Report: Feds To Seek Live Nation-Ticketmaster Break-Up

The federal government and a group of states will file an antitrust suit against Live Nation as soon as Thursday, Bloomberg News reports.
Citing people familiar with the case, Bloomberg says one of the remedies sought in the suit will be the break-up of Live Nation and Ticketmaster. The companies merged in 2009 and entered into a consent decree with the federal government to allow the merger the next year. That consent decree was amended in early 2020 and is set to expire at the end of 2025.
The DOJ opened an antitrust investigation of Live Nation in November 2022 and the Wall Street Journal reported in April that a lawsuit was imminent.
Bloomberg says the suit is expected to be filed in the federal court of the Southern District of New York.
Justice Department officials declined to comment to Bloomberg. Live Nation did not immediately respond to Pollstarโs request for comment.
Live Nation stock plummeted in after-hours trading once the Bloomberg story went live, trading as low as $91 after closing at $101.40.
The news comes on the heels of an appearance by Live Nation President and CFO Joe Berchtold at theJ.P Morgan Global Technology, Media and Communications conference, where he said meetings between the companyโs top executives and leading Justice Department officials were ongoing.
โWe wouldnโt get to this point if they didnโt have concerns, but the good news is weโre still talking and theyโve said they have an open mind,โ he said at the conference. โSo without getting into the real details of the conversation, I think itโs fair to say I continue to believe that we fundamentally have business practices that are fully defensible. But weโre also open to figuring out common ground in order to get this settled and moved on. But we donโt know exactly what they want at this point still.โ
Berchtoldโs statement echoed what he told investors during the companyโs quarterly earnings call May 2, when said discussions between senior officials at the company and DOJ indicated the feds were in the โfinal phaseโ of the investigation. On that call, Berchtold acknowledged โcompetitors and interest groupsโ were pushing the DOJ to break-up Live Nation and Ticketmaster, but that he didnโt believe that was a legally available remedy as the Justice Department โrepeatedly stated in court filings that the merger and settlement were in the public interest.โ
โThe DOJโs investigation appears to be focused on specific business practices, not the legality of Live Nation-Ticketmaster merger or our overall business structure. Very little of the conduct that DOJ has raised with us relates to the combination of ticketing and promotion resulting from the merger,โ he said.
In January 2020, the Justice Department filed a memorandum stating that Live Nation was โretaliating against concert venues for using another ticketing company, or conditioning or threatening to condition Live Nationโs provision of concerts and other live events on a venueโs purchase of Ticketmasterโs ticketing service โฆ Specifically, Defendants have repeatedly conditioned and threatened to condition Live Nationโs provision of live concerts on a venueโs purchase of Ticketmaster ticketing services, and they have retaliated against venues that opted to use competing ticketing services โ all in violation of the plain language of the decree. Indeed, Defendantsโ well-earned reputation for threatening behavior and retaliation in violation of the Final Judgment has so permeated the industry that venues are afraid to leave Ticketmaster lest they risk losing Live Nation concerts, hindering effective competition for primary ticketing services.โ
Despite the strong words, citing findings dating back to the early days of the consent decree, no antitrust actions were filed at that time.
