Antitrust lawsuit against mega hotel chains moves forward...
U.S. lawsuit on hotels' internet advertising moves
forward
BUSINESS NEWSMARCH 21, 2019 / 2:51 PM
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A federal judge on Thursday
rebuffed a request by hotel chains including Hyatt Hotels Corp, Marriott
International Inc and Wyndham Hotel Group to throw out a class-action suit accusing
them of conspiring not to compete with one another online.
The case, which was filed last year by a group of hotel
customers, alleges that Hyatt, Marriott, Wyndham, Hilton Domestic Operating
Company and Six Continents Hotels, Inc, now called InterContinental Hotels
Group PLC, agreed not to advertise against one another on online travel
agencies, like Expedia.
Similarly, the lawsuit alleges, the companies stopped
advertising against one another in search results. The lawsuit says the changes
came shortly after a 2014 hotel industry conference.
“These allegations show, at best, that defendants had an
opportunity to conspire; they do not support an inference that a conspiracy
occurred,” Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer of the U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of Illinois wrote in allowing the lawsuit to go forward.
The hotel chains argued that the named plaintiff, Karen
Tichy, was not harmed by the alleged conspiracy. They also cited instances
where searches for one hotel prompt advertisements for another chain,
indicating there is online competition.
A representative for IHG said it was reviewing the filing
but would not comment further. Marriott and Wyndham declined comment.
Representatives for Hyatt and Hilton did not respond to requests for comment.
The lawsuit is similar to one that the Federal Trade
Commission brought against the online seller 1-800 Contacts.
The FTC had accused the company of reaching agreements
with other online contact lens retailers that required them to refrain from advertising
to consumers who had searched online for 1-800 Contacts.
In exchange, 1-800 Contacts agreed to not advertise to
people who searched for the rivals’ names.
Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by G Crosse and Peter
Cooney
Comments
Post a Comment