Search Site

Trends banner

Qualcomm to Alphawave for $2.4 bn

The deal makes Alphawave the latest tech company to depart London.

Equinor signs $27 bn gas deal

The 10-year contract was signed with Centrica.

ADNOC Drilling secures $1.15bn contract

The contract for two jack-up rigs begins in the second quarter.

Etihad Q1 profit $187 million

This is a 30% YoY increase over Q1 2025.

Yalla Group Q1 revenue $83m

Net income rose to $36.4 million, a 17% YoY increase.

EU raids energy drink Red Bull over violation of antitrust rules

Data show that the bloc's internal market takes center stage in EU countries’ trade. (AFP)
  • EU's executive arm said earlier its teams carried out unannounced inspections Monday at the premises of Red Bull.
  • EU authority is probing allegations the company violated antitrust rules that prohibit cartels and restrictive business practices.

Brussels, Belgium – EU antitrust investigators have raided energy drink maker Red Bull over suspicions it abused its dominance in the wildly popular market, officials said Tuesday.

Red Bull said EU Commission officials “visited our premises” on Monday.

“We will, of course, work with them on all matters that concern them,” the company said in a statement, declining to comment further.

The EU’s executive arm said earlier its teams carried out unannounced inspections Monday “at the premises of a company active in the energy drinks sector in various member states”.

The commission, the 27-country bloc’s powerful antitrust authority, is probing allegations the company violated EU antitrust rules that prohibit cartels and restrictive business practices.

If the company raided is guilty of antitrust violations, it risks large fines but can be granted immunity if it cooperates with the commission.

Following the death of Austrian founder Dietrich Mateschitz, Red Bull named a board of three directors to lead the energy drink giant in November.

Mateschitz, who made the energy drink a global phenomenon and forged a title-winning Formula One team and a sports empire, died in October aged 78.

His son, Mark Mateschitz, now owns Distribution and Marketing GmbH, which holds 49 percent of Red Bull shares. The Thai Yoovidhya family holds the rest. The company is based in Fuschl-am-See in western Austria.