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Valassis v. News America Closing Arguments: Why the Jury May Hand a Monopoly to Murdoch

By Jim Edwards | Jul 21, 2009

Valassis has offered plenty of evidence that News America Marketing has an illegal monopoly in supermarket advertising but it still may lose the case — delivering NAM a second monopoly in the promo business.

Valassis and News America Marketing started their closing arguments today in a Michigan state court trial over whether the latter illegally took business from the former by forcing clients dependent on News America’s virtual monopoly over supermarket advertising to take bundled deals for newspaper coupons. Much is at stake. The court has heard that there may be 450 layoffs at Valassis if the jury finds that News America’s tactics were legit. The stock prices of Valassis and Insignia Systems are both highly dependent on the verdict. Beyond that, the decay of Valassis’ newspaper coupon business in favor of News America would be almost unstoppable. And News America would eventually gain two virtual monopolies: The first over in-store supermarket ads and the second over newspaper coupons. Clients would see increases in their POP bills: Testimony has indicated that News America threatened increased prices for Pepsico, Unilever, Conagra and Kraft by millions of dollars when it felt able to leverage its dominance in supermarkets.

The jury has heard plenty of testimony to allow it to conclude that News America was engaging in unfair competition. Exclusivity payments, unannounced price rises, and clients who believed they were held hostage by News America have all featured in the trial. BNET’s sources indicate that the Valassis legal team feels confident in its case.

The icing on the cake: Valassis has tried to portray itself as the local company done good (it’s based in Livonia, Mich.) while News America is a mob-like bunch of New Yorkers owned by the “Capo di Tuto Capo,” Rupert Murdoch.

But if you think the decision is a lock for Valassis, think again. It should not be a surprise if the jury goes for News America.

The main problems with Valassis’ case are that it has been complicated, long, and, for laypersons, counterintuitive. Although BNET has highlighted some of the more colorful parts of the case, the majority of the testimony has been an unstructured waltz through the arcana of CPMs, net effective rates and per-page costs. Much of it was impossible to follow, even for someone with knowledge of the business. Will a Michigan jury understand it all? They may not.

Second, this trial lasted weeks. Much of the testimony was incredibly dull. And it was largely on video, not from live witnesses. Juries literally fall asleep in cases like this. If they did in this case, they will be less sure of finding in Valassis’ favor.

Third, Valassis is essentially arguing that News America broke the law by offering a two-for-one deal that was cheaper than a single buy. Every American consumer appreciates that discounts are often offered for bulk buys; yet in this case Valassis alleges it’s illegal. Technically, Valassis may be correct, but the jury will have to overcome its “common sense” hurdle in order to reach that lawyerly conclusion.

Last of all, the jury has heard that although News America may be dominant in supermarkets, both companies have access to in-store advertising (Valassis via Insignia). And while Valassis has lost the war, it is still a going concern — the newspaper coupon category is split 56-44 percent in favor of News America.  Those numbers don’t look insurmountable to someone not in the business.

(Note to readers: BNET will break into its delayed-but-chronological coverage of the trial when breaking news happens. We’ll continue summarizing trial testimony even after the verdict if needs be.)

Jim Edwards, a former managing editor of Adweek, has covered drug marketing at Brandweek for four years, and is a former Knight-Bagehot fellow at Columbia University's business and journalism schools. Follow him on Twitter or send him an email.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Valassis Wins Directed Verdict Motion in News America Trial

    BNET Advertising - 129 days 2 minutes ago

    Valassis won a directed verdict motion in a Michigan state court case which alleges that News America Marketing employed illegal monopoly practices to dominate in-store supermarket advertising and the newspaper coupon business. After a jury heard several witnesses brought by Valassis, News America asked the judge to find that Valassis had not...

  • Valassis v. NAM Federal Trial Set for February; Judge Denies Pretrial Motions

    BNET Advertising - 74 days 11 hours 54 minutes ago

    Valassis and News America Marketing are set to enter a federal court trial in February over the former’s claims that NAM illegally

  • News America Exec Testifies Unilever, Conagra and Kraft Got Higher Prices for Not Taking Bundled Ad Deals

    BNET Advertising - 158 days 23 hours 27 minutes ago

    News America Marketing vp/business operations Tom Leprine testified that companies who did not accept its bundled deals on in-store supermarket ads and newspaper coupons got higher prices. The testimony came in a Michigan state court trial in which newspaper coupon agency Valassis accuses News America of using its supermarket ad monopoly to...

  • Valassis' Brown Says She Used Same Monopoly Tactics as News America

    BNET Advertising - 124 days 14 hours 26 minutes ago

    Suzanne Brown, the chief marketing officer at newspaper coupon agency Valassis, told a Michigan state court that the agency’s corporate strategy was to increase market share using the same tactics as its rival, News America Marketing. The admission was potentially important because Valassis is alleging in the case that News America was...

  • 450 Jobs at Stake in Valassis Trial; Is This All CEO Schultz's Fault?

    BNET Advertising - 150 days 23 hours 41 minutes ago

    Valassis CFO Robert Recchia testified that 450 jobs are on the line if his company does not win its anti-competition trial against News America Marketing. Since 2001, Valassis has lost so much newspaper coupon business that if News America is allowed to continue to use its alleged monopoly pricing power in supermarket ads to subsidize its...

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    driskilmat

    07/22/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Valassis v. News America Closing Arguments: Why the Jury May Hand a Monopoly to Murdoch

    To underestimate the power of a jury and downplay their interest in this trial, sounds a bit to me like an article that focuses on headlines, not reality. I give people a lot more credit for doing to the right thing and following the law. Maybe in this "mediocre media" reporting period in our country, lack luster trials have lost their interest to those who are responsible for upholding the law. I believe this jury will do what is best based on the law, the evidence, but surely not based on whether or not the trial was "entertaining" enough.

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