Peter Roff | It’s High Time to Punch the Ticket on Ticketmaster

Commentary
Commentary
Share
Tweet
Email

The most critical nexus in the free market is the transactions that occur when willing sellers and interested buyers meet. One does not usually look to the federal government to resolve concerns that the costs of particular goods or services are too high.

Sometimes there are exceptions. There is general agreement, for example, that the government can and should act when a company’s control of all or most of a single market allows it to act in ways adverse to the best interests of consumers. Now that it costs almost as much to buy a pair of concert tickets as it does to pay the monthly bills, the government has correctly started to examine the live entertainment industry more closely.

The recent U.S. Department of Justice action against Ticketmaster and Live Nation, its parent company, promises long-overdue consumer relief. Since they combined their operations, the two companies have used their virtual monopoly in the marketplace to raise prices far beyond where a free and fair market would put them.

This has frustrated artists and athletes, policymakers who’d prefer prices be set by demand, and consumers who recently discovered they couldn’t get anywhere near Taylor Swift unless they were at a Kansas City Chiefs game.

Their 2010 merger, which made Live Nation/Ticketmaster the largest, most influential company in the live event business, was only approved after federal regulators were persuaded that competition within the industry would be unaffected. At the time, Christine Varney, then the head of the Department of Justice’s antitrust division, assured one and all there would be “enough air and sunlight in this space for strong competitors to take root, grow and thrive.”

She was wrong. The opposite happened. Consumers were too often left with one choice when seeking out tickets to live entertainment, something everyone should have seen coming. Letting Live Nation and Ticketmaster operate as one firm allowed them to dominate the live events market. They have virtual control over concert promotion, management, and ticketing, and something close to a stranglehold over venue management.

How is this possible? Of the world’s top 100 amphitheaters, 56 are owned and/or operated by Live Nation. Almost two-thirds of the top-grossing venues in the U.S. are linked to the company, with annual earnings above $2 billion.

With venue control comes consolidation, and, in this case, at least, consolidation leads to exclusivity. Live Nation’s response has been to deny it has “monopoly power” and point to other companies through which a person can buy event tickets. That’s a diversion. Its closest real competitor, AEG Presents, is less than half the size of Live Nation. They can try to get us to look the other way, but their excuses and misdirection fail to explain why their tactics are not anti-competitive, as the DOJ asserts in its lawsuit.

Cartel-style arrangements with would-be competitors — one firm described itself as a “hammer” for Live Nation — buying up or acquiring majority stakes in regional rivals, and coercive techniques all contribute to their monopoly position.

Live Nation’s questionable tactics extend to the secondary and resale markets, specifically through its efforts to safeguard ticketing revenue and data through software called SafeTix.

Ticketmaster claims SafeTix’s rotating bar code system limits fraud. It also creates a moat around consumer data, requiring all ticket transfers to occur on its platform. This forces consumers to sign up with their app, pushing secondary ticket purchasing back through Ticketmaster and bringing all consumer data with it, leaving its rivals effectively cut off from the transactions.

Live Nation’s alleged anti-competitive practices and contracts have produced a record-setting first quarter in 2024, with revenues up 21% to about $3.8 billion. It’s been a meteoric rise. Since the merger, the stock price has increased 967%, more than double the 382% increase of the S&P 500 over the same period.

The industry is trapped in a web of Live Nation’s design. It has no choice but to use it and Ticketmaster. Some say the lawsuit won’t do anything to address soaring ticket prices. Still, it’s hard to see how adding to the choices available to artists, venues and consumers won’t help.

It is necessary and proper to check Live Nation and Ticketmaster’s structural power within the industry. Unlike some of the other supposedly corrective, anti-monopolistic actions taken by the Biden Administration, the DOJ lawsuit is not an antitrust abuse.

Washington has a chance to stand up for consumers. It should take it.

Peter Roff is former U.S. News and World Report contributing editor and UPI senior political writer now affiliated with several DC-based public policy organizations. He writes for numerous publications and appears regularly on international television talking about U.S. politics. His column is distributed by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.

Related To This Story

Latest NEWS