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“梦幻般的主张”和斯蒂芬·金:企鹅兰登书屋和司法部面对反托拉斯战斗

In one of the biggest antitrust showdowns of President Biden’s tenure, the Justice Department is pulling out the big guns to stop a mega-publishing merger.

“梦幻般的主张”和斯蒂芬·金:企鹅兰登书屋和司法部面对反托拉斯战斗
[Source Images: Getty]

The Justice Department’s雄心勃勃的出价to stop Penguin Random House from buying rival publisher Simon & Schuster has started taking on more of the trappings of a legal thriller.

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It was already one of the biggest, most unexpected antitrust cases of President Biden’s tenure—in which the DOJ is arguing that Penguin, the largest publisher, merging with Simon & Schuster, the fourth largest, will hurt industry competition, cut authors’ advances, and reduce the variety of books available to consumers. But as Penguin reinforced in its pretrial brief submitted on Friday, a copy of which was shared with德赢提款, the publishing giant believes the complete opposite: that this deal will result in higher advances for authors and more choices for consumers.

Both sides are gearing up for a showdown. Penguin’s lawyers called the DOJ’s claims “fantastical” last week, and argued prosecutors don’t even grasp “the most basic elements” of modern-day publishing. Prosecutors responded by noting that they’ll see Penguin in court with their star witness Stephen King. He’s supposed to testify about tactics publishers use to negotiate the rights to anticipated best sellers, and how a mega-acquisition like Penguin’s could impact the authors of these books. Penguin’s lawyers have said they plan to call a who’s who of Big Five CEOs, editors, and famous literary agents to testify.

Monopoly versus monopsony versus public opinion

谁占上风可能会遵守司法部的法律策略。政府正在建立另一种反托拉斯案件。通常,它声称合并或收购将创造垄断 - 在这种情况下,一家公司对出售商品的不公平控制以及多少。这次,美国司法部主要指控单调索赔,这种情况在这种情况下,一家公司以买方的身份获得了不公平的控制权,从而使其为商品支付较少。

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但是,单声道指控不是约翰·格里舍姆 - 口径的东西。因此,最初,当司法部宣布将在11月宣布销售时,总检察长梅里克·加兰德(Merrick Garland)声明argued: “American authors and consumers will pay the price of this anticompetitive merger—lower advances for authors and ultimately fewer books and less variety for consumers.”

However, Penguin’s new filing contends the government has essentially “abandoned” the last part of Garland’s claim, the one about fewer books and less variety. “The government [has] found no evidence that combining PRH and S&S would diminish competition in any consumer market,” its pretrial brief says, adding that the government’s expert now “admits that the market will remain unconcentrated.”

We are the 98%

Instead, Penguin argues, the government now seems focused on authors’ advances. But not normal authors: Its argument repeatedly looks at a dollar figure unobtainable to most writers today: advances of $250,000 and up. Penguin says this reflects not just a tiny subset of authors—the industry’s Stephen Kings—but also a trivial number of the total books published, arguing the government is talking about roughly “1,200 books acquired annually . . . 0r about 2% of all books published by commercial publishers.” The result, according to Penguin, is that the DOJ is “ignoring the merger’s effects on the remaining 98% of the market, and completely ignoring its effects on 100% of consumers.”

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In a statement released with the filing, Penguin’s lead attorney, Dan Petrocelli, argues, “The Department of Justice’s lawsuit misunderstands that competitive dynamic and many others. As trial will show, this acquisition will benefit readers, booksellers, and authors alike.”

The trial is expected to last for the first three weeks of August. The one irony is that Penguin is, itself, familiar with the monopsony claim because that’s the charge it leveled against Amazon the last time the government accused the major publishers of price-fixing, back in 2010. That time, it argued they colluded with Apple to fix e-book prices. Their side ultimately lost, and Apple支付了4.5亿美元to settle, for which the appeals court标记它的违法行为“反托拉斯的最高邪恶”。

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