Business and Finance

Trade Regulation Reporter

AREA: US

Yearly Subscription

Print: 7 Loose-Leaf Volumes, Weekly Updates

Internet: Year, Weekly Updates

Since 1914, the CCH Trade Regulation Reporter has been the publication of record・in the antitrust and trade regulation fields. It is the only single source of the policies, rules, and guidelines of the U.S. Department of Justice. It is the only publication providing U.S. antitrust cases, texts, and pending U.S. consent decrees. Perhaps its most important feature is the full-text reporting of court decisions in both government and private antitrust litigation. Subscribe today to:

  • Learn basic antitrust laws, plus the concepts of conspiracy, restraint of trade, and monopoly using CCH's annotated explanations
  • Understand complex statutes and interpretations making up the current trade regulation law
  • Access full-text reporting or summaries of federal and state statues
  • Keep current with weekly reporting of court decisions in government and private litigation
  • Track federal and state antitrust enforcement actions
  • Follow FTC antitrust and consumer protection rules, guides, and enforcement actions
  • Receive full-text reports of related U.S. Supreme Court cases dating to 1932, and all Trade Cases reported between 1977 and 1993, via Internet and CD-ROM with purchase of the Trade Regulation Reporter and Case Archive (sold separately)
Features & Benefits

Ensure that you and your clients are in compliance with trade regulation law - CCH has created the ultimate research tool. You can access historic cases and uncover important precedents. You'll also be able to stay on top of new trends and changes so that you can anticipate future enforcement and act accordingly. Trade Regulation Reporter covers all the issues important to your business:

  • Basic rules. Get up to speed with concise analysis of the basic laws on including conspiracy, restraint of trade, mergers and acquisitions, price fixing and monopoly.
  • Federal and state statutes. For your convenience, we're reproduced federal and state antitrust, price discrimination and sales-below-cost acts in full text.
  • Government antitrust decrees. Access summaries of both current litigated and settled cases in antitrust suits instituted by the U.S. in the new U.S. Antitrust Cases・section. Current complaints, indictments and judgments are also included and are often accurate indicators of impending regulations.
  • Enforcement and procedures. Special explanation sections analyze how the Justice Department, the FTC, the states, private individuals and corporations enforce the laws, providing you with the full picture of rules, so you can avoid breaking them and facing penalties.
  • Current developments. This section enables you to keep up-to-date on enforcement litigation trends.
  • Supreme Court docket. Track cases submitted for review by the Supreme Court from filing information to denial or decision.

Be confident your research information is current with weekly updates - With your subscription you'll receive a weekly Report Letter that summarizes pertinent developments and news and allows you to stay one step ahead of the competition.

Locate information quickly and easily with our intuitive organization and powerful search aids - In the print version, we use paragraph numbers throughout for indexing, citing and cross-referencing. Electronically, you can apply sophisticated criteria from one convenient search screen and pinpoint the information you need in no time. No matter which format you choose, CCH makes your research swift and effortless.

Contents Includes

CCH-written explanations addressing:

  • Monopoly
  • Restraints
  • Business Practices
  • Customers and Suppliers
  • Mergers and Acquisitions
  • Pricing
  • Labor
  • Intellectual Property
  • Warranties
  • Packaging and Labeling
  • Misrepresentation
  • Federal/State/Private Enforcement
  • Private Suits
  • Federal and State FTC Enforcement
  • FTC Rules and New Actions

New Developments including:

  • Court and Administrative Decisions
  • Current Comment
  • U.S. Supreme Court Docket Topical and Cumulative Indexes