Court Opinion

ID: 6343537
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-24 23:00:43.793184+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:42:54.502969
License: Public Domain

USCA11 Case: 21-11521    Date Filed: 05/24/2022   Page: 1 of 33

                                                   [PUBLISH]
                           In the
         United States Court of Appeals
                 For the Eleventh Circuit

                  ____________________

                        No. 21-11521
                  ____________________

OJ COMMERCE, LLC,
NAOMI HOME, INC.,
                                          Plaintiffs-Appellants,
versus
KIDKRAFT, INC.,
MIDOCEAN PARTNERS IV, L.P.,

                                        Defendants-Appellees,

IKEA North America Services, LLC.,

                                                    Defendant.
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2                      Opinion of the Court                21-11521

                     ____________________

           Appeal from the United States District Court
               for the Southern District of Florida
              D.C. Docket No. 0:19-cv-60341-MGC
                    ____________________

Before WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, ROSENBAUM, and BRASHER,
Circuit Judges.
WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge:
        This antitrust appeal presents two questions. The first is
whether MidOcean Partners IV, L.P., a private-equity firm, and
KidKraft, Inc., a majority-owned subsidiary, are capable of conspir-
ing with one another in violation of section one of the Sherman
Act. See 15 U.S.C. § 1. The second is whether OJ Commerce, LLC,
a retailer, and Naomi Home, Inc., a manufacturer, have marshalled
substantial evidence to support their claim that KidKraft monopo-
lized the market for the manufacture of wooden play kitchens in
violation of section two of the Act. See id. § 2. Because we conclude
that a company ordinarily cannot conspire with an entity it owns
and controls and with which it does not compete, the district court
correctly entered a summary judgment in favor of MidOcean and
KidKraft on the section-one claim. The district court also correctly
entered a summary judgment against the section-two claim be-
cause OJ Commerce and Naomi Home failed to present substantial
evidence to support a viable theory of monopolization. And, be-
cause the remaining claim, premised on state law, rises and falls
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21-11521               Opinion of the Court                         3

with the antitrust claims, the district court correctly entered a sum-
mary judgment against that claim. We affirm.
                        I. BACKGROUND
       KidKraft manufactures wooden play kitchens and other chil-
dren’s toys. It sells its products to tens—and sometimes hun-
dreds—of commercial resellers. Those resellers include large retail-
ers such as Amazon, Costco, Sam’s Club, and Walmart.
        OJ Commerce, a smaller online retailer, began purchasing
wooden play kitchens from KidKraft in 2011. OJ Commerce de-
scribes itself as “an aggressive discounter” that “incentivizes other
sellers . . . to keep their own prices on [the same] products low.”
And it was “at times ranked as high as [the] 13th largest” customer
of KidKraft products. The company is owned and operated by Ja-
cob Weiss.
        Weiss also owns and operates Naomi Home, a manufac-
turer that, in 2011, sold exclusively to OJ Commerce. Naomi Home
uses sales data from OJ Commerce “[a]s part of its market research
to develop products.” In 2013, Naomi Home began selling a
wooden play kitchen through OJ Commerce. The parties dispute
the degree of similarity between the Naomi Home kitchen and
KidKraft’s kitchen—KidKraft describes the former as a “knock-off”
of the latter. Naomi Home also began “developing other play kitch-
ens,” but did not sell those kitchens during the relevant period.
      In July 2015, private-equity firm MidOcean acquired a 57
percent ownership interest in KidKraft Group Holdings, LLC, the
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4                      Opinion of the Court               21-11521

company that wholly owns KidKraft. The acquisition agreement
gave MidOcean the right to appoint a majority of the KidKraft
board of directors, and MidOcean has exercised that right.
MidOcean also enjoys certain approval rights. For example,
MidOcean’s written approval is required before KidKraft may ap-
point or remove officers, enter into corporate transactions worth
over $1 million, or change the size of the board. MidOcean has no
other investments in the children’s toy industry.
       Sometime in 2015, Matan Wolfson, a KidKraft employee,
had a conversation with Weiss about the Naomi Home kitchen. As
Weiss recalls the conversation, “KidKraft was very upset about [the
kitchen] and wanted to end its relationship with OJ Commerce.”
Wolfson asked Weiss why OJ Commerce was “competing with
KidKraft.” Weiss “told [Wolfson] that [OJ Commerce] was not
competing with KidKraft because [OJ Commerce] w[as] selling to
consumers and KidKraft was selling to retailers.” Weiss also told
Wolfson that Naomi Home “would agree not to produce any ad-
ditional new items . . . that would compete with KidKraft and . . .
wouldn’t reach out to any of KidKraft’s retailers [other than OJ
Commerce] to compete with KidKraft.” Wolfson replied that he
was “going to take it up the chain and . . . let [Weiss] know.” “But
[Weiss] . . . didn’t hear[] . . . back from him,” and “the situation
went away.” Still, at Weiss’s direction, Naomi Home “dropped
plans to develop additional products” and “did not . . . try to sell
any [of its] products to any retailers for approximately two years.”
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                           5

OJ Commerce continued to sell Naomi Home kitchens, and
KidKraft continued to supply its own kitchens to OJ Commerce.
       The relationship between KidKraft and OJ Commerce came
to an end in 2016. That year, OJ Commerce’s sales of KidKraft’s
products “plummeted,” although the parties dispute the cause of
this decline. According to KidKraft, it believed that OJ Commerce
“was using KidKraft’s kitchen as a prop to drive consumers to the
Naomi Home kitchen and was no longer focused on selling
KidKraft’s kitchens.” OJ Commerce, by contrast, blames KidKraft
for “not making inventory available . . . during this time period.”
Whatever the cause, a MidOcean board member reached out to
KidKraft in November and instructed KidKraft to contact OJ Com-
merce about the “decline in sales.” According to Weiss, KidKraft
told him that it “was going to cut OJ[] [Commerce] off because it
sold [Naomi Home].” Weiss urged KidKraft to change its mind, but
KidKraft stopped supplying OJ Commerce two days later.
        Following the termination, sales of Naomi Home wooden
play kitchens “increased considerably,” and Naomi Home at-
tempted to sell the kitchens to third-party retailers. The company
hired Michael Drobnis, a seasoned independent sales representa-
tive, for that task. But “every retailer [he] contacted declined . . . to
carry Naomi Home’s [k]itchen.” Drobnis “received the impression
that [the retailers] did not want to carry a product that would di-
rectly compete with Kid[K]raft and thereby upset the applecart.”
Drobnis put Weiss in touch with Shannon Lord, a Costco em-
ployee who explained to Drobnis in February 2017 “that the
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6                      Opinion of the Court                 21-11521

[wooden play kitchen] category was already filled.” On a telephone
call, Lord told Weiss that “Costco did not want to jeopardize its
relationship with KidKraft by purchasing Naomi Home kitchens.”
       OJ Commerce and Naomi Home sued KidKraft and
MidOcean. OJ Commerce and Naomi Home alleged that “KidKraft
control[led] over 70% of the wooden play kitchen market in the
continental United States.” They asserted that “KidKraft’s termina-
tion of its relationship with OJ[] [Commerce] had no legitimate
business justification or procompetitive benefit” and violated sec-
tion two of the Sherman Act. See 15 U.S.C. § 2. They asserted that,
alternatively, the termination was a form of attempted monopoli-
zation, a separate violation of section two. See id. They asserted
that KidKraft and MidOcean had violated section one of the Sher-
man Act, see id. § 1, by conspiring “to refuse to sell and boycott
OJ[] [Commerce], solely on the basis of it selling the competing
Naomi Home [k]itchen.” They asserted that MidOcean committed
tortious interference with contract by “induc[ing] KidKraft to ter-
minate its business relationship with OJ[] [Commerce].” And they
sought damages, including treble damages for the Sherman Act vi-
olations. See id. § 15(a).
       At the close of discovery, KidKraft and MidOcean moved for
summary judgment. By then, OJ Commerce and Naomi Home had
come up with an additional theory in support of the section-two
monopolization claim: “that KidKraft foreclosed [Naomi Home]’s
access to retail channels of distribution by threatening other retail-
ers that KidKraft would withhold sales of its toy kitchens if those
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21-11521               Opinion of the Court                         7

retailers did business with [Naomi Home].” KidKraft argued that
“there [was] no evidence to support [this] theory,” and that, in any
event, there was no evidence “that KidKraft foreclosed such a sub-
stantial portion of the market that competition was thereby
harmed.” As for the theory that KidKraft violated section two by
terminating its relationship with OJ Commerce, KidKraft argued
that the unilateral termination of a distributor is lawful under the
Sherman Act; that a “rare exception to th[is] general rule” did not
apply; that the termination did not cause anticompetitive harm;
and that KidKraft had legitimate business reasons to justify the ter-
mination. KidKraft also argued that OJ Commerce and Naomi
Home had failed to prove that KidKraft had monopoly power.
MidOcean and KidKraft argued that the section-one claim failed
because “MidOcean owns and controls KidKraft,” so the two enti-
ties are “incapable of conspiring with one another.” And MidOcean
argued that the state-law claim failed because “the only torts . . .
allege[d] [were] the alleged actions underlying the antitrust
claims.” “Thus, if the[] antitrust claims fail, so too must the[] tor-
tious interference claim.”
       OJ Commerce and MidOcean opposed the motion. They ar-
gued, on the section-two claims, that it was a question of fact for
the jury whether KidKraft had “threatened any other vendors for
selling [Naomi Home] products”; there was no requirement to
prove substantial foreclosure; the termination fell within the small
class of unilateral terminations that are prohibited by section two;
there was proof that KidKraft’s “actions harmed competition by
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8                      Opinion of the Court                 21-11521

causing increased prices and reduced product choice and innova-
tion”; and there were disputes of fact about the reasons KidKraft
advanced for the termination. They also argued that they had es-
tablished that KidKraft enjoyed monopoly power in the market for
wooden play kitchens. They argued, on the section-one claim, that
KidKraft “is not a ‘wholly owned’ subsidiary of [MidOcean].” And
they argued that the state-law claim was viable because their anti-
trust claims were meritorious.
        After the parties were permitted to conduct additional dis-
covery and file supplemental briefing, the district court entered
summary judgment in favor of KidKraft and MidOcean. The dis-
trict court found that there were “material issues of fact . . . as to
the relevant product market and market power.” It also found a
genuine dispute regarding whether KidKraft and MidOcean were
capable of conspiring for purposes of section one. But it entered
summary judgment against the antitrust claims because OJ Com-
merce and Naomi Home “failed to establish harm to competition.”
It reasoned that the purported harm was “speculative” and
amounted to “harm to competitors—not harm to the competition
process in general, as required by law.” And it granted summary
judgment against the state-law claim because OJ Commerce and
Naomi Home “conceded that their state law claim relies on their
ability to succeed on their antitrust claim.” Because it considered
the absence of evidence of harm to competition to be fatal to the
antitrust claims, the district court did not decide whether there was
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                         9

a genuine dispute about KidKraft’s justifications for the termina-
tion. OJ Commerce and Naomi Home timely appealed.
                   II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
        “We review a summary judgment de novo.” Washington v.
Howard, 25 F.4th 891, 897 (11th Cir. 2022). “Summary judgment is
only appropriate when there is no genuine dispute as to any mate-
rial fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). We “view the evidence and
all factual inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the
non-moving party, and resolve all reasonable doubts about the
facts in favor of the non-movant.” Id. (internal quotation marks
omitted).
                          III. DISCUSSION
        We divide our discussion of the merits in three parts. We
first explain why, as a matter of law, MidOcean and KidKraft can-
not conspire under section one of the Sherman Act. We next ex-
plain why the section-two monopolization claim fails. Finally, we
explain why the state-law claim similarly fails. We do not address
the attempted-monopolization claim because OJ Commerce and
Naomi Home forfeited any challenge to the dismissal of that claim
by failing to address its merits in their initial brief. See Sapuppo v.
Allstate Floridian Ins. Co., 739 F.3d 678, 680 (11th Cir. 2014).
      Before turning to the merits, we explain why we have not
redacted the public version of this opinion even though it discusses
record evidence that the parties, with our permission, filed under
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10                      Opinion of the Court                 21-11521

seal. We granted the parties’ motions to redact portions of the pub-
licly available versions of their appellate briefs based on represen-
tations that those briefs “contain[ed] ‘[c]onfidential’ or ‘[h]ighly
[c]onfidential’ information.” But much of the information that was
redacted should not have been.
        There is a presumption that material attached to or included
in a substantive filing, such as an appellate brief, “is subject to the
public right of access.” See Romero v. Drummond Co., 480 F.3d
1234, 1245–46 (11th Cir. 2007); accord Callahan v. United Network
for Organ Sharing, 17 F.4th 1356, 1362 (11th Cir. 2021). The pre-
sumption “may be overcome by a showing of good cause.”
Romero, 480 F.3d at 1246. That showing ordinarily requires a party
to establish that it has a “legitimate . . . privacy or proprietary in-
terest in information” and that this interest would likely be harmed
“if made public.” See id.; Callahan, 17 F.4th at 1363 (“Concerns
about trade secrets or other proprietary information . . . can over-
come the public interest in access to judicial documents.”). It fol-
lows that a party should not seek to seal information that is already
public, see Perez-Guerrero v. U.S. Att’y Gen., 717 F.3d 1224, 1236
(11th Cir. 2013), or that would cause no harm to a party if disclosed,
see Romero, 480 F.3d at 1246. But much of the redacted infor-
mation—including the information we recount throughout this
opinion—does not satisfy the good-cause requirement.
      Publication of some of the redacted information would not
harm a legitimate privacy or proprietary interest. Consider, for ex-
ample, the sixth page of OJ Commerce and Naomi Home’s
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21-11521               Opinion of the Court                        11

opening brief. The first of two redactions on that page conceals
that, before termination, OJ Commerce was a “top-20” reseller of
KidKraft products. Assuming this fact was once private or proprie-
tary, it is unclear how the publication today of a six-year-old tidbit
about the parties’ now-terminated relationship could harm a legit-
imate interest. Cf. Joy v. North, 692 F.2d 880, 894 (2d Cir.1982)
(“[A] naked conclusory statement that publication of the [sealed
document] will injure the [party] in the industry and local commu-
nity falls woefully short of the kind of showing which raises even
an arguable issue as to whether it may be kept under seal.”). The
second redaction conceals a statement from OJ Commerce and Na-
omi Home’s expert that “[Naomi Home] stopped development of
a train table and a dollhouse when KidKraft said it would stop sell-
ing to OJ[] [Commerce] if OJ[] [Commerce] continued to sell the
[Naomi Home] [k]itchen.” (Alteration adopted.) Again, there is no
legitimate privacy or proprietary interest that could be harmed by
the publication of this statement. Perhaps OJ Commerce and Na-
omi Home are embarrassed that Weiss allegedly agreed to a course
of conduct they now claim to be anticompetitive. But the “desire
to keep indiscreet communications out of the public eye . . . is not
enough to satisfy our standard for good cause.” Callahan, 17 F.4th
at 1364.
      Some of the information is also already publicly available.
See Perez-Guerrero, 717 F.3d at 1236. For example, OJ Commerce
and Naomi Home have redacted KidKraft’s alleged market share,
even though they mentioned the figure in their publicly filed
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12                      Opinion of the Court                   21-11521

complaint, and even though the district court also mentioned that
figure in its publicly filed opinion. Similarly, OJ Commerce and Na-
omi Home have disclosed certain information in their initial brief,
only to redact that same information in their reply brief.
  A. MidOcean and KidKraft are Incapable of Conspiring under
                         Section One.
         “The Sherman Act contains a basic distinction between con-
certed and independent action.” Copperweld Corp. v. Indep. Tube
Corp., 467 U.S. 752, 767 (1984) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Section one of the Sherman Act, which prohibits “[e]very contract,
combination . . . , or conspiracy, in restraint of trade,” 15 U.S.C. § 1,
concerns only “[c]oncerted activity,” Copperweld, 467 U.S. at 768.
By its terms, the section “does not reach conduct that is wholly uni-
lateral.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). “[U]nilateral activ-
ity” is instead the concern of section two of the Act. Id.
       When assessing whether concerted activity is present, “it is
not determinative that [the] two parties to an alleged [section] 1
violation are legally distinct entities.” Am. Needle, Inc. v. Nat’l
Football League, 560 U.S. 183, 196 (2010). “The question is whether
the [relevant] agreement joins together independent centers of de-
cisionmaking.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). “If it does,
the entities are capable of conspiring under [section] 1, and the
court must decide whether the restraint of trade is an . . . illegal
one.” Id. This “inquiry is one of competitive reality,” see id.; a court
must determine “whether there is a contract, combination, or con-
spiracy amongst separate economic actors pursuing separate
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                        13

economic interests, such that the agreement deprives the market-
place of independent centers of decisionmaking, and therefore of
diversity of entrepreneurial interests, and thus of actual or potential
competition,” id. at 195 (alteration adopted) (citations and internal
quotation marks omitted).
        Two decisions of the Supreme Court guide our review. In
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp., the Court held
that “the coordinated activity of a parent and its wholly owned sub-
sidiary must be viewed as that of a single enterprise for purposes of
[section] 1 of the Sherman Act.” 467 U.S. at 771. The Court ex-
plained that “a parent and a wholly owned subsidiary always have
a unity of purpose or a common design.” Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted). And “[t]hey share a common purpose whether or
not the parent keeps a tight rein over the subsidiary . . . [because]
the parent may assert full control at any moment if the subsidiary
fails to act in the parent’s best interests.” Id. at 771–72.
       By contrast, the Court later held in American Needle, Inc. v.
National Football League—a lawsuit about professional football
teams’ licensing of intellectual property—that the National Foot-
ball League and its constituent teams were capable of conspiring in
violation of the Sherman Act. See 560 U.S. at 186–87. Because
“[e]ach of the teams [was] a substantial, independently owned, and
independently managed business[,] ‘[t]heir general corporate ac-
tions [were] guided or determined’ by ‘separate corporate con-
sciousnesses,’ and ‘their objectives [were]’ not ‘common.’” Id. at
196 (alteration adopted) (quoting Copperweld, 467 U.S. at 771).
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14                      Opinion of the Court                  21-11521

Moreover, “[t]he teams compete[d] with one another, not only on
the playing field, but [also] . . . in the market for intellectual prop-
erty.” Id. at 196–97. So, “[d]ecisions by [League] teams to license
their separately owned trademarks collectively . . . [were] decisions
that ‘depriv[ed] the marketplace of independent centers of deci-
sionmaking.’” Id. at 197 (quoting Copperweld, 467 U.S. at 769).
        Although the Supreme Court has declined to address “under
what circumstances, if any, a parent may be liable for conspiring
with [a subsidiary] it does not completely own,” Copperweld, 467
U.S. at 767, Copperweld and American Needle suggest that “the
presence of a minority interest in a ‘subsidiary’ corporation does
not itself dictate that the subsidiary can conspire with the ‘parent’
corporation that controls it,” see 7 PHILLIP E. AREEDA & HERBERT
HOVENKAMP, ANTITRUST LAW: AN ANALYSIS OF ANTITRUST
PRINCIPLES AND THEIR APPLICATION ¶ 1466a, at 234 (4th ed. 2017).
Particularly when none of the participants are competitors, the ma-
jority and minority interest-holders will usually have a unity of eco-
nomic interests. See id. ¶ 1466d3, at 238. And because the Supreme
Court has “suggested that the core . . . of Sherman Act [section] 1’s
conspiracy concept is the aggregation of previously independent
market power,” id. ¶ 1466a, at 234, agreements between non-com-
peting entities that aggregated their decision-making before the al-
leged conspiracy took place will ordinarily not implicate that con-
cern. For that reason, “majority ownership and control should be
presumptively decisive” when determining whether a parent and
subsidiary can conspire. Id.
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                        15

       As we have already explained, MidOcean owns nothing
other than its interest in KidKraft that sells toys of any type. And as
noncompetitors, MidOcean and KidKraft are incapable of conspir-
ing for purposes of section one because the evidence establishes
that MidOcean has majority ownership of and controls KidKraft. It
is undisputed that, during the relevant period, MidOcean owned
approximately 57 percent of the membership interests in the com-
pany that wholly owns KidKraft. MidOcean also controlled
KidKraft. Under the acquisition agreement, MidOcean “appoint[s]
a majority of the seats on the KidKraft [b]oard of [d]irectors.”
MidOcean “maintains control over the strategic direction of
KidKraft and controls the hiring and firing of the executive officers
of KidKraft.” KidKraft requires MidOcean’s prior approval to
change the size of the KidKraft board, appoint or remove officers,
or enter into a transaction “in excess of $1 million.” And MidOcean
“retains the authority to wind up KidKraft’s activities.” KidKraft is
also MidOcean’s “only investment in the children’s toy industry.”
Cf. Am. Needle, 560 U.S. at 197 (considering it “[d]irectly relevant”
to the analysis that “the teams compete in the [relevant] market”).
Because MidOcean controlled and majority-owned KidKraft before
the agreement at issue, the two entities shared a single “corporate
consciousness,” see Copperweld, 467 U.S. at 771, and the agree-
ment could not “deprive[] the marketplace of independent centers
of decisionmaking,” see Am. Needle, 560 U.S. at 195 (internal quo-
tation marks omitted).
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16                     Opinion of the Court                 21-11521

        OJ Commerce and Naomi Home argue that this “inquiry
[presents] a fact-intensive issue for the jury,” but they do not iden-
tify any facts that would permit a reasonable jury to conclude that
KidKraft and MidOcean are “separate economic actors pursuing
separate economic interests.” See Copperweld, 467 U.S. at 769. OJ
Commerce and Naomi Home mention that KidKraft and
MidOcean “have separate officers[,] . . . [and] separate corporate
headquarters in locations thousands of miles from each other,” and
that “[d]ecisions relating to KidKraft’s day-to-day operations are
made by KidKraft’s own management team rather than by
MidOcean.” But “[t]he[se] factors simply describe the manner in
which [a] parent chooses to structure a subunit of itself,” id. at 772
n.18—a “formalistic distinction[]” that is of little relevance to the
“functional analysis” the Court must perform, see Am. Needle, 560
U.S. at 191–92; 7 AREEDA & HOVENKAMP, supra, ¶ 1467d2, at 245
(“[W]hether related corporations share offices, employees, or offic-
ers is irrelevant to the unity of their operation.”). Under that func-
tional analysis, KidKraft and MidOcean “share a common purpose
whether or not [MidOcean] keeps a tight rein over [KidKraft]” be-
cause the evidence establishes that MidOcean “may assert full con-
trol at any moment if [KidKraft] fails to act in [MidOcean’s] best
interests.” See Copperweld, 467 U.S. at 771–72; 7 AREEDA &
HOVENKAMP, supra, ¶ 1467a, at 242 (“[M]ajority ownership with its
centralized power to control, whether or not apparently exercised
in detail on a day-to-day basis, creates a single entity for antitrust
purposes.”).
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21-11521               Opinion of the Court                       17

 B. The Record Presents No Substantial Evidence that MidOcean
               and KidKraft Violated Section Two.
        Although section two of the Sherman Act prohibits “monop-
oliz[ing], or attempt[ing] to monopolize . . . any part of the trade
or commerce among the several States,” 15 U.S.C. § 2, “[t]he mere
possession of monopoly power, and the concomitant charging of
monopoly prices, is . . . not unlawful,” Verizon Commc’ns Inc. v.
Law Offs. of Curtis V. Trinko, LLP, 540 U.S. 398, 407 (2004). Be-
cause “[t]he opportunity to charge monopoly prices—at least for a
short period—is what . . . induces [the] risk taking that produces
innovation and economic growth, . . . the possession of monopoly
power will not be found unlawful unless it is accompanied by an
element of anticompetitive conduct.” Id. To prove monopoliza-
tion in violation of section two, a plaintiff must establish “(1) the
possession [by the defendant] of monopoly power in the relevant
market and (2) the willful acquisition or maintenance of that power
as distinguished from growth or development as a consequence of
a superior product, business acumen, or historic accident.” Morris
Commc’ns Corp. v. PGA Tour, Inc., 364 F.3d 1288, 1293–94 (11th
Cir. 2004) (quoting United States v. Grinnell Corp., 384 U.S. 563,
570–71 (1966)). We also require section-two plaintiffs to prove
“harm to competition . . . within [the] relevant . . . market.” Span-
ish Broad. Sys. of Fla., Inc. v. Clear Channel Commc’ns, Inc., 376
F.3d 1065, 1074 (11th Cir. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted).
      The first element—monopoly power in a relevant market—
is not at issue because KidKraft does not challenge the
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18                      Opinion of the Court                 21-11521

determination of the district court that “material issues of fact exist
as to the relevant product market and market power.” So, we pro-
ceed from the assumption that the relevant market is the market
for wooden play kitchens in the United States. And we assume that
KidKraft possessed monopoly power in that market throughout
the relevant period.
       OJ Commerce and Naomi Home advance two theories of
harm in support of the second element. First, OJ Commerce argues
that KidKraft’s termination of its relationship with OJ Commerce
was an unlawful refusal to deal. Second, Naomi Home argues that
KidKraft engaged in “unlawful monopoly maintenance” by threat-
ening “other vendors for selling [Naomi Home] products.”
        We address each theory of harm in turn, and we explain why
KidKraft was entitled to a summary judgment in its favor. We also
reject the contention that KidKraft has forfeited many of the argu-
ments it presses on appeal.
          1. The Refusal-To-Deal Theory Is Not Viable.
        “[T]he Sherman Act does not restrict the long recognized
right of a trader or manufacturer engaged in an entirely private
business, freely to exercise his own independent discretion as to
parties with whom he will deal.” Trinko, 540 U.S. at 408 (alteration
adopted) (internal quotation marks omitted). So, “the monopolist’s
unilateral refusal to deal is not ordinarily a suspect act.” 3 AREEDA
& HOVENKAMP, supra, ¶ 658f, at 187. Still, “the right is [not] unqual-
ified,” Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen Highlands Skiing Corp., 472 U.S.
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                        19

585, 601 (1985), and “a refusal to deal under some circumstances
‘can constitute anticompetitive conduct and violate [section] 2,’”
Duty Free Ams., Inc. v. Estée Lauder Cos., 797 F.3d 1248, 1265
(11th Cir. 2015) (quoting Trinko, 540 U.S. at 408). But because “the
[Supreme] Court has ‘been very cautious in recognizing excep-
tions’ to th[e] [general] rule,” we must begin by considering
“whether [the] refusal to deal alleg[ed] [here] ‘fit[s] within existing
exceptions or provide[s] a basis, under traditional antitrust princi-
ples, for recognizing a new one.’” Id. (alteration adopted) (quoting
Trinko, 540 U.S. at 408).
         OJ Commerce does not ask us to craft a new exception and
argues only that the exception in Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen High-
lands Skiing Corp. applies. “[I]n Aspen Skiing, a system was devel-
oped in Aspen, Colorado[,] at a time when each of its [four] major
ski resorts were independently owned, under which skiers could
purchase an ‘all-Aspen’ pass that would allow them to use specially-
purchased tickets interchangeably at all the resorts.” Duty Free
Ams., 797 F.3d at 1265–66. “One company, Ski Co., subsequently
gained control of three of the four major resorts, but the fourth,
Highlands, remained independent.” Id. at 1266. “Ski Co. then uni-
laterally discontinued the ‘all-Aspen’ pass, and subsequently re-
fused to enter into any cooperative arrangement allowing High-
lands customers access to any of its resorts.” Id. “It also refused to
sell lift tickets to Highland, even when Highland offered to pay the
market retail price of the tickets.” Id. The Supreme Court “upheld
a jury verdict for [Highlands], reasoning that ‘the jury may well
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20                     Opinion of the Court                 21-11521

have concluded that [Ski Co.] elected to forgo these short-run ben-
efits because it was more interested in reducing competition over
the long run by harming its smaller competitor.’” Trinko, 540 U.S.
at 409 (alterations adopted) (quoting Aspen Skiing, 472 U.S. at 608).
      Aspen Skiing does not assist OJ Commerce. The Supreme
Court in “Trinko clarified that Aspen Skiing embodies only a ‘lim-
ited exception’ to the general rule that firms may choose the other
companies with which they deal.” Duty Free Ams., 797 F.3d at 1266
(quoting Trinko, 540 U.S. at 409). And because “Aspen Skiing is at
or near the outer boundary of [section] 2 liability,” Trinko, 540 U.S.
at 409, the Supreme Court has declined to extend the exception
when presented with facts that differ materially from those pre-
sented in Aspen Skiing, see id. at 409–11 (distinguishing and declin-
ing to extend the Aspen Skiing exception); Pac. Bell Tel. Co. v.
linkLine Commc’ns, Inc., 555 U.S. 438, 448–50 (2009) (applying, in
a section-two case involving a “price-squeeze claim[],” the general
rule of non-liability stated in Trinko and distinguishing Aspen Ski-
ing). The courts of appeals have followed suit. See, e.g., Duty Free
Ams., 797 F.3d at 1267–68; Novell, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., 731 F.3d
1064, 1074–76 (10th Cir. 2013) (Gorsuch, J.); cf. Viamedia, Inc. v.
Comcast Corp., 951 F.3d 429, 458–59 (7th Cir. 2020) (applying As-
pen Skiing only after comparing the facts presented in the appeal
with thirteen “facts found . . . in Aspen Skiing . . . which the Su-
preme Court considered significant to its analysis”). The facts here
are materially different from those in Aspen Skiing.
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                        21

        “[T]he present case does not fit within the limited exception
recognized in Aspen Skiing ” because OJ Commerce has not estab-
lished “that [KidKraft] voluntarily engaged in a course of dealing
with its rivals.” See Trinko, 540 U.S. at 409; Novell, 731 F.3d at 1074
(“To invoke Aspen’s limited exception, the Supreme Court and we
have explained, . . . there must be a preexisting voluntary and pre-
sumably profitable course of dealing between the monopolist and
rival.”); Transhorn, Ltd. v. United Techs. Corp. (In re Elevator An-
titrust Litig.), 502 F.3d 47, 53 (2d Cir. 2007) (“Th[e] [Aspen Skiing]
exception applies when a monopolist seeks to terminate a prior
(voluntary) course of dealing with a competitor.”). The competi-
tors in Aspen Skiing had “cooperated for years” to sell a “joint of-
fering.” Trinko, 540 U.S. at 408–09; see also Viamedia, 951 F.3d at
458–59 (listing the “[l]ong-term business relationship that created
[a] joint offering” in Aspen Skiing as a “significant” fact). By con-
trast, there is no evidence here of a joint offering by competitors.
KidKraft did not voluntarily engage in a course of dealing with its
competitor, Naomi Home. And OJ Commerce, which did have an
established commercial relationship with KidKraft, was not a com-
petitor in the relevant market.
       Because KidKraft and Naomi Home were never in business
together, KidKraft’s termination of its relationship with OJ Com-
merce also did not cause Naomi Home’s “share of the market for
[wooden play kitchens to] decline[] steadily.” See Aspen Skiing, 472
U.S. at 594; cf. Duty Free Ams., 797 F.3d at 1266 (“[In Aspen Skiing,]
Highlands’s market share dropped from approximately 20% to
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22                     Opinion of the Court                21-11521

11% over the four year period after the pass was discontinued.”).
To the contrary, it is undisputed that, “after KidKraft’s termination
of its agreement with OJ[] [Commerce], [Naomi Home’s] prices fell
considerably while its sales of [wooden play kitchens] increased
considerably.” And Naomi Home attributes this expansion in out-
put to the “terminat[ion] [of OJ Commerce’s] relationship” with
KidKraft. In other words, KidKraft’s termination of OJ Commerce
fostered the growth of a new entrant in the market—a result that
OJ Commerce agrees is pro-competitive. Extending Aspen Skiing
to a situation in which termination led to the growth of a compet-
itor would be inconsistent with the hornbook principle that “it is
inimical to the antitrust laws to award damages for losses stem-
ming from continued competition.” See Cargill, Inc. v. Monfort of
Colo., Inc., 479 U.S. 104, 109–110 (1986) (alterations adopted) (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted).
       In any event, OJ Commerce has failed to offer evidence that
would permit a reasonable jury to conclude that the termination
harmed competition in the market for wooden play kitchens. See
Spanish Broad. Sys., 376 F.3d at 1074. OJ Commerce argues that
the evidence establishes “that [the] termination [of OJ Commerce]
was quickly followed by an increase in KidKraft’s [wooden play
kitchen] prices.” But this evidence, without more, is insufficient to
prove harm to competition.
       “[T]he primary purpose of the antitrust laws is to protect in-
ter brand competition,” State Oil v. Khan, 522 U.S. 3, 15 (1997) (em-
phasis added)—that is, “the competition among manufacturers
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                         23

selling different brands of the same type of product,” Leegin Crea-
tive Leather Prods., Inc. v. PSKS, Inc., 551 U.S. 877, 890 (2007) (em-
phasis added). By contrast, evidence about the effect of termination
on the prices retailers charged for KidKraft wooden play kitchens
relates to “intra brand competition—the competition among retail-
ers selling the same brand.” Id. (emphases added). Because a “re-
duc[tion] [in] intrabrand competition” “can stimulate interbrand
competition,” id., an antitrust plaintiff cannot rely on evidence of
reduced intrabrand competition alone but must offer evidence con-
necting that reduction to “marketwide”—that is, interbrand—“in-
creased prices or reduced output,” see Jacobs v. Tempur-Pedic
Int’l, Inc., 626 F.3d 1327, 1340 (11th Cir. 2010); cf. Spanish Broad.
Sys., 376 F.3d at 1075 (“[C]onduct that injures individual firms ra-
ther than competition in the market as a whole does not violate
[s]ection [t]wo.”); 3B AREEDA & HOVENKAMP, supra, ¶ 760b1, at 51
(“[S]o-called ‘intrabrand’ restraints . . . are generally irrelevant for
Sherman Act [section] 2 purposes, because they do not impair the
competitive opportunities of rivals.”).
        OJ Commerce identifies no evidence of harm to interbrand
competition. Instead, it concedes that the “increas[e] [in] price” on
which their expert relied was an increase in “the price . . . of
KidKraft ” products. (Emphasis added) (internal quotation marks
omitted). And the experts for both sides agree that marketwide unit
sales increased year-on-year following KidKraft’s termination of OJ
Commerce, suggesting that the termination did not cause a mar-
ketwide decrease in output. Without evidence establishing or
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24                        Opinion of the Court                    21-11521

reasonably implying harm to the interbrand market, OJ Com-
merce’s Aspen Skiing theory fails.
     2. The Evidence Does Not Support the Monopoly-Mainte-
                          nance Theory.
       Naomi Home argues that KidKraft violated section two by
“threaten[ing]” to cut off “vendors for selling [Naomi Home] prod-
ucts,” but, as an initial matter, the parties disagree about the correct
name for—and test that applies to—this kind of section-two theory
of harm. KidKraft contends that Naomi Home’s theory of harm
must be assessed using the framework for an “exclusive dealing”
arrangement. Naomi Home responds that, unlike exclusive-deal-
ing arrangements, which “are common and can be procompeti-
tive,” McWane, Inc. v. Fed. Trade Comm’n, 783 F.3d 814, 827 (11th
Cir. 2015), KidKraft’s conduct is a “‘naked exclusion’” with “no ar-
guable benefits to competition,” (quoting 3B AREEDA &
HOVENKAMP, supra, ¶ 768a5, at 167). We agree with KidKraft.
        Our precedent treats “conditional refusals to deal—i.e., one
firm . . . [unilaterally] refus[ing] to deal with another firm unless
some condition is met,” Viamedia, 951 F.3d at 453 (internal quota-
tion marks omitted)—and exclusive dealing as synonymous, see
Seagood Trading Corp. v. Jerrico, Inc., 924 F.2d 1555, 1567 (11th
Cir. 1991) (“[A] party may choose with whom he will do business
and . . . this behavior . . . [is] referred to as ‘exclusive dealing[.]” (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted)); cf. Le Page’s Inc. v. 3M (Minn.
Mining & Mfg. Co.), 324 F.3d 141, 157 (3d Cir. 2003) (en banc) (ex-
plaining that the term “exclusive dealing” includes “arrangements
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                         25

which, albeit not expressly exclusive, effectively foreclosed the
business of competitors”). Because Naomi Home argues that
KidKraft refused to deal with retailers unless a certain condition—
the retailers’ abstention from purchasing Naomi Home products—
was met, the theory sounds in exclusive dealing. And Naomi
Home’s contention about the arguable benefits to competition is
relevant to the merits of the exclusive-dealing theory, not to its la-
bel. See McWane, 783 F.3d at 833.
        We have employed a burden-shifting approach “to evaluate
an exclusive dealing monopoly maintenance [theory of harm].” Id.
“First, the [plaintiff] must show that the monopolist’s conduct had
the anticompetitive effect of harming competition, not just a com-
petitor.” Id. (alteration adopted) (internal quotation marks omit-
ted). “If the [plaintiff] succeeds in demonstrating this anticompeti-
tive harm, the burden then shifts to the defendant to present pro-
competitive justifications for the exclusive conduct, which the
[plaintiff] can refute.” Id. “If the court accepts the defendant’s prof-
fered justifications, it must then decide whether the conduct’s pro-
competitive effects outweigh its anticompetitive effects.” Id. As
part of its initial burden to prove anticompetitive harm, the plaintiff
must prove that “the exclusive dealing arrangements” foreclosed
“a substantial share of the market.” Id. at 837.
      We divide our discussion of the exclusive-dealing theory in
two parts. We first explain that some of Naomi Home’s account of
KidKraft’s exclusionary conduct is not supported by substantive
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26                     Opinion of the Court                 21-11521

evidence. We then explain that Naomi Home has failed to prove
substantial foreclosure.
     a. The Evidence Does Not Create a Genuine Dispute About
              Some of the Alleged Exclusionary Conduct.
        Naomi Home contends that it has elicited sufficient evi-
dence to proceed to trial on its exclusive-dealing theory because
“KidKraft took two distinct actions to stop [its] market entry.”
“First, from 2015 through November 2016, KidKraft threatened to
cut off OJ[] [Commerce] unless Naomi Home stopped producing
any additional products that competed with KidKraft.” “Second, af-
ter the November 2016 termination, KidKraft threatened to take
action against third party sellers such as Costco if they sold the Na-
omi Home [wooden play kitchen].”
       According to Naomi Home, the first set of “distinct actions”
consists of a threat and coerced agreement in 2015 and a threat in
2016. Naomi Home asserts that Matan Wolfson, a KidKraft em-
ployee, threatened Weiss in 2015 “that KidKraft would cut off OJ[]
[Commerce] from further KidKraft products unless OJ[] [Com-
merce] agreed to stop selling Naomi Home products.” It asserts
that, “[o]n the same call, . . . [i]t was agreed Naomi Home would
cease the development and sale (via OJ[] [Commerce] or other-
wise) of additional competing products and, in exchange, OJ[]
[Commerce] would be permitted to continue reselling KidKraft
products.” And it asserts that, in November 2016, another KidKraft
employee “told [Weiss that] OJ[] [Commerce] had to either stop
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21-11521              Opinion of the Court                      27

selling the Naomi Home kitchen altogether or lose its KidKraft
business relationship completely.”
         Naomi Home has adduced sufficient evidence to create a
genuine dispute about the 2015 and 2016 threats, but evidence of
an agreement in 2015—for Naomi Home to limit production and
cease innovation in exchange for continued KidKraft sales to OJ
Commerce—is wanting. To be sure, Weiss initially testified that he
and Wolfson “came to some sort of . . . understanding that [Naomi
Home] w[ould] not be selling to retailers our product and not be
producing . . . any new products that compete with KidKraft, and
that would be sufficient to retain the relationship with KidKraft.”
But, when pressed for more details, Weiss testified that he pro-
posed cutting back production of Naomi Home products and that
Wolfson stated that he would “take [the proposal] up the chain and
. . . let [Weiss] know.” Weiss never “heard . . . back from
[Wolfson].” Weiss did not “follow up with Mr. Wolfson about th[e]
. . . proposal.” A KidKraft account representative to whom Weiss
reached out told Weiss that “it’s not a concern.” And, by Weiss’s
own account, “the situation went away.”
       The evidence also does not support the second alleged set of
“distinct actions”—that KidKraft “threatened to take action against
third party sellers such as Costco if they sold the Naomi Home
[wooden play kitchen].” It is undisputed that Naomi Home “sub-
poenaed over 20 retailers and suppliers and asked them to produce
evidence that KidKraft threatened to foreclose or foreclosed Naomi
Home . . . from the market,” but received no such evidence in
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28                     Opinion of the Court                21-11521

response. Instead, the head toy buyer for Costco testified that she
was “not aware of KidKraft ever issuing any threat of any kind to
Costco,” and that, because of her position, she “would be aware of
such a threat if one had been made.” She also testified that, if
Costco were to receive such a threat, “Costco . . . would not yield.”
       Naomi Home argues that a genuine dispute remains be-
cause a jury could infer an agreement between Costco and KidKraft
from conversations Weiss and Drobnis had with Costco employ-
ees. Weiss “was told by . . . Drobnis that Shannon Lord told him
that [Costco] couldn’t buy the Naomi Home kitchen” because “the
category was already filled.” Drobnis “received the impression”
from his conversation with Costco “that [Costco] did not want to
carry a product that would directly compete with KidKraft and
thereby upset the applecart.” And Weiss maintains that, in a sepa-
rate conversation, Lord told him “that [Costco] didn’t want to jeop-
ardize [its] relationship with KidKraft.”
       This evidence does not permit a reasonable inference that
KidKraft used its monopoly power to coerce Costco into boycott-
ing Naomi Home. To be sure, the Court must credit as true Weiss’s
testimony that a Costco buyer told him that Costco was afraid of
souring its relationship with KidKraft. See Washington, 25 F.4th at
897. But, for Naomi Home’s contention to be correct, one must
draw the inference from Weiss’s testimony that Costco’s reluc-
tance to buy resulted from acquiescence in a KidKraft threat. And
that inference is not a reasonable one. Evidence of a threat to
Costco or of Costco’s acquiescence “did not surface during
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                        29

discovery.” Martin v. Fin. Asset Mgmt. Sys., Inc., 959 F.3d 1048,
1055 (11th Cir. 2020). And, “[a]bsent any [such evidence], we are
. . . left with [a] hypothesized account of [a] . . . meeting [between
KidKraft and Costco.] [B]ut . . . speculation is not evidence.” See id.
Indeed, if KidKraft was in fact a monopolist in the market for
wooden play kitchens, it would have been rational for Costco to
fear upsetting KidKraft even without a threat. And it would have
been lawful for Costco to decide unilaterally not to deal with Na-
omi Home on that basis. See NYNEX Corp. v. Discon, Inc., 525
U.S. 128, 137 (1998).
        In antitrust disputes where conduct is as consistent with un-
lawful “concerted action” as it is with lawful “independent action,”
the plaintiff must present “evidence that tends to exclude the pos-
sibility that the manufacturer and nonterminated distributors were
acting independently.” See Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Serv.
Corp., 465 U.S. 752, 763–64 (1984); see also Dunnivant v. Bi-State
Auto Parts, 851 F.2d 1575, 1583 (11th Cir. 1988) (“To infer conspir-
acy from terminations or refusals to deal would, in effect, deter or
penalize perfectly legitimate conduct.” (internal quotation marks
omitted)). Naomi Home presented no such evidence. To the con-
trary, Naomi Home concedes “that Costco in February 2017 opted
not to carry KidKraft’s wooden kitchen” or Naomi Home’s kitchen
and instead chose “to carry a competitor’s product.”
  b. Naomi Home Has Not Established Substantial Foreclosure.
      Naomi Home offers no evidence that KidKraft’s 2015 and
2016 threats to OJ Commerce and its supposed threat to Costco
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30                       Opinion of the Court                   21-11521

caused “competition [to] be[] foreclosed in a substantial share of
the line of commerce affected.” McWane, 783 F.3d at 835 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Instead, Naomi Home cites McWane,
Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission, 783 F.3d at 835, 837, for the
propositions that “substantial foreclosure is not an essential ele-
ment of a [section] 2 claim” and that “a lesser degree of foreclosure
is required when the defendant is a monopolist.” (Internal quota-
tion marks omitted.) But McWane supports neither proposition.
       McWane confirms that substantial foreclosure remains a
necessary element of an exclusive-dealing theory of harm. We ex-
plained that, before 1961, “all that was required for an exclusive
deal to violate the [antitrust laws] was proof of substantial foreclo-
sure.” Id. at 835. In Tampa Electric Co. v. Nashville Coal Co., 365
U.S. 320 (1961), the Supreme Court “continued to emphasize the
importance of substantial foreclosure, but opened the door to a
broader analysis.” McWane, 783 F.3d at 835. Under that analysis,
“‘[s]ubstantial foreclosure’ continues to be a requirement for exclu-
sive dealing to run afoul of the antitrust statutes,” “[b]ut foreclo-
sure is usually no longer sufficient by itself.” Id. at 835, 837. In other
words, Tampa Electric and the decisions that followed made it
harder, not easier, to establish a violation of the antitrust laws
based on exclusive dealing.
       Naomi Home also misconstrues the necessary degree of
foreclosure. McWane did not hold, as Naomi Home implies, that
something less than substantial foreclosure will suffice. Instead,
this Court explained that, “[t]raditionally[,] a foreclosure
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21-11521                Opinion of the Court                        31

percentage of at least 40% has been a threshold for liability in ex-
clusive dealing cases,” although “some courts have found that a
lesser degree of foreclosure is required when the defendant is a mo-
nopolist.” Id. at 837 (citing United States v. Microsoft Corp., 253
F.3d 34, 70 (D.C. Cir. 2001) (en banc)). In other words, “‘substantial
foreclosure’ continues to be a requirement,” id., even though
“courts have varied widely in the degree of foreclosure they con-
sider [substantial],” Eisai, Inc. v. Sanofi Aventis U.S., LLC, 821 F.3d
394, 403 (3d Cir. 2016) (internal quotation marks omitted). In
McWane, for example, we concluded that foreclosure of “50–60%
of [the] distribution [market]” was high enough to be substantial.
See McWane, 783 F.3d at 837–38. And in United States v. Microsoft
Corp., the District of Columbia Circuit concluded that Microsoft
had caused substantial foreclosure through “exclusive deals with
fourteen of the top fifteen access providers in North America,
which account[ed] for a large majority of all” providers of the rele-
vant product. See Microsoft, 253 F.3d at 70–71 (alteration adopted)
(internal quotation marks omitted). But even if we accept that
some amount of foreclosure less than forty percent can count as
substantial, Naomi Home does not explain what the threshold
would be or why.
      Nor does Naomi Home explain in its briefs how much of the
market for wooden play kitchens was foreclosed by KidKraft’s sup-
posed threats to OJ Commerce and Costco. Indeed, given that OJ
Commerce rejected KidKraft’s request in 2016 not to stock Naomi
Home kitchens, that threat could not have caused any foreclosure.
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32                     Opinion of the Court                 21-11521

Similarly, it is undisputed that, after the 2015 threat, OJ Commerce
continued selling both KidKraft and Naomi Home kitchens until
November 2016. And Naomi Home has not pointed us to any sub-
stantive evidence establishing Costco’s market share, a figure that
could serve as a proxy for the degree of foreclosure caused by the
supposed threat to Costco.
     3. KidKraft Has Not Forfeited Its Arguments in Support of Af-
                                firmance.
        We briefly address OJ Commerce and Naomi Home’s mer-
itless contention that KidKraft forfeited many of the arguments it
made in its appellate brief. They contend that KidKraft failed to ar-
gue before the district court that there was “no proof of agreement
with [KidKraft] for [Naomi Home] to not bring additional products
to market.” But in response to OJ Commerce and Naomi Home’s
statement of material facts, KidKraft argued that “the cited evi-
dence” did “not support[]” that “KidKraft entered into” Weiss’s
proposed agreement. Similarly, in a brief in support of its motion
for summary judgment, KidKraft wrote that “Plaintiffs’ own testi-
mony is that KidKraft took no action in response to [Weiss’s] of-
fer.”
        OJ Commerce and Naomi Home also incorrectly assert that
KidKraft raised for the first time on appeal its argument about the
absence of evidence of harm to interbrand competition. But, in the
district court, KidKraft argued that there was “no evidence that [its]
termination of OJ[] [Commerce] caused the sort of constraint in
market-wide supply or increase in price that would be required to
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21-11521               Opinion of the Court                      33

show an anticompetitive outcome.” And KidKraft’s economist
made a similar argument in his expert report.
 C. The State Law Claim Fails Because the Antitrust Claims Fail.
        The claim of tortious interference fails. OJ Commerce and
Naomi Home concede that “their state law claim relies on their
ability to succeed on their antitrust claim[s].” (Internal quotation
marks omitted). Because the district court correctly entered sum-
mary judgment on the antitrust claims in favor of KidKraft and
MidOcean, it follows that MidOcean was entitled to a summary
judgment in its favor on the state-law claim.
                        IV. CONCLUSION
     The judgment in favor of KidKraft and MidOcean is
AFFIRMED.