Publication:

Resolving Reverse-Payment Settlements With The Smoking Gun Of Stock Price Movements

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2015

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Thomas G. McGuire, Keith Drake, Einer Elhauge, Raymond S. Hartman & Martha Starr, Resolving Reverse-Payment Settlements With The Smoking Gun Of Stock Price Movements (Harvard John M. Olin Discussion Paper Series Paper No. 823, Apr. 2015).

Abstract

The Supreme Court recently held that in reverse payment settlements of drug patent disputes, anticompetitive effects can be inferred if the reverse payment exceeds the patent holder’s anticipated litigation costs, absent some offsetting justification. Application of this standard is problematic because defendants usually (a) obscure the amount of the reverse payment and (b) claim their settlement was justified by risk aversion. Further, even if a net reverse payment can be proven, it is little help in estimating the period of delay or damages. This Article offers another type of evidence that demonstrates and quantifies anticompetitive effects. An otherwise unexplained bump in the patent holder’s stock price shows that the settlement created new future profits by extending the period without generic competition beyond what the stock market expected. The stock market test has several advantages: it rebuts the risk aversion claim (which cannot explain the stock price rise); it more effectively (though still conservatively) captures damages than the magnitude of the reverse payment; and, finally, it relies on the behavior of objective traders rather than deal makers with well-understood incentives to obscure the presence of a payment. We conduct a stock market event study on one of the early instances of a reverse-payment settlement to illustrate how the method works.

Description

Other Available Sources

Research Data

Keywords

Terms of Use

This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material (LAA), as set forth at Terms of Service

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Related Stories

Story
Resolving Reverse-Payment Settlements With The Smoking… : DASH Story 2015-08-20
Hi! I'm writing my Master's thesis on pay-for-delay agreements (in the EU) and came across this article because of my googlescholar alerts. I don't know yet just how this will benefit or how I might use it, but at first glance it looks very promissing. Despite my Uni having an excelent online access to most journals, I always apreciate an open access possibilites. Especially when coming from highly acclaimed sources! So thank you for the knowledge!