No, it's not *officially* an LLM program, it's a Master of Business, Competition, and Regulatory Law.
However, as the terminology in law master's programs is rather vague, and because an LLM isn't anything more than just a master's degree in law, the degrees are (relatively) comparable.
Look at the program details, the curriculum, etc. If this course appeals to you there's no sense in disregarding it just because "LLM" is not in the course title. No employer will look at the degree any differently than an LLM, since, after all, it is still a master's program in the law domain.
No, it's not *officially* an LLM program, it's a Master of Business, Competition, and Regulatory Law.
However, as the terminology in law master's programs is rather vague, and because an LLM isn't anything more than just a master's degree in law, the degrees are (relatively) comparable.
Look at the program details, the curriculum, etc. If this course appeals to you there's no sense in disregarding it just because "LLM" is not in the course title. No employer will look at the degree any differently than an LLM, since, after all, it is still a master's program in the law domain.