Do "Reverse Payment" Settlements Constitute an Anticompetitive Pay-for-Delay?

Brand and generic drug manufacturers frequently settle patent litigation on terms that include a payment to the generic manufacturer. The Federal Trade Commission contends that these agreements extend the brand's market exclusivity and amount to anticompetitive market division. Involved parties...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of the economics of business 2015-05, Vol.22 (2), p.173-200
Hauptverfasser: Drake, Keith M., Starr, Martha A., McGuire, Thomas G.
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container_title International journal of the economics of business
container_volume 22
creator Drake, Keith M.
Starr, Martha A.
McGuire, Thomas G.
description Brand and generic drug manufacturers frequently settle patent litigation on terms that include a payment to the generic manufacturer. The Federal Trade Commission contends that these agreements extend the brand's market exclusivity and amount to anticompetitive market division. Involved parties defend the settlements as normal business agreements that reduce business risk. The anticompetitive hypothesis implies brand stock prices should rise with settlement announcements. We classify 68 brand-generic settlements into those with and without indication of a "reverse payment," and conduct an event study of the settlement announcement's influence on the brand's stock price. For settlements with indication of a reverse payment, brand stock prices rise on average 6% at the announcement. A control group of brand-generic settlements without indication of a reverse payment had no significant effect. Our results support the hypothesis that settlements with a reverse payment increase the expected profits of the brand manufacturer and are anticompetitive.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/13571516.2015.1045744
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The Federal Trade Commission contends that these agreements extend the brand's market exclusivity and amount to anticompetitive market division. Involved parties defend the settlements as normal business agreements that reduce business risk. The anticompetitive hypothesis implies brand stock prices should rise with settlement announcements. We classify 68 brand-generic settlements into those with and without indication of a "reverse payment," and conduct an event study of the settlement announcement's influence on the brand's stock price. For settlements with indication of a reverse payment, brand stock prices rise on average 6% at the announcement. A control group of brand-generic settlements without indication of a reverse payment had no significant effect. 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source EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Taylor & Francis Journals Complete
subjects Anti-trust legislation
Antitrust
Average
Brands
Event Studies
Generic drugs
Hypotheses
Patent Settlements
Payments
Pharmaceutical industry
Pharmaceuticals
Reverse Payment
Stock prices
Studies
Trade agreements
title Do "Reverse Payment" Settlements Constitute an Anticompetitive Pay-for-Delay?
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