A rollup is a series of acquisitions through which a financial sponsor consolidates ownership. Increasingly, this strategy is shaping economically important markets, but historically, it has escaped antitrust enforcement. We study this phenomenon in the anesthesia industry, site of the first rollup-based antitrust case in US history. First, we identify 18 other rollups that are observationally similar to the litigated ones. Next, we show that rollups consolidate ownership and that prices rise sharply as competing practices are acquired. Last, we estimate a structural bargaining model and simulate counterfactual equilibria under remedies that courts are likely to consider.

More on this topic

BFI Working Paper·Jan 22, 2025

Network Rewiring and Spatial Targeting: Optimal Disease Mitigation in Multilayer Social Networks

Ozan Candogan, Michael D. König, Kieran Marray, and Frank W. Takes
Topics: Health care
BFI Working Paper·Jan 21, 2025

Disease, Disparities, and Development: Evidence from Chagas Disease Control in Brazil

Jon Denton-Schneider and Eduardo Montero
Topics: Development Economics, Health care
BFI Working Paper·Dec 18, 2024

The Effect of Medicaid on Crime: Evidence from the Oregon Health Insurance Experiment

Amy Finkelstein, Sarah Miller, and Katherine Baicker
Topics: Health care