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Competition
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March 06, 2025
7-Eleven Eyes US IPO Next Year After Failed Takeover Deal
Japan's Seven & i Holdings Co. on Thursday unveiled plans to pursue a U.S. initial public offering of its North American 7-Eleven convenience stores by the second half of next year, among other business changes, a move that comes after the company reported that a $58 billion takeover offer fell through due to a financing snafu.
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March 06, 2025
Google To Face £1B Class Action Over App Store Practices
The U.K. antitrust court gave an academic the go-ahead Thursday to bring a £1 billion ($1.3 billion) class action against Google on behalf of software developers over allegedly anticompetitive app store practices, clearing his litigation funding arrangement with amendments.
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March 06, 2025
Visa, Mastercard Face UK Regulatory Action Over Fees
The U.K.'s Payment Systems Regulator said Thursday it will act against Mastercard and Visa over concerns about the duopoly's sharp price hikes on bank card fees.
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March 06, 2025
O'Melveny Antitrust Pro Jumps To Paul Hastings In LA
Paul Hastings LLP is expanding its West Coast team, announcing Thursday it is bringing in an O'Melveny & Myers LLP antitrust litigator as a partner in a Los Angeles office.
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March 05, 2025
Agri Stats Wants Another Shot At DOJ Specifics
Agri Stats is continuing to ask a Minnesota federal court to force the U.S. Department of Justice to identify specific data fields in the company's industry reports that allegedly allow chicken, pork and turkey producers to exchange competitively sensitive information.
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March 05, 2025
BCBS Hit With New Antitrust Suits By $2.8B Deal Opt-Outs
Dozens of hospitals and healthcare systems that opted out of a landmark $2.8 billion Blue Cross Blue Shield antitrust settlement filed fresh Sherman Act lawsuits against the insurance entities in Pennsylvania, California and Illinois federal courts Tuesday, accusing them of colluding to restrict competition for the purchase of healthcare services.
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March 05, 2025
Teva Wants Pause Of Patent Delisting For High Court Appeal
Israeli drugmaker Teva Pharmaceuticals is hoping the Federal Circuit will keep an injunction ordering it to remove its inhaler patents from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Orange Book on hold while it appeals the matter to the U.S. Supreme Court.
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March 05, 2025
9th Circ. Upholds Arizona's Wine Retailer Law Challenge
Arizona isn't being discriminatory by requiring companies that want to ship alcohol to people's homes to have a business location in the state, the Ninth Circuit has declared in a split ruling that upheld the state's win against a challenge to the law laying down that mandate.
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March 05, 2025
Parameters Set For Final NIL Deal Approval Hearing
The California federal judge overseeing the massive $2.78 billion name, image and likeness settlement between the National Collegiate Athletic Association and former and current student-athletes has released guidelines for the deal's final approval hearing in April.
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March 05, 2025
Steven Madden Resolves Libel Dispute Over IP Allegations
Parties in Steven Madden Ltd.'s lawsuit accusing Danish "affordable luxury" brand Ganni A/S of falsely claiming that two of its shoe designs infringed Ganni's intellectual property have reached an agreement to resolve the dispute, according to a filing Tuesday in New York federal court.
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March 05, 2025
Ga. Baseball Player Shutters NCAA Eligibility Suit
A University of Georgia athlete has ended his efforts in federal court to earn another year of eligibility to play college baseball, dropping his antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA following the ruling in a similar case that was not favorable to the athlete, his attorney said.
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March 05, 2025
NASCAR Calls Teams 'Per Se Illegal Cartel' In Countersuit
NASCAR is countersuing two racing teams that have accused the organization of monopolizing premier motorsport racing, alleging Wednesday in North Carolina federal court that the teams conspired to pressure NASCAR into accepting their preferred charter contract terms "in order to maintain their per se illegal cartel."
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March 05, 2025
UK Clears $35B Synopsys, Ansys Merger
The Competition and Markets Authority said Wednesday it has cleared Synopsys' planned $35 billion acquisition of fellow U.S. software company Ansys under certain divestiture and monitoring conditions.
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March 05, 2025
Longtime DOJ Antitrust Litigator Joins Fried Frank In DC
Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson LLP announced that a Cooley LLP attorney who previously spent more than 15 years in the U.S. Department of Justice's Antitrust Division has joined the firm's Washington, D.C., office as a partner.
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March 05, 2025
DOJ Fights Bid To Pause Piece Of Amedisys Merger Case
The U.S. Department of Justice is opposing a bid from Amedisys to pause allegations that it shirked its merger filing requirements until after a trial on UnitedHealth's acquisition of the home health and hospice company.
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March 05, 2025
Major Supermarkets Keep £675M Salmon Cartel Claim In UK
A London antitrust tribunal declined Wednesday to send a £675 million ($868 million) cartel claim brought by several of the U.K.'s largest supermarkets to Norway, ruling that the claim should be heard in the U.K. because it concerned the price of salmon in the U.K.
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March 05, 2025
Fighters' Attys Get $115M In Fees For UFC Settlement Work
A Nevada federal judge has awarded more than $115 million to the attorneys who struck a $375 million settlement with the UFC on behalf of more than 1,100 fighters alleging vast wage suppression, nodding to the considerable effort involved in litigating the decade-long case.
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March 05, 2025
UK Drops Probe Into Microsoft's OpenAI Partnership
Britain's antitrust authority said Wednesday that it has dropped its probe into Microsoft's investment into ChatGPT developer OpenAI after finding it does not have the jurisdiction to look into their complex partnership.
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March 05, 2025
Royal Mail To Face Trial In £878M Bulk Mail Class Action
The owner of Royal Mail must face an £878.5 million ($1.1 billion) class action brought on behalf of 290,000 retail businesses that accuse the postal service of abusing its dominant position in the bulk mail market, the antitrust tribunal has ruled.
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March 04, 2025
Musk Fails To Block OpenAI From Turning Into For-Profit Entity
A California federal judge on Tuesday denied Elon Musk's bid to preliminarily bar OpenAI Inc. from converting into a for-profit entity, saying that a threshold question of whether Musk's over $44 million in donations created a charitable trust was a "toss-up."
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March 04, 2025
Shipping Council Urges DC Circ. To Nix Maritime Rule
An ocean carrier trade association is urging the D.C. Circuit to wipe out new regulations defining unreasonable refusals to deal in the maritime industry, telling the appeals court that the "vague" rule has thrown the carriers into confusion.
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March 04, 2025
Agencies Have 'Ultimate' Authority Over Firings, OPM Says
The Office of Personnel Management on Tuesday issued a revised version of its January memo directing agency heads to identify all probationary employees, adding a disclaimer that OPM "is not directing agencies to take any specific performance-based actions" and that agencies "have ultimate decision-making authority."
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March 04, 2025
Meijer Says 1st Circ. Must Resolve Takeda Arbitration Order
Grocery store chain Meijer on Tuesday urged a Massachusetts federal judge to allow it to immediately appeal his ruling granting Takeda Pharmaceutical's bid to arbitrate the grocer's antitrust claims over a constipation drug, arguing that the case presents several issues that the First Circuit needs to address.
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March 04, 2025
Baseball Player Strikes Out On Bid For NCAA Early Waiver
A Tennessee federal judge will not grant a Division I baseball player another year of eligibility, ruling on Monday that the student-athlete failed to show how the NCAA's rules violate antitrust laws while acknowledging that the organization's actions are "questionable at best and self-interested at worst."
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March 04, 2025
DC Opposes RealPage Bid For Sanctions In Antitrust Case
The District of Columbia and its attorneys at Cohen Milstein are opposing a bid for sanctions from RealPage in the district's rental pricing case, contending they have support for allegations about the company not wanting to work with landlords that reject its price recommendations.
Expert Analysis
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What 2024 Trends In Marketing, Comms Hiring Mean For 2025
The state of hiring in legal industry marketing, business development and communications over the past 12 months was marked by a number of trends — from changes in the C-suite to lateral move challenges — providing clues for what’s to come in the year ahead, says Ben Curle at Ambition.
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The Prospects Of Pa. Gaining Its Own Antitrust Law After 2024
In the only state that does not have its own antitrust law, Pennsylvania's business community's strong opposition to the Pennsylvania Open Markets Act signals a rough road lies ahead for passage of the bill after Republicans retained a narrow majority in the state Senate, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.
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Series
Group Running Makes Me A Better Lawyer
The combination of physical fitness and community connection derived from running with a group of business leaders has, among other things, helped me to stay grounded, improve my communication skills, and develop a deeper empathy for clients and colleagues, says Jessica Shpall Rosen at Greenwald Doherty.
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Opinion
6 Changes I Would Make If I Ran A Law School
Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner identifies several key issues plaguing law schools and discusses potential solutions, such as opting out of the rankings game and mandating courses in basic writing skills.
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The Current State Of Play Around Corporate Transparency Act
Although a Texas court preliminarily enjoined enforcement of the Corporate Transparency Act and paused an impending Dec. 31 reporting deadline, multiple states have similar requirements, so companies should continue to monitor compliance obligations regardless of the CTA's constitutionality, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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Predictions For Trump Antitrust Enforcement Of Life Sciences
Key life sciences antitrust issues of the past two administrations may indicate the direction of enforcement during President-elect Donald Trump's second term, including in areas such as drug prices, killer acquisitions and merger remedies, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.
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Firms Still Have The Edge In Lateral Hiring, But Buyer Beware
Partner mobility data suggests that the third quarter of this year continued to be a buyer’s market, with the average candidate demanding less compensation for a larger book of business — but moving into the fourth quarter, firms should slow down their hiring process to minimize risks, say officers at Decipher Investigative Intelligence.
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Opinion
Antitrust Posturing Against Algorithmic AI Should End
President-elect Donald Trump needs to rein in the federal government's antitrust crusade against algorithmic AI, sending the message that antitrust enforcement must be grounded in evidence and real harm, says attorney David Balto, a former Federal Trade Commission assistant director of policy and evaluation.
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Think Like A Lawyer: 1 Type Of Case Complexity Stands Out
In contrast to some cases that appear complex due to voluminous evidence or esoteric subject matter, a different kind of complexity involves tangled legal and factual questions, each with a range of possible outcomes, which require a “sliding scale” approach instead of syllogistic reasoning, says Luke Andrews at Poole Huffman.
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Back To The Future? Antitrust Enforcement Under Trump 2.0
While the transition to the second Trump administration's antitrust policy should be accompanied by less uncertainty, we're unlikely to get a full sense of the true focus and tenor of competition enforcement under Trump 2.0 before late next year, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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Think Like A Lawyer: Note 3 Simple Types Of Legal Complexity
Cases can appear complex for several reasons — due to the number of issues, the volume of factual and evidentiary sources, and the sophistication of those sources — but the same basic technique can help lawyers tame their arguments into a simple and persuasive message, says Luke Andrews at Poole Huffman.
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Corporate Liability Issues To Watch In High Court TM Case
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in a trademark dispute between Dewberry Group and Dewberry Engineers next week, presenting an opportunity for the court to drastically alter the fundamental approach to piercing the corporate veil, or adopt a more limited approach and preserve existing norms, say attorneys at Bracewell.
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Trending At The PTAB: Collateral Estoppel Continues Evolving
We are starting to see brighter lines on collateral estoppel involving Patent Trial and Appeal Board proceedings, illustrated by two recent cases that considered whether collateral estoppel should apply to factual findings on prior art from the PTAB in a later district court litigation, say attorneys at Finnegan.
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Antitrust in Retail: Handbag Ruling Won't Go Out Of Fashion
Although a New York federal court’s recent decision to enjoin a proposed $8.5 billion merger between the owners of Michael Kors and Coach applied noncontroversial antitrust interpretations, several notable aspects of the opinion stand out as likely candidates for further discussion in future merger litigation, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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Series
Gardening Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Beyond its practical and therapeutic benefits, gardening has bolstered important attributes that also apply to my litigation practice, including persistence, patience, grit and authenticity, says Christopher Viceconte at Gibbons.