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US sues to break up Live Nation-Ticketmaster ‘monopoly’

 

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(Reuters) — The U.S. Justice Department and a group of 30 states and the District of Columbia Thursday sued to break up Live Nation LYV.N, arguing the big concert promoter and its Ticketmaster unit illegally inflated concert ticket prices and hurt artists.

“It is time to break up Live Nation,” said U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland.

Concert fans and politicians for years have been calling for a re-examination of Live Nation’s purchase of Ticketmaster in 2010, especially after the ticket seller in 2022 botched sales to Taylor Swift’s first concert tour in years, sending fans into hours-long online queues, charging prices that customers said were too high and drawing charges of poor service.

Thursday’s legal action underscores the aggressive approach President Joe Biden’s antitrust enforcers have adopted as they seek to create more competition in a wide range of industries, from Big Tech to healthcare to groceries.

“Live Nation relies on unlawful, anticompetitive conduct to exercise its monopolistic control over the live events industry in the United States at the cost of fans, artists, smaller promoters, and venue operators,” Garland said, adding that as a result fans pay more in fees, artists have fewer opportunities to perform and smaller promoters get squeezed out.

The suit says Live Nation directly manages more than 400 musical artists and controls around 60% of concert promotions at major concert venues. It owns or controls more than 265 concert venues in North America, and through Ticketmaster controls roughly 80% or more of big venues’ primary ticketing for concerts.

In the lawsuit, filed in the Southern District of New York, the DOJ argued the “vast scope” of Live Nation and Ticketmaster allowed them to “insert themselves at the center and the edges of virtually every aspect of the live music ecosystem.”

U.S. senators in January 2023, in a hearing called after the ticket sales fiasco, slammed Live Nation’s lack of transparency and inability to block bot purchases of tickets.

In 2010, the Justice Department approved Ticketmaster’s controversial merger with Live Nation, with conditions intended to stop the combined company from harming competition.

In 2020, a court extended most of the DOJ’s oversight of the merger to 2025 because, the department said, Ticketmaster retaliated against stadiums and arenas that opted to use other ticketing companies.

Live Nation has said in the past that it was confident its business practices were legal, and that the probe had been prompted by complaints from rivals, including re-sellers.

Reporting by Chris Sanders; Additional reporting by David Shepardson, Sarah Lynch and Mike Scarcella; Editing by Tom Hogue and Nick Zieminski

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