By Victoria Graham, Bloomberg
This Thanksgiving, consumers can give thanks that their turkey, unlike many other meats, isn’t the focus of a federal antitrust price-fixing probe.
Top U.S. enforcers are investigating whether the biggest beef, chicken, salmon, and tuna suppliers conspired to set prices.
Baked hams aren’t free from scrutiny, either. Pork producers Hormel Foods Corp., Smithfield Foods Inc., Tyson Foods Inc., and others have been accused in several putative class actions of working together to manipulate prices.
Food industry consolidation that’s left a handful of companies controlling 80% of livestock production in some markets has made engaging in price fixing simpler, said Claire Kelloway, a food and agriculture researcher at think tank the Open Markets Institute. Mergers mean there are less players to coordinate with, she said.
New technology helps, too. Pork and chicken producers, both of which are subject to Justice Department probes, allegedly use a data subscription service called Agri Stats Inc. to coordinate and monitor each others’ prices, according to several civil suits.
“It makes price fixing easy,” said Austin Frerick, deputy director of Yale University’s antitrust research group, the Thurman Arnold Project. “All you have to do is just log on from your desk.”
Price-fixing schemes are nothing to cluck at since they can lead to higher costs for both consumers and food distributors and also lower profit margins for small food producers, such as local cattle farmers, who contract with national companies.
Featured News
Massachusetts AG Sues Insulin Makers and PBMs Over Alleged Price-Fixing Scheme
Jan 14, 2025 by
CPI
Apple and Amazon Avoid Mass Lawsuit in UK Over Alleged Collusion
Jan 14, 2025 by
CPI
Top Agent Network Drops Antitrust Suit Against National Association of Realtors
Jan 14, 2025 by
CPI
Weil, Gotshal & Manges Strengthens Antitrust Practice with New Partner
Jan 14, 2025 by
CPI
Russian Court Imposes Hefty Fine on Google for Non-Compliance with Content Removal Orders
Jan 14, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – CRESSE Insights
Dec 19, 2024 by
CPI
Effective Interoperability in Mobile Ecosystems: EU Competition Law Versus Regulation
Dec 19, 2024 by
Giuseppe Colangelo
The Use of Empirical Evidence in Antitrust: Trends, Challenges, and a Path Forward
Dec 19, 2024 by
Eliana Garces
Some Empirical Evidence on the Role of Presumptions and Evidentiary Standards on Antitrust (Under)Enforcement: Is the EC’s New Communication on Art.102 in the Right Direction?
Dec 19, 2024 by
Yannis Katsoulacos
The EC’s Draft Guidelines on the Application of Article 102 TFEU: An Economic Perspective
Dec 19, 2024 by
Benoit Durand