Geoffrey Manne & Richard Epstein Join WLF in Pusle Network v. Visa Amicus Brief

Summary

On April 12, 2019, WLF asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit to reject an effort by a competitor-plaintiff to weaken one of the core elements of antitrust standing: “antitrust injury.” The case arises from Pulse Network’s lawsuit against Visa, Inc., claiming that Visa’s debit-network-pricing strategies are exclusionary and violate federal antitrust laws. The district court rightly held that Pulse could not sue because it lacks antitrust injury—that is, even assuming that Visa’s conduct violates the antitrust laws (which Visa very much disputes), Pulse was not injured by any anti-competitive aspect of Visa’s conduct. In its brief, WLF argues that Pulse’s theory of antitrust injury, if adopted, would make it much easier for struggling competitors to pursue litigation as a business strategy, bogging down thriving companies in meritless but time-consuming and expensive antitrust litigation. WLF’s brief was joined by leading antitrust scholars Richard A. Epstein and Geoffrey A. Manne.

Click here to read the brief.