The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas Feb. 12 vacated a final rule by the Federal Trade Commission that changed premerger notification rules, form and instructions under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act. The rule had increased reporting requirements on the HSR form. The final rule was challenged by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in 2024.

“First, the Final Rule exceeds the FTC’s statutory authority because the agency has not shown that the Rule’s claimed benefits will ‘reasonably outweigh’ its significant and widespread costs,” Judge Jeremy D. Kernodle wrote in his opinion. “Though the FTC asserts that the Rule will detect illegal mergers and save agency resources, the FTC fails to substantiate these assertions. The Final Rule is therefore not ‘necessary and appropriate,’ and the statute ‘does not authorize [the FTC] to promulgate [the Final Rule].’"

The AHA filed an amicus brief in the case last year, explaining that the changes made by the FTC under the HSR Act were “unnecessary and unlawful.” Key aspects of yesterday’s decision, including the court’s rejection of the FTC’s reliance on a study regarding hospital mergers, were based on arguments made in the AHA’s amicus brief.

Related News Articles

Blog
Public
Physicians are increasingly choosing to be employed instead of running their own small practices. Though a far higher percentage of physicians remain in…
Headline
The Department of Justice March 27 announced it is launching an Anticompetitive Regulations Task Force to advocate for “the elimination of anticompetitive…
Headline
A report released Jan. 9 by Kaufman Hall highlights hospital and health system merger and acquisition activity from last year.  The report said that…
Headline
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce Jan. 13 filed a lawsuit against the Federal Trade Commission, saying changes made by the FTC to premerger notification rules under…
Headline
The Federal Trade Commission Oct. 10 finalized changes to the premerger notification rules, form and instructions under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust…
Headline
The top three large-group insurers control an average of 82.2% of the market share in each state, nearly twice the combined average market share of each state’…