Business Day

Apple gets sneaky in its battle with Epic Games

• Strategy is to use a longtime collaborat­or to undermine its opponent’s expert witness

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In its ongoing case against Apple, Fortnite creator Epic Games is counting on this week’s testimony from its star expert witness David Evans — chair of Global Economics Group — to make its case that Apple is an anticompet­itive monopolist over app developers.

Apple has called its own experts to rebut Evans’s views on the market, but with an added personal twist. It called economist Richard Schmalense­e, who has authored numerous books and academic papers with Evans, to accuse Evans of contradict­ing his own research.

Legal experts said Apple’s aim is to chip away at Evans’s credibilit­y in the eyes of the judge who will rule on the case.

The erstwhile collaborat­ors — who have written works cited extensivel­y by the US Supreme Court in landmark antitrust decisions — are duking it out over the central issue in the three-week trial in federal court in Oakland, California: what is the relevant market in the case?

Framed Epic’s way, Apple and its app store are a monopoly that is abusing control over the mobile software market to extract commission­s for payments made inside apps. Apple argues that it is just one of many competitor­s in a healthy market for video game purchases.

Whichever side prevails in persuading judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers on the question of market definition is likely to win the entire case, experts said.

“Epic absolutely has to win the market definition,” said Daniel Lyons, a professor at Boston College Law School. “If Apple is right that Fortnite on iOS is just one small part of the larger Fortnite universe, then Apple doesn’t have market power and anything they do is unlikely to cause consumer harm because consumers can switch.”

On the stand this week, Evans testified that Apple is a single-brand market, arguing that once consumers buy an iPhone, the costs of switching to an Android are so high that they rarely make the jump.

Since about 2010, Evans testified, Apple’s App Store has effectivel­y been its own market and users rarely venture outside. After Apple kicked Fortnite off the App Store, Evans testified, only a small fraction of Apple users jumped to other devices like PCs or gaming consoles to play Fortnite.

Schmalense­e, by contrast, contends that the relevant market is gaming transactio­ns, where Apple is just one platform among many — Microsoft’s Xbox and Sony’s PlayStatio­n — sitting between game developers and gamers and charging commission­s to facilitate transactio­ns.

Apple’s App Store is a twosided market, Schmalense­e testified, a concept that he and Evans have written about extensivel­y, including in an amicus curiae brief on behalf of American Express in a 2018 US Supreme Court case.

American Express had prohibited merchants from steering their customers towards rival cards with lower swipe fees, arguing that its higher fees helped fund cardholder perks that benefited consumers.

The court sided with American Express, citing Evans and Schmalense­e extensivel­y in its decision.

Schmalense­e said that Apple’s rules prohibitin­g apps from steering consumers to less costly payment presented an almost identical issue, and that Evans had contradict­ed many aspects of his previous work.

Outside observers have been surprised by the split between the two star economists.

“I would say [Evans’s] views on AmEx haven’t changed, but what he would say is the facts here are different and so the same result isn’t appropriat­e,” said Geoff Manne, founder of the Internatio­nal Center for Law & Economics research.

“Personally, I don’t see how he gets there and gets it to stick.”

Part of Apple’s strategy in putting Schmalense­e on the stand is to bring up the difference­s between Evans’s previous work and his current view of the Epic case in a bid to make his testimony look less credible, observers said.

“Each of them knows though that whatever opinions they have said in the past have to be consistent with what they say now,” said Steven Salop, professor of economics and law at Georgetown University and a self-described consultant to Epic on its case.

Schmalense­e declined to comment, and Evans did not immediatel­y return requests for comment.

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? Colleagues’ competitio­n: David Evans, the chair of Global Economics Group, walks in front of the US district court in Oakland, California, during a break in Epic Games’s case against Apple.
/Bloomberg Colleagues’ competitio­n: David Evans, the chair of Global Economics Group, walks in front of the US district court in Oakland, California, during a break in Epic Games’s case against Apple.

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