Not So Fast, You Still Have To Define The Relevant Market: The Less Debated Yet Vital Teaching Of Ohio v. American Express

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Most discussions of Ohio v. America Express focus on two-sided markets.
United States Antitrust/Competition Law

Most discussions of Ohio v. America Express focus on two-sided markets. This article will not. Instead, the article analyzes the Court's ruling that plaintiffs cannot evade defining the relevant market when challenging vertical restraints (and arguably other practices subject to the rule-of-reason). In holding that courts must first define the relevant market before assessing evidence of anticompetitive effects in rule-of-reason cases, the majority resisted efforts to relax the market definition requirement, which has been advocated by scholars and litigants in recent years. Instead, the Court reaffirmed the centrality of relevant market definition, which has been a fundamental feature of antitrust jurisprudence for nearly a century.

Not so Fast, You Still Have to Define the Relevant Market- The Less Debated Yet Vital Teaching of Ohio v. American Express.pdf (pdf | 945.89 KB )

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