From a Patent Market for Lemons to a Marketplace for Patents: Benchmarking IP in Its Evolution to Asset Class Status
Chapman Law Review
Volume 18 | Issue 3
Article 7
2015
From a Patent Market for Lemons to a Marketplace
for Patents: Benchmarking IP in Its Evolution to
Asset Class Status
Ian D. McClure
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Recommended Citation
Ian D. McClure, From a Patent Market for Lemons to a Marketplace for Patents: Benchmarking IP in Its Evolution to Asset Class Status, 18
Chap. L. Rev. 759 (2015).
Available at: http://digitalcommons.chapman.edu/chapman-law-review/vol18/iss3/7
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From a Patent Market for Lemons to a
Marketplace for Patents: Benchmarking IP in
Its Evolution to Asset Class Status
Ian D. McClure*
INTRODUCTION
An emphasis on strategic patent management as an
independent business operation has created a sophisticated
patent intermediary and services market over the past ten years,
spurring an influx of patent service firms and tools which make
patent research a more manageable endeavor.1 In that same time
period, intermediaries, brokers, agents, and other non-practicing
entities (NPEs)—patent holding companies without operations
independent of patent monetization—have entered the patent
market in search of high-margin returns. The concurrent timing
of both phenomena is a result of the interrelated upward swing of
IP value and risk.
The value of intangible assets (of which intellectual property
is a component) relative to other corporate assets has ballooned
from 20% to 80% of corporate value since 1975.2 Supporting the
proximate accuracy of this measurement is the incredible
* Ian D. McClure is an experienced corporate, M&A, and intellectual property
transactions attorney and licensing professional. He is a member of the “IAM Strategy
300 – The World’s Leading IP Strategists” (IAM Magazine) and an adjunct faculty
member at Chicago-Kent College of Law. B.A. in Economics from Vanderbilt University
(cum laude), J.D. from Chapman University Fowler School of Law (magna cum laude),
and L.L.M. from DePaul University College of Law. Special thank you to Kelly O’Neil,
J.D. and Masters in Intellectual Property Management and Markets at Chicago-Kent
College of Law, for her helpful research and analysis in support of this article.
1 James Malackowski, The Next Big Thing in Monetizing IP: A Natural Progression
to Exchange-Traded Units, LANDSLIDE, May/June 2011, at 32, 32–37 (summarizing IP
intermediary market development); see also Steve Lohr, Patent Auctions Offer Protections
to Inventors, N.Y. TIMES, Sept. 20, 2009, at B1 (stating that the IP market has
experienced “[a] flurry of new companies and investment groups [looking] to buy, sell,
broker, license and auction patents”).
2 Intangible Asset Market Value, OCEAN TOMO, http://www.oceantomo.com/2011intangible-market-value/ (last visited Oct. 27, 2013) (“Within the last quarter century, the
market value of the S&P 500 companies has deviated greatly from their book value. This
‘value gap’ indicates that physical and financial accountable assets reflected on a
company’s balance sheet comprises less than 20% of the true value of the average firm.
Our further research shows that a significant portion of this intangible value is
represented by patented technology.”).
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increase in patent filings over the same time period.3 Specifically,
four times more patent applications were filed in 2012 than in
1975.4 This has resulted in an increased focus on IP protection,
as is evidenced by the steady rise in patent litigation since 1990,5
capped by an unprecedented 30% increase in patent litigation
filings in 2012 to reach 5000 patent suits filed in a year for the
first time in history.6
The rise in patent litigation filings evidences increased risk
to operating entities. Moreover, infringement damages awards
continue to break records, and 2012 was again a benchmark year
with multiple billion-dollar awards.7 As the demand for
competent patent attorneys to enforce or defend these actions has
increased, the fixed costs of patent litigation remain high.8 These
typically unplanned expenses and potential liabilities do in fact
move the needle for shareholders9 and can result in company
downfall or, more frequently, in restricted patent filings to
account for the cost.10 As a result, this author has pointed out in
3 PATENT TECH. MONITORING TEAM, U.S. PATENT & TRADEMARK OFFICE, U.S.
PATENT STATISTICS CHART CALENDAR YEARS 1963–2013, [hereinafter U.S. PATENT
& TRADEMARK OFFICE] available at http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ido/oeip/taf/us
_stat.pdf (showing that utility patent application filings actually decreased year to year in
1977, 1978, 1979, 1983, 1991, 1996, 2008, and 2009, but continued their overall upward
trajectory nonetheless); see also Robert Sterne & Trevor Chaplick, Why Directors Must
Take Responsibility for Intellectual Property, INTELL. ASSET MGMT. MAG., Feb./Mar. 2005,
at 16, 16–24, available at http://www.skgf.com/uploads/24/doc/Why_Directors_Must_Take
_Responsiblity_PDF.pdf (“The role of IP in certain industry sectors was much less
prominent a decade ago. . . . Today all industry sectors embrace IP.”).
4 U.S. PATENT & TRADEMARK OFFICE, supra note 3.
5 Sterne & Chaplick, supra note 3, at 20.
6 PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP, 2013 PATENT LITIGATION STUDY: BIG CASES
MAKE HEADLINES, WHILE PATENT CASES PROLIFERATE 3 (2013), available at http://pwc.to/
1rMmST6.
7 Id.
8 See AM. INTELLECTUAL PROP. LAW ASS’N, REPORT OF THE ECONOMIC SURVEY 2013,
at 24–27 (2013); U.S. GOV’T ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE, GAO-13-465, INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY: ASSESSING FACTORS THAT AFFECT PATENT INFRINGEMENT LITIGATION COULD
HELP IMPROVE PATENT QUALITY 26 (2013) (commenting on the cost of patent litigation
and providing a helpful aggregation of research).
9 See NAM SANGJUN & NAM CHANGI, THE IMPACT OF PATENT LITIGATION ON
SHAREHOLDER VALUE IN THE IT INDUSTRY 4–5 (2012), available at http://econstor.eu/
bitstream/10419/72514/1/742699536.pdf (“Bhagat, Bizjak and Coles (1998), using an event
study, showed that the wealth effect of patent litigation is negative for defendant firms
and insignificant for plaintiff firms. Lerner (1995) investigated the wealth effect of patent
litigation on biotechnology firms and found a negative effect on stock prices. Bessen and
Meurer (2007) examined the negative impact of a patent lawsuit on shareholder value
using a large sample based on the date of the filing of the lawsuit for US public firms from
1984 to 1999. The results showed that the patent litigation filing announcement has a
negative effect on defendant firms, after controlling certain factors pertaining to firm
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