BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Japanese company Sanrio (T:8136), which owns the Hello Kitty franchise, was fined 6.2 million euros ($6.94 million) by EU antitrust regulators on Tuesday for preventing cross-border sales of its products in Europe.
The European Commission, which started an investigation into the company and several others two years ago, said Sanrio's non-exclusive licensing agreements breached EU antitrust rules. The anti-competitive practices occurred from January 2008 to December 2018.
These included direct measures restricting out-of-territory sales by licensees and measures such as a audits and not renewing contracts to encourage compliance with the curbs.
The restrictions concerned products featuring Hello Kitty and other characters owned by Sanrio, the European Commission said in a statement.