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FTC sues Pepsi, alleging illegal pricing deals with ‘a large, big box retailer’ : NPR


The Federal Trade Commission has sued PepsiCo, accusing it of “rigging” the market for soft drinks by offering special deals to one big-box retailer, but not others.

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A new federal lawsuit accuses Pepsi of rigging competition by offering unfair deals to a large big-box store at the expense of rival retailers, resulting in higher prices for shoppers.

The Federal Trade Commission is suing Pepsi for its special deals with a company whose name is redacted. Industry experts point to Walmart, the largest retailer in the U.S., as the likely company. The redactions might get lifted over time as part of the legal process.

The FTC alleges that because Pepsi did not offer the same deals to other stores that sell its products, it put other retailers “ranging from large grocery chains to independent, local convenience stores” at a disadvantage. Pepsi described the lawsuit as “wrong on the facts and the law.”

The case is part of the FTC’s recent revival of a long-dormant law to try to crack down on high grocery prices, which have been topping Americans’ economic concerns. The 1936 law prohibits manufacturers and wholesalers from giving preferential treatment to big retailers over smaller ones, though with caveats.

“When firms like Pepsi give massive retailers a leg up, it tilts the playing field against small firms and ultimately inflates prices for American consumers,” FTC Chair Lina Khan said in statement.

Pepsi, in a statement, it said its “practices are in line with industry norms and we do not favor certain customers by offering discounts or promotional support to some customers and not others.” Walmart declined comment.

The Pepsi lawsuit brings new scrutiny to Walmart’s power to use its scale to extract cheaper prices. It also shines a spotlight on PepsiCo’s own power as the owner of numerous soft-drink brands, including Gatorade, Mountain Dew, Lipton and Bubly.

It’s unclear how the case will continue under the Trump administration. Some Republican legal thinkers have favored the revival of the old law, called the Robinson-Patman Act.

But the FTC’s vote to sue Pepsi split along party lines, with the two Republican commissioners dissenting. Trump’s pick to lead the FTC, Commissioner Andrew Ferguson, had taken issue with the Pepsi proceeding. Republican Commissioner Melissa Holyoak called Friday’s lawsuit “the worst case” she’d seen at the agency, saying that she thought Democrats had “rushed the case out the door.”

The FTC last month similarly sued the largest U.S. alcohol distributor, Southern Glazer’s Wine and Spirits, alleging it illegally denied smaller businesses the discounts and rebates that it offered to big chains.



This story originally appeared on NPR

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