray, and Ludwig Burger)

(source: Reuters)