Editor's note: This will be my last post before going on holiday. I plan to resume blogging the week of June 15. This weekend, however, I am pleased to present a guest post by Roya Ghafele of OxFirst, discussing her upcoming conference (on issues that also happen to be central to a paper I am currently working on, tentatively titled On the Law and Economics of Extraterritoriality and IP Rights). Take it away, Roya:
OxFora’s 14th IP & Competition Forum: When U.S. Patents Come to Munich
By Roya Ghafele, info@oxfirst.com
The 14th IP & Competition Forum, taking place in Munich on 23 and 24 June 2026 under the title “The Global Patent Chess Game: International Patent Strategy in a Fragmented World Order,” will address one of the most urgent questions in patent litigation today: what happens when territorial patent rights collide with global litigation strategy?
The recent BMW/Onesta dispute illustrates the point. Onesta brought proceedings in Munich involving, among other rights, U.S. patents. BMW responded in the Western District of Texas, arguing that U.S. patent claims should not be litigated abroad in a way that may bypass core features of the U.S. system, including the right to a jury trial.
Patent rights are territorial. Patent litigation strategy increasingly is not.
The Forum is designed around this new reality: long-arm jurisdiction after BSH v. Electrolux, cross-border patent enforcement, injunctions as bargaining chips in licensing disputes, forum choices, SEPs, FRAND, global rate-setting and the emerging European patent litigation architecture. What makes the discussion unusual is the breadth of judicial and institutional participation. The programme brings together voices from the German Federal Court of Justice, the Unified Patent Court, the EPO Boards of Appeal, the Supreme People’s Court of China, the Court of Rio de Janeiro and the Munich patent judiciary, including Prof. Peter Meier-Beck former German Supreme Court, Dr Juan He of the China Supreme Court, Judge Victor Torres from the Brazilian Judiciary and selected Munich patent judges.
After BSH v. Electrolux, European courts are being asked how far they may go in cross-border patent disputes. At the same time, U.S. courts are being asked how far they should go to protect their own patent adjudication system. The result is a new kind of patent conflict: not only over infringement, validity or damages, but over which court gets to control the dispute.
That matters because the next phase of patent litigation will not be shaped by doctrine alone. It will be shaped by institutional choices: which court moves first, which procedural safeguards apply, how far remedies may reach, and how courts respond when patent disputes become global before the law has fully caught up.
For companies, patent strategy now requires a global map. A filing in Munich may trigger a response in Texas. An injunction in one jurisdiction may reshape negotiations worldwide. A procedural move may matter as much as the substantive patent claim.
For courts, the challenge is harder: how to enforce rights effectively without overreaching into another legal system; how to respect territoriality without ignoring commercial reality; and how to preserve legitimacy when patent disputes increasingly have global consequences.
Munich is the right place to have this conversation. It sits at the centre of European patent litigation, close to the EPO, the DPMA and the UPC, and it is increasingly part of the global debate on how far courts should go in shaping international patent outcomes.
The global patent chess game is already underway. The question is whether the rules are keeping up. Join us in Munich, to debate and discuss.
More information is available at OxFora.
The previous 12th IP & Competition Forum provides further background on the series.
You can also follow OxFirst on LinkedIn and OxFora on LinkedIn.
For further information, please contact: info@oxfirst.com