International Paper, other "cardboard makers" hit with US price-fixing class action
From news reports
International Paper and other rival manufacturers have been accused in a new lawsuit in U.S. federal court of conspiring to fix and inflate prices for key raw materials that are used to make cardboard boxes and merchandise displays. The proposed class action filed on Tuesday in the federal court in Chicago said International Paper, Packaging Corporation of America, Georgia-Pacific and several other companies, including Smurfit Westrock, Cascades, Pratt Industries, Graphic Packaging and Greif, collectively raised prices by 30% since late 2020. The lawsuit said the manufacturers violated U.S. antitrust law through "numerous unprecedented and unjustified price increases, often implemented at the exact same time and for the exact same increase." Attorneys for the plaintiffs did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The lawsuit said the defendants inflated prices for containerboard and linerboard, the materials that make up finished products such as cardboard boxes. The companies also make and sell boxes and other containerboard products, according to the lawsuit. Price increases in the corrugated box market "drastically outpaced" what the lawsuit described as a modest rise in demand over the period covered by the complaint. As demand fell in recent years, the lawsuit said, price increases continued.
The case is Artuso Pastry Foods Corp v. Packaging Corporation of America et al, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, No. 1:25-cv-08856. For plaintiffs: Vincent Briganti of Lowey Dannenberg; Christopher Burke of Burke LLP; Eric Unrein of Cavanaugh, Biggs & Lemon; and Gary McCallister of McCallister Law Group. For defendants: No appearances yet
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