Reserve Supply Corporation (Reserve) appeals a grant of summary judgment in favor of Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation (Owens-Corning) and CertainTeed Corporation (CertainTeed). The district court determined that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed did not conspire to fix prices in the residential fiberglass insulation market in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, and the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. I2IV2, para. 261, et seq. It also determined that Owens-Coming and CertainTeed had a good faith belief that the discriminatory prices for insulation that they offered Builders Marts of America (BMA) were warranted by competitive circumstances and that, consequently, their conduct was shielded from liability under the Clayton Act, as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act, by that statute’s “meeting competition” defense. 15 U.S.C. § 13(b). For the reasons given below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
BACKGROUND
A. Facts
This case involves pricing practices in the fiberglass insulation industry. Reserve is a lumber dealer cooperative based in Illinois, which purchased fiberglass insulation. Owens-Corning and CertainTeed are large insulation manufacturers, which, along with Johns-Manville, held 85 to 90 percent of the market share in the period between 1979 and 1983.
Reserve brings two distinct claims. First, it alleges that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed offered discriminatorily low prices to Reserve’s competitor, BMA, in the spring and summer of 1979. Second, Reserve contends that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed conspired to fix prices generally in the fiberglass insulation market. The facts relevant to one claim are not necessarily relevant to the other. Consequently, for the sake of clarity, we shall provide a statement of the facts related to each claim as. that claim is discussed. Nonetheless, some background common to both claims ought to be set forth at this point.
Fiberglass insulation is an essentially homogeneous product which is marketed in standard sizes, grades (“R-values”), and formats. There is little or no functional difference between the insulation that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed sold. At the time relevant to this dispute, Owens-Corning and CertainTeed priced insulation ac: cording to an identical method: each company made available to its customers a list price for various types of insulation; it then provided standard discounts off this price based on the type of customer who was purchasing. According to the record, it appears that discounts were the practice, not the exceрtion; apparently every cus *40 tomer received one of these standard discounts. In addition, both suppliers provided extraordinary discounts to certain customers in order to meet the prices of competitors.
When they were offered lower prices for insulation from other suppliers, purchasers made it a practice to inform suppliers in the hope of obtaining the same price from them. Consequently, pricing information was widely disseminated throughout the industry. Because of this readily available information, the fungibility of the product, and the relatively small number of producers, the market for insulation was “interdependent.” That is, each producer had to take into account the conduct of its competitors when it priced its product, and it could not maintain a higher price without losing its market share. 1 Demand for insulation was tied substantially to the level of housing starts, and was therefore relatively inelastic. An industrywide drop in the price of insulation would not have translated necessarily into a commensurate increase in industrywide sales.
B. District Court Proceedings
In June 1983, Reserve filed a three-count complaint against Owens-Corning and Cer-tainTeed. Count One alleged a conspiracy or agreement to restrain trade in the fiberglass insulation market, in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act. 15 U.S.C. § 1. Count Two alleged discriminatory pricing on the part of Owens-Corning and Certain-Teed by charging discriminatorily lower prices for insulation products to competitors of Reserve, in violation of section 2(a) of the Clayton Act, as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act. 15 U.S.C. § 13(a). Finally, Count Three asserted, as a pendent state claim, that Owens-Corning and Cer-tainTeed’s alleged price fixing also violated the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 12 DA, para. 261, et seq.
In 1986, the district court (Duff, J.) granted CertainTeed’s motion for summary judgment on the Robinson-Patman claim.
Reserve Supply Corp. v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp.,
II
THE ROBINSON-PATMAN CLAIM
Count Two of Reserve’s complaint alleged that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed engaged in discriminatory pricing of insulation in sales to various competitors of Reserve. On appeal, Reserve challenges only the district court's finding of no illegal discrimination in sales that the defendants made to Builders Marts of America (BMA), a large building supplies dealer in the southeast United States. 2
1. Holding of the district court
As wе have noted previously, summary judgment on this claim was granted for CertainTeed by the district court’s (Duff, J.) order in 1986. For the purposes of ruling on this motion, the court assumed that Reserve had made out a prima facie case of price discrimination — that is, that CertainTeed had sold insulation at a price lower than that available to Reserve. However, the court ruled that, even if this discrimination had taken place, Certain-Teed’s conduct was not illegal because it was entitled as a matter of law to the “meeting competition” defense contained in section 2(b) of the Act. 15 U.S.C. § 13(b). With regard to sales to purchasers other than BMA, the court found that Certain-Teed had followed company procedures designed to verify the existence of discounts reported by customers. This fact established that the lower prices it offered these customers were made with a good faith belief that they would meet a competitor’s
*41
lower price.
Reserve Supply Corp.,
Summary judgment in favor of Owens-Corning was granted by the district court’s (Alesia, J.) order of 1990. As in the case of CertainTeed, the court assumed that Owens-Corning had offered discriminatory prices to its customers. Also, as in the case of CertainTeed, the court held that Owens-Corning’s discount verification procedures entitled it to the meeting competition defense for sales made to purchasers other than BMA. With regard to sales to BMA, the court found that, before Owens-Corning had offered its discount, BMA had informed it of a comparable discount from CertainTeed, that BMA had threatened Owens-Coming with a loss of sales if that discount were not met, and that Owens-Corning had evaluated that discount against market conditions. The district court held that, under United States Gypsum, these facts demonstrated that Owens-Corning was entitled to the section 2(b) defense as a matter of law.
2. Applicable standards
Section 2(a) of the Robinson-Pat-man Act, 15 U.S.C. § 13(a), makes it illegal to discriminate in pricе between buyers when an injury to competition is the consequence. Uni
ted States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
That nothing herein contained shall prevent a seller rebutting the prima-facie case thus made by showing that his lower price or the furnishing of services or facilities to any purchaser or purchasers was made in good faith to meet an equally low price of a competitor, or the services or facilities furnished by a competitor.
The burden of establishing the defense falls on Owens-Corning and CertainTeed.
Falls City. Indus., Inc. v. Vanco Beverage, Inc.,
The Supreme Court has held that the section 2(b) defense “at least requires the seller, who has knowingly discriminated in price, to show the existence of facts which would lead a reasonable and prudent person to believe that the granting of a lower price would in fact meet the equally low price of a competitor.”
FTC v. A.E. Staley Mfg. Co.,
“a flexible and pragmatic, not technical or doctrinaire, concept.... Rigid rules and inflexible absolutes are especially inappropriate in dealing with the § 2(b) defense; the facts and circumstances of the particular case, not abstract theories or remote conjectures, should govern its interpretation and application.”
United States Gypsum,
This case is bеfore us after Owens-Corning and CertainTeed prevailed on motions for summary judgment. Our review is therefore governed by the standards of Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. We review de novo a district court’s decision to grant summary judgment.
Doe v. Allied-Signal, Inc.,
Finally, we must remember that courts traditionally have been quite circumspect in permitting a grant of summary judgment when claims of good faith and belief are involved — especially when the moving party has the burden of establishing that fact at trial.
See International Shortstop,
3. Analysis
Reserve contends that neither Owens-Corning nor CertainTeed has made a sufficient factual showing to entitle them to summary judgment on the section 2(b) defense. In evaluating this contention, we must determine whether Owens-Corning and CertainTeed have shown “the existence of facts that would lead a reasonable and prudent person to believe that [their] lower price would meet the equally low price of a competitor” and whether they have demonstrated that their “lower price was a good-faith response to a competitor’s lower price.”
Falls City,
a. Owens-Corning’s good faith
In early April 1979, Bill Lee, a BMA vice-president responsible for purchasing, contacted Charles Hartmann, the manager of Owens-Corning’s Residential Insulation Distribution Marketing Division and the person within Owens-Corning who was responsible for approving pricing for BMA. BMA was a long-time established customer of Owens-Corning and had purchased over $9 million worth of building insulation in 1978. Hartmann had negotiated with BMA and Lee since 1976, and he believed Lee was trustworthy and a person of integrity. Lee also enjoyed respect generally within the building materials industry.
At the time of this conversation, Owens-Corning was selling insulation to BMA at a discount of 13 percent, which had been instituted to counter competition from Johns-Manville. During this conversation, Lee informed Hartmann that he had met with representatives of CertainTeed, and that CertainTeed was interested in selling insulation to BMA. Hartmann testified that he took contemporaneous notes of this conversation, and these notes show that Lee told Hartmann that CertainTeed had offered BMA a discount of 16 percent. An internal Owens-Corning “Sрecial Approval Request” form 5 dated at roughly the same *44 time also reports the 16 percent discount to BMA. R.138; Goodwin Ex. at 5. 6
Owens-Corning had found that its customers quickly reported any price reduction by one manufacturer to their other suppliers in order to obtain similar pricing from those other suppliers. As Owens-Corning points out, other customers reported 16 percent discounts from CertainTeed. R.164, Ex. A. Indeed, Reserve notes in its brief the existence of an alleged 16 percent discount to another customer. Appellant’s Br. at 27 n. 3. Hartmann testified that, after receiving this report from BMA, he evaluated the credibility and reasonableness of the CertainTeed 16 percent discount in light of the price situation and competitive circumstances in the marketplace. He also stated that he looked at internal Owens-Corning Special Approval Request forms which detailed competitive offers in the marketplace. Although, because of the lapse of time, Hartmann could not remember specifically what he “did in this regard,” he was sure that he followed his normal practice of satisfying himself that “the reported competitive situation did in fact, exist,” and that Owens-Coming “was not offering any additional discounts more than necessаry to retain the existing share of the business.” R.135, Hartmann Aff. at 1140; R.164, Hartmann Dep. at 172-74, 187-93. Hartmann also testified that he had further conversations with Lee in which he discussed the CertainTeed offer to determine if Lee’s representations were consistent. During one of these conversations, Lee informed Hartmann that Owens-Corning would lose business unless it met the CertainTeed price.
In light of this reported discount, Owens-Coming increased its discount to BMA from 13 percent to 15 percent on May 25, 1979. This price change was made retroactive to May 1, 1979. On June 20, 1979, Owens-Corning increased its discount a further percentage point, from 15 percent to 16 percent. However, subsequent events revealed that the April report of the CertainTeed discount was erroneous. In fact, CertainTeed did not offer BMA a 16 percent discount on insulation until August 1979.
Although Owens-Corning was mistaken in believing that its 16 percent discount matched a discount provided by CertainTeed, it may still prevail on the section 2(b) defense if it can establish the existence of facts that would lead a reasonable and prudent person to believe that granting a lower price would in fact meet the equally low price of a competitor.
See Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. FTC,
Reserve raises a number of arguments to attempt to rebut Owens-Corning’s showing of good faith. First, it claims that an issue of fact exists as to whether BMA actually ever reported a credible 16 percent discount to Owens-Corning. In support of this argument, it cites (1) deposition testimony by Lee that he had a “policy” not to divulge specific priсes offered by specific vendors; (2) the fact that Owens-Corning did not increase its discount to BMA until May and June 1979; and (3) the fact that Owens-Corning salesman Dexter Goodwin did not refer to the 16 percent CertainTeed discount in an April 1979 report recommending continuing a 13 percent discount Owens-Corning provided BMA to counter competition from Johns-Manyille. However, after examination of the record, we believe that these assertions do not create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the discount was ever reported by BMA.
See Liberty Lobby, 477
U.S. at 248,
Owens-Corning’s lack of haste in lowering its price, standing alone, is, at best, ambiguous. Reserve suggests that the delay demonstrates that Hartmann did not believe Lee and was not worried seriously about losing BMA’s business. Appellant’s Br. at 19. This is conjecture. Other explanations are just as plausible. A seller has the right to study and verification before acting and, indeed, Hartmann’s affidavit and deposition state affirmatively that he did both. In similar vein, the fact that Owens-Corning raised the discount in stages does not place in question seriously the existence of the discount report. At best, it suggests only that Owens-Corning did not want to meet, or did not think it necessary to meet, the full cost of the discount immediately. Finally, the fact that the report of the 16 percent discount of CertainTeed was not mentioned in the April 1979 review of discounts to BMA is not probative, because that document’s purpose was to confirm the existence of continuing competition from Johns-Man-ville at the 13 percent discount level.
Reserve next claims that Owens-Corning cannot establish its good faith because it cannot demonstrate that it was ever threatened with a loss of business if the Certain-Teed 16 percent discount was not matchеd.
See United States Gypsum,
Reserve next argues that Owens-Corning has not demonstrated good faith because it cannot show that it evaluated the discount’s reasonableness in light of market data.
See United States Gypsum,
b. CertainTeed’s good faith
In the spring and summer of 1979, Cer-tainTeed and BMA entered into negotiations to purchase fiberglass insulation products. BMA had not purchased Cer-tainTeed insulation previously, although CertainTeed’s area salesperson, Alex McCaskill, had been attempting to gain BMA’s business for several years. Negotiations took place between high-ranking officials of both companies; Director of Marketing George Hoffman and Marketing Manager for Residential Insulation Robert Mobley represented CertainTeed, and Vice-President Bill Lee negotiated on behalf of BMA. During the course of these negotiations, BMA suggested a discount of 16 percent on all fiberglass insulation products and an additional 2 percent off on two foil-backed products. Except for the additional 2 percent on the foil-backed products, it is undisputed that this discount met exactly the discount that BMA was then receiving from Owens-Corning. Hoffmann also testified that he expected the products on which the additional 2 percent was given would make up a small portion of the product mix.
It is disputed whether during negotiations Lee stated that Owens-Corning was offering BMA a discount equivalent to that which CertainTeed was being asked to meet. Mobley and Hoffmann stated that he did, and an internal CertainTeed doc *47 ument prepared during the negotiation period shows that Lee identified Owens-Corning as the source of a 16 percent discount. Reserve contends that Lee never made this statement. It admits, however, that Lee told CertainTeed during negotiations that the price BMA was seeking was not “overly competitive,” that is, that he “would not let them sell us at a price that was below prices that we had been quoted or prices that we felt and believed strongly were in the marketplace.” R.101 at 14; R.85, Lee Dep. at 44-45.
Mobley and Hoffmann later discussed with each other the BMA offer. They also attested that they compared the offer with the competitive pricing that CertainTeed was offering distribution accounts at that time, although they did not check company pricing records because they were both familiar with that aspect of CertainTeed’s business. Mobley stated that during negotiations they had asked Lee for written confirmation of the discount that BMA was receiving from Owens-Corning, but never followed up on this request because they received the information orally from Lee. CertainTeed accepted BMA’s proposal, with minor exceptions, and, in August 1979, began to sell insulation to it at a 16 percent discount. After the initial sale, Certain-Teed regularly reconfirmed that its pricing to BMA was competitive with other sellers.
We believe that CertainTeed, like Owens-Corning, has shown “the existence of facts which would lead a reasonable and prudent person to believe that the granting of a lower price would in fact meet the equally low price of a competitor.”
Falls City,
Despite this showing, Reserve contends that summary judgment in favor of Cer-tainTeed is inappropriate for several reasons. First, Reserve asserts that a question exists whether Lee informed Certain-Teed that BMA was actually receiving a 16 percent discount in August 1979. It claims that the record does not show clearly that the terms of any discount to BMA were revealed tо CertainTeed, and that Lee’s promise that any CertainTeed price would not be “overly competitive” may have referred to prices present in the market, but not actually available to BMA. Consequently, Reserve argues that it is not settled whether CertainTeed actually believed that it was meeting the price of a competitor when it extended its discount to BMA. Reserve’s characterization of Lee’s statement is strained and conjectural. The clear import of Lee’s statement is that it refers to. prices that BMA was already receiving on insulation or had available to it.
Reserve next contends that CertainTeed is not entitled to summary judgment because it cannot establish adequately that it
*48
was ever threatened with a loss of business if it did not grant BMA a 16 percent discount.
See United States Gypsum,
Ill
THE SHERMAN ACT CLAIM
Reserve also claims that the court erred in granting summary judgment on its claim that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed agreed to fix prices in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, and the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 121V2, para. 261, et seq. 8
1. Holding of the district court
In adjudicating the merits of the price-fixing claims, the district court first determined that Reserve had no direct evidence that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed had colluded to set prices in the insulation market. It then analyzed the circumstantial evidence of collusion that Reserve offered, including the facts that the defendants priced their product in a parallel manner, that they engaged in price discrimination, and that they raised prices when faced with a decrease in demand. The court determined that this evidence was as consistent with behavior in an oligopolistic, but competitive, market as it was with a market influenced by collusion. Concluding that Reserve’s evidence did not tend to exclude the possibility that the defendants’ conduct was as consistent with competition as it was with illegal conduct, the court granted summary judgment to Owens-Corning and CertainTeed on the Sherman Act count.
Reserve Supply Corp.,
2. Guiding principles
“On a claim of concerted price fixing, the antitrust plaintiff must present evidence sufficient to carry its burden of proving that there was such an agreement.”
Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Serv. Corp.,
This case is before us after the district court granted summary judgment against Reserve on its price fixing claim. In order to contest successfully a motion for summary judgment, a nonmoving plaintiff “ ‘must show that-the inference of conspiracy is reasonable in light of the competing inferences of independent action.’ ”
Valley Liquors,
(1) is the plaintiff’s evidence of conspiracy ambiguous, i.e., is it as consistent with the defendants’ permissible independent interests as with an illegal conspiracy; and, if so, (2) is there any evidence that tends to exclude the possibility that the defendants were pursuing these independent interests.
Id.
(quoting
Gibson v. Greater Park City Co.,
3. Analysis
In evaluating Reserve’s price fixing claim, it is helpful to restate a few facts about the fiberglass insulation industry contained in the record. First, this industry is highly concentrated. Between 1979 to 1983, Owens-Corning, CertainTeed, and Johns-Manville contrоlled approximately 85 to 90 percent of the market. The insulation that these vendors sell is essentially identical; it is manufactured in standard sizes and grades. Demand for insulation is tied to factors such as the level of housing starts. Consequently, demand is somewhat inelastic; a decrease in the price of insulation will not necessarily lead to a comparable increase in consumption.
Owens-Corning, CertainTeed, and Johns-Manville priced insulation according to an identical formula. Each manufacturer made available to its sales force a price list which gave a base price for different *50 grades, sizes, and facing of insulation. Apparently, however, no purchaser of insulation ever paid list price for the product. Instead, customers received a standard percentage discount off this price, depending upon the classification into which they fit. In addition, certain customers received additional discounts in order to counter competition from other manufacturers.
a.
Reserve has produced no direct evidence of a price fixing agreement.
9
Instead, it points to a number of circumstantial facts that it argues support an inference that there was a conspiracy to restrain trade in the fiberglass insulation market. Reserve alleges that, during the period relevant to this lawsuit, the fiberglass insulation industry was interdependent. One firm could not maintain higher prices than another without facing a loss in sales.
10
Owens-Corning and CertainTeed essentially concede this point by stating that they could not effectively cut price to increase market share because their rivals would follow suit. While Reserve concedes that this interdependence is not sufficient to prove the existence of an agreement to fix prices, it argues that such an agreement plausibly could exist in this type of industry. It is well-established, however, that “[t]he mere existence of an oligopolistic market structure in which a small group of manufacturers engage in consciously parallel pricing of an identical product does not violate the antitrust laws.”
E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. FTC,
Courts have noted that the Sherman Act prohibits agreements, and they have almost uniformly held, at least in the pricing area, that ... individual pricing decisions (even when each firm rests its own decision upon its belief that competitors will do the same) do not constitute an unlawful agreement under section 1 of the Sherman Act_ That is not be-
cause such pricing is desirable (it is not), but because it is close to impossible to devise a judicially enforceable remedy for “interdependent” pricing. How does one order a firm to set its prices without regard to the likely reactions of its competitors?
Clamp-All Corp. v. Cast Iron Soil Pipe Inst.,
Interdependence is consistent with the existence of a conspiracy but does not itself prove the traditional agreement, It is a necessary condition for inferring any consрiracy from parallelism but is not sufficient to infer a traditional conspiracy. Motivation to enter a conspiracy is never enough to establish a traditional conspiracy_ Ordinarily, ... additional proof of conspiratorial activity is required.
6 Phillip E. Areeda,.Antitrust Law ¶ 1411 (1986) (emphasis in original).
ty
Reserve next identifies actions by Owens-Corning and CertainTeed that it claims were contrary to economic self-interest, absent an agreement to fix prices. First, Reserve alleges that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed engaged in long-term economic price discrimination.
11
It then argues that this fact suggests that the price charged generally was inordinately high and would have been reduced if the market had been competitive.
See Falls City,
As Reserve correctly notes, “[p]er-sistent economic discrimination” might be relevant to whether price fixing exists, Appellant’s .Br. at 34;
see Falls City,
Reserve’s argument that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed gained supracompetitive profits suffers from similar defects. Reserve asserts that Owens-Coming and CertainTeed made “high profits,” and it attempts to establish that these profits were supracompetitive by pointing out, first, that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed made higher profits on fiberglass insulation than they did on other products, and, second, that they met the lower prices offered by small regional competitors when those competitors entered the fiberglass insulation market. Reserve offers no evidence, such as studies on the comparative costs of production or on market conditions, to indicate that these profits were above those available in a competitive market. Likewise, the fact that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed dropped prices to meet the challenge of pricecutting regional competitors does not necessarily indicate that the profits they reaped were above those available in a competitive market. Reserve also contends that these price drops “protected profits in those markets uneffected [sic] by the competition caused by new entry.” Appellant’s Br. at 38. Apparently, Reserve is arguing that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed dropped their prices in these regions as part of an agreement to isolate competition and prevent its spread. However, as Reserve admits, because of the interdependence of the market, one producer cannot maintain higher prices than another without risking a loss of market share.
Id.
at 32. Meeting the discounts of new regional competitors does not suggest necessarily a conspiracy to maintain higher prices in other regions. These actions well could have been independent decisions of Owens-Corning and CertainTeed to cut prices in order to preserve market share.
See Clamp-All Corp.,
c.
Reserve also claims that Owens-Coming and CertainTeed’s parallel price increases during the late 1970s and early 1980s indicate that a price fixing agreement was in place. From late 1979 to 1982, the housing market and, consequently, the demand for fiberglass insulation were depressed. Howevеr, during that period, Owens-Corning and CertainTeed announced a series of parallel price increases in insulation products. Reserve asserts that during this slow period Owens-Corning and Cer-tainTeed followed a strategy of raising prices and decreasing capacity, which made no economic sense without an agreement to raise prices. Instead, contends Reserve, a competitive producer should have maintained lower prices in an attempt to increase sales and revenues. In response, Owens-Corning and CertainTeed first assert that a portion of their price increases were attributable to increased costs. They also assert that the nature of their industry made it irrational to attempt to increase sales by maintaining lower prices, because a lower price would be met by their competitors, leaving no increase in market share and reduced profit levels. Certain-Teed also argues that no evidence exists in the record to show that it reduced production capacity during the economic slowdown.
Reserve’s evidence that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed increased prices during a period of low demand in the early 1980s does not unambiguоusly suggest, given the prevailing market conditions, an agreement to fix prices. Those companies have brought forward evidence that they experienced increased costs during this period. Indeed, Reserve admits that some of these price increases may be attributable to cost increases. Appellant’s Reply Br. at 19 n. 6. Also, we are unpersuaded by Reserve’s argument that the economically rational action for Owens-Corning and CertainTeed during a time of reduced demand necessarily would have been to cut price in order to increase sales. Because the market for insulation was inelastic, a drop in price would not have led to an appreciable increase in industry-wide demand. Therefore, the only new customers which would have been available were those that were currently being served by their competitors.
*53 A firm in a concentrated industry typically has reason to decide (individually) to copy an industry leader. After all, a higher-than-leader’s price might lead a customer to buy elsewhere, while a lower-than-leader’s price might simply lead competitors to match the lower price, reducing profits for all. One does not need an agreement to bring about this kind of follow-the-leader effect in a concentrated industry.
Clamp-All Corp.,
d.
As additional evidence of collusion, Reserve points to ■ Owens-Corning and Cer-tainTeed’s practices of maintaining price lists for products and of announcing price increases' thirty to sixty days before their effective date. Reserve asserts that these lists have no independent value because no buyer in the industry pays list price for insulation. Instead, it claims that the price lists are an easy means for producers to communicate and monitor the price activity of rivals by providing a common starting point for the application of percentage discounts. As a result, “each manufacturer can easily monitor the net prices of its rivals and thereby reduce pricing uncertainty.” Appellant’s Br. at 45. Reserve also contends that, because Owens-Corning generally announсed price increases sixty days in advance, while CertainTeed and Johns-Manville announced around thirty days in advance, these announcements served as a way to negotiate price increases throughout the industry. Owens-Corning and CertainTeed counter by arguing that the use of list prices to monitor pricing would not be possible because the widespread use of discounts in the industry ensures that list prices do not reflect the actual price that a purchaser pays. They also contend that announcing price increases thirty to sixty days in advance serves a legitimate purpose because their customers,- who are mostly rehandlers and contractors, need to be able to inform their customers of price increases or to figure such increases into their bidding.
We agree that the industry practice of maintaining price lists and announcing price increases in advance does not necessarily lead to an inference of price fixing. The fact that a standard product is priced according to a standard formula does not indicate that a conspiracy exists; one manufacturer could have implemented the pricing system, and its competitors could have deсided independently to adopt it. The result would have been permissible “conscious parallelism,” rather than illegal collusion.
See Market Force,
We also believe that the fact that Owens-Corning and CertainTeed informed their customers of price increases in advance hardly enhances Reserve’s case. These advanced announcements did reduce the uncertainty inherent in raising prices by allowing competitors time to decide if they would follow suit. In that way they facilitated the parallel pricing that occurred in the market.
See
6 Phillip E. Areeda,
Antitrust Law
¶ 1425d (1986). However, the record indicates that these announcements served an important purpose in the industry. Many of Owens-Corning’s and CertainTeed’s customers resold insulation to other customers or bid on building contracts well in advance of starting construction and, therefore, required sixty days’ or more advance notice of price increases. Indeed, Reserve’s president testified during his deposition that Reserve required manufacturers to provide at least thirty days’ notice of price increases. R.145, Hamrick Dep. at 132-34, 338-39. Therefore, the practice of announcing price increases is explainable apart from any agreement to fix prices.
See Illinois Corporate Travel,
e.
Reserve points to the fact that several smaller, regional competitors have entered the fiberglass insulation field and suggests that they were attracted to the industry, which had an overcapacity, only by the lure of monopolistic profits prevailing because of the defendants' alleged collusion. The defendants reply by arguing that this hypothesis applies only if the industry has persistent excess capacity; otherwise, the entry could be seen as a bet by the new arrivals that demand would increase. They then claim that at the time of this suit any excess capacity in thе industry was temporary, and not of a type sufficient to support Reserve’s hypothesis. Reserve has made no showing of persistent overcapacity in the insulation market. Its argument is conclusory and, at best, it has demonstrated that new producers entered during a temporary slow market in the early 1980s. Without more, the entry of new competitors is consistent with a competitive market based on the participants’ estimation of prospects for future growth.
4. Summary
“The teaching of
Monsanto
and
Matsu-shita
is that, in order to survive a summary judgment motion, a plaintiff must put forward evidence that tends to exclude the possibility of independent action. A defendant is entitled to summary judgment when it ‘provides a plausible and justifiable alternative interpretation of its conduct that rebuts the alleged conspiracy.’ ”
Market
*55
Force,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. See, infra, note 10.
. In this appeal, Reserve does not challenge the district court's finding of no illegal price discrimination by either CertainTeed or Owens-Corning in sales to customers other than BMA. Appellant’s Br. at 11 n. 1.
.
See Celotex,
. Earl W. Kintner, A Robinson-Patman Primer 187 (1970).
. The district court described the use of a "Special Approval Request” form in the following way:
Owens-Corning’s regular practice required its sales representatives to complete "Special Approval] Requests” ("SARs”) when deciding whether to partially or wholly meet a reported competitive offer. SAR’s document information about the identities of customers and *44 competitors, competitive prices reported by a customer, and prices requested for approval by Owens-Corning sales representatives. If a sales representative recommended meeting a price, the representative forwarded a completed SAR to Owens-Corning’s Toledo headquarters, where RIDMD [Owens-Corning’s Residential Insulation Distribution Marketing Division] personnel could assess the reported competitive offer’s credibility. If necessary, RIDMD sought further information from a customer_ Furthermore, Owens-Corning periodically reverified that competitors continued to offer the prices that Owens-Corning had elected to meet.
Reserve Supply Corp. v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp.,
. Also, Reserve states in its Local Rule 12(f) statement that Lee told Owens-Corning salesperson Dexter Goodwin in April 1979 that Cer-tainTeed was offering a 16 percent discount to BMA. R.158 at f 17.
. Reserve also states that BMA explicitly told Owens-Corning that it would keep its purchases from CertainTeed to a minimum. R.158, Lee Dep. Ex. 6. Consequently, Reserve argues, BMA’s business was secure at Owens-Corning, and it had no reason to drop its discount to meet a possible threat from CertainTeed. This statement hardly creates a genuine issue of triable fact. As a preliminary matter, it is contrary to Reserve’s admissions that (1) purchasers actively disclosed discounts to their suppliers in order to acquire better prices and (2) that Owens-Corning could not maintain a higher price than Johns-Manville or CertainTeed without a loss of business. More importantly, this statement purportedly assuring Owеns-Corning was made at the exact time that Owens-Corning agreed to offer the 16 percent discount, in June 1979, after it had already instituted the 15 percent discount. It therefore has little probative value.
. The parties and the district court apparently assumed that the Illinois state law claim would stand or fall on whether there was an agreement to restrain trade in violation of the Sherman Act. Therefore, for the purposes of this appeal, we shall assume, without deciding, that this is a correct characterization of Illinois law.
. In a footnote in its brief, Reserve suggests that a 1981 discussion at a trade association meeting between a Johns-Manville employee and a counterpart from Owens-Corning shows the existence of a price-fixing agreement. Appellant’s Br. at 43 n. 7. During this conversation a Mr. Walters of Johns-Manville remarked to a Mr. Zinn of Owens-Corning that Johns-Manville foresaw "moderate growth ahead” in the market, and that "they anticipate very little increase” in industry capacity. R.168, Zinn Dep. at 11-15. Mr. Zinn testified that he did not respond with any information about Owens-Corning’s situation or plans.
Id.
We agree with the district court that this single, isolated, and vague statement is insufficient to infer an agreement to fix prices.
Reserve Supply Corp.,
. See 6 Phillip E. Areeda, Antitrust Law If 1411 (1986) (“One firm's actions are intеrdependent with those of another when their utility depends on the other firm’s response. If firm A has any influence on market price, it knows that its price change will affect rivals and that its gain from changing price depends upon rival reactions.”); Richard A. Posner, Antitrust Law: An Economic Perspective 43 (1976) (Firms are "interdependent in their pricing” when "they base their pricing decisions in part on anticipated reactions to them.”).
. " ‘Econpmic’ price discrimination consists in selling a product to different customers at prices that bear different ratios to the marginal costs of sales to those customers, for example, charging the same price to two customers despite the fact that the seller incurs higher costs to serve one than the other, or charging different prices to two customers despite the fact that the seller’s costs of service are the same.”
Falls City Indus., Inc. v. Vaneo Beverage, Inc.,
. As the Eastern District of Pennsylvania noted in
United States
v.
FMC Corp.,
[D]ue to the relative inelasticity of demand for the products a lower price will not increase the size of the total market; no producer can successfully sell at a higher price than its competitors; and if a seller attempts to sell . at a lower price ... its competitors will be given the opportunity to meet its lower price, thereby resulting in uniform prices again, but at a lower level; and without any increase in the original seller’s net share of the market.
