Corporate dealmakers can no longer just worry about Washington D.C. State attorneys general are aggressively stepping up as major independent players in U.S. antitrust enforcement—and they are sending the bill directly to the corporations.
💰 THE LEGAL TAB:
- The Ask: California and a coalition of eight other states are seeking $10.3 million in legal fees and costs for their role in successfully blocking the massive $25 billion Kroger-Albertsons supermarket merger.
- California’s Cut: The Golden State alone is looking to recoup $5.1 million to refill its coffers for future antitrust battles.
- The Corporate Defense Bill: Fighting these suits is astronomically expensive. Kroger and Albertsons reported a staggering $1.5 billion in combined merger-related costs, which included hiring over 60 defense attorneys across eight law firms (with some billing north of $1,625 per hour).
⚖️ THE MACRO SHIFT (States Going Solo): States are no longer just playing backup to the FTC or DOJ; they are actively taking the lead when federal agencies step back:
- California is spearheading a bipartisan effort to block Nexstar’s $3.54B acquisition of Tegna (after the DOJ declined to challenge it).
- Several states are still pressing ahead with a case against Live Nation, even after the DOJ settled mid-trial.
- California is actively probing Paramount Skydance’s proposed $110B acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery alongside the DOJ.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE: The collapse of the Kroger-Albertsons merger is a massive wake-up call for Wall Street and corporate boardrooms. The regulatory gauntlet has officially decentralized. Even if you manage to clear the federal hurdles, you still have to face highly motivated state attorneys general who are more than willing to litigate—and who will absolutely demand multi-million dollar reimbursements from your balance sheet when they win.
