One of the biggest corporate dramas of the year played out recently inside a sweltering courtroom in Oregon.
Our colleague Patrick Thomas was there covering the trial.
And, you know, it's a smaller, a little bit of a smaller courtroom.
Not accustomed to these kind of high profile antitrust trials.
And it got really hot in that courtroom.
I mean, it was, everybody's gotta pack together in the back benches.
And it was, yeah, it would get pretty toasty.
The case, the Federal Trade Commission was suing to block a merger between the country's two largest supermarket chains, Kroger and Albertsons.
At a high level, it was about the largest grocery store deal of all time.
And if these two companies combining were going to mean higher food prices for.
Consumers, the deal would have been worth $20 billion and it would have created a mega grocery store operator.
This week, months after the FTC filed its suit, a judge finally ruled on the case.
The federal judge has blocked the merger of grocery giants Kroger and Albertsons.
After a three week hearing.
It's a deal that didn't check out.
And so you would think that the judge's ruling here, no, you cannot push through with this merger, would be the end of the story.
But was it?
Of course not.
Shortly after the judge made this decision, Albertsons decided they were gonna sue Kroeger for billions of dollars.
Welcome to the Journal, our show about money, business and power.