Live Nation Entertainment has dominated live events for years, and now a jury has officially called it a monopoly.
A Manhattan federal jury returned its verdict on Wednesday in a civil antitrust case, finding that Live Nation and its subsidiary Ticketmaster held illegal control over ticket sales for major live entertainment events. It was the fourth day of deliberation, following a five-week trial.
LYV stock fell 6.3% to $155.82 on Wednesday and dipped a further 0.1% in premarket trading Thursday. The stock is still up 9.4% for the year.
Live Nation Entertainment, Inc., LYV
The case was originally filed in 2024 by the U.S. Department of Justice and numerous state attorneys general. Prosecutors alleged Live Nation used its position to maintain an illegal grip on the live entertainment industry and called for the company to spin off Ticketmaster.
The two companies merged back in 2010. Since then, Live Nation has expanded its reach to include ownership or control of bookings for hundreds of venues, while Ticketmaster operates as a global ticket-selling platform.
The jury found Live Nation held illegal control over ticketing services at more than 200 major venues and parts of the amphitheater market. It also found the company tied its venue access and promotion deals to Ticketmaster use, which restricted fair competition.
New York Attorney General Letitia James was direct in her response. “A jury found what we have long known to be true: Live Nation and Ticketmaster are breaking the law and costing consumers millions of dollars in the process,” she said.
Markets reacted fast. As LYV fell, rivals picked up steam. Vivid Seats jumped 9.3% and StubHub gained 3.5% — investors pricing in more room for competition if Live Nation’s grip on the market loosens.
Back in March, Live Nation had already reached a settlement with the DOJ under President Trump’s administration — just days into the trial. That deal included a 15% cap on service fees for event organizers and limits on long-term exclusivity contracts between Ticketmaster and venues.
Crucially, the settlement let Live Nation keep Ticketmaster. But more than 30 states were not satisfied and pushed ahead with the trial, leading directly to Wednesday’s verdict.
Live Nation issued a statement Wednesday pushing back on the result. “The jury’s verdict is not the last word on this matter. Pending motions will determine whether the liability and damages rulings stand,” the company said.
The verdict now moves to the remedies phase. No fines have been set, but several states are expected to push for a forced breakup of Ticketmaster from Live Nation. That outcome would hit the company’s pricing power and control over ticket distribution.
Live Nation said it expects total damages to stay below $350 million. The company has already set aside $280 million from its prior settlement and believes the final outcome “will not be materially different.”
Separately, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission has an active case tied to ticket resale practices. The March DOJ deal also requires Ticketmaster to open its system to other vendors at select venues and stop retaliating against partners who use competing platforms.
Wall Street still leans bullish. Based on 17 analyst ratings, LYV carries a Strong Buy consensus with an average price target of $189.38 — implying roughly 21.5% upside from current levels.
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