The Justice Department filed a lawsuit Thursday seeking to break up Live Nation, the parent company of Ticketmaster, alleging it has hurt consumers and violated antitrust laws by exercising outsize control over the live events industry.
The suit, filed in the Southern District of New York and backed by attorneys general for 29 states plus Washington, D.C., alleges that Live Nation has engaged in practices that harm the entire live entertainment industry — from artists and fans to venues and startups seeking to break into the business.
It says Live Nation directly manages more than 400 musical artists, controls 60% of concert promotions at major venues and, through Ticketmaster, controls roughly 80% or more of major concert venuesâ€
“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,� Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a news release. “The result is that fans pay more in fees, artists have fewer opportunities to play concerts, smaller promoters get squeezed out, and venues have fewer real choices for ticketing services. It is time to break up Live Nation.�
Among the accusations against Live Nation:
In a statement, Live Nation said that the Justice Department’s allegations were ‘baseless’ and that its actions would prove counterproductive.
‘The DOJâ€
The company also disputed that it plays a dominant role, saying Ticketmaster’s market share has been declining for more than a decade.
And it said the suit ignores key factors that have made the live entertainment and ticket-buying experience for fans worse, like increasing production costs, surging artist popularity and 24/7 online ticket scalping.
‘Live Nation can offer and has offered fans, artists, venues and the rest of the performance ecosystem better prices and better services than they would receive if these complementary businesses were separated,’ it said. ‘Ticketmaster in particular is a far better, more artist- and fan-focused business under Live Nationâ€
Ticketmaster has faced gripes from fans and artist for years. The ire reached a fever pitch in 2022 following a botched ticket rollout for Taylor Swiftâ€
Thursdayâ€
Biden has said that while he is “proud capitalist,â€� “capitalism without competition isnâ€
Several bills have been introduced over the past year to address issues affecting ticket buyers. The House last week passed the Transparency in Charges for Key Events Ticketing (TICKET) Act, which would require sellers to disclose all costs and fees upfront when they list tickets for sale.
Live Nation supported the move and said it backs ticketing reforms such as anti-bot legislation and banning speculative tickets, or the sale of tickets that are not currently in the sellerâ€
“Bipartisan support for these reforms show that protecting fans and artists is in everyoneâ€
Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., who introduced the BOSS and SWIFT acts last year to combat deceptive ticketing practices, called the suit ‘one of the most fan-friendly moves by our federal government in many years.’ He added that Live Nation and Ticketmaster should not have been allowed to merge.
“This news is a victory for the millions of American fans who have been taken advantage of, screwed, ripped off, and outright robbed by this corrupt and greedy entity,� Pascrell said in a statement.
Recently, over 250 artists signed a letter in support of the Fans First Act, which was introduced in the Senate in December. The bill seeks to improve price transparency and consumer protections, as well as prevent bad actors from charging exorbitant prices. It would also bolster the Better Online Ticket Sales Act, passed in 2016 to prohibit scalpers from using software to buy tickets in bulk, by further prohibiting the use of bots in ticket sales.
Dan Wall, Live Nationâ€
Consumer advocacy groups cheered reports this year that the Justice Department was planning to sue Live Nation.
A case against the company would show “the severity of this situation and the need for action to protect fans,� the president of the Fan Fairness Coalition, Mark Meador, a Republican antitrust expert, said in a statement in April.
“This will be a critical step in holding Ticketmaster and Live Nation accountable for monopolistic, anticompetitive business practices that have eroded free market competition in the live event ticketing industry and hurt millions of fans,� he said.
In a statement, a group representing independent venues hailed the Justice Department’s actions.
‘We hope that the suit filed today will ultimately produce a meaningful result that will benefit fans, artists, independent venues and festivals, along with the businesses that surround us across the country,’ said Stephen Parker, executive director of the National Independent Venue Association.
Ticketmaster has argued that artists and their teams set the terms for how tickets are rolled out. In a webpage titled Ticketing Truths, it says acts are responsible for setting face-value ticket prices. And in collaboration with managers, agents and promoters, artists also decide which venues to play, when to put tickets on sale and how to sell them, it says.
As for service fees — a frequent target of criticism among fans — the company says they are set by venues, which also keep most of the fee proceeds. “Some portion� of fee revenue goes to the ticketing company and to pay credit card fees.