The Sherman Antitrust Act is a landmark piece of United States federal legislation passed in 1890 that serves as the foundation for modern antitrust laws. It was the first major law designed to combat monopolistic business practices, aiming to preserve a competitive marketplace for the benefit of consumers. The Act's core principles are laid out in two key sections. The first prohibits any contract, combination, or conspiracy in “restraint of trade,” which targets behaviors like price-fixing cartels where competitors collude to set prices. The second section makes it illegal to “monopolize, or attempt to monopolize,” any part of trade or commerce. This doesn't make being a monopoly illegal in itself, but it outlaws the act of using anti-competitive tactics to build or maintain one. In essence, the Sherman Act was designed to prevent powerful corporations, or “trusts,” from strangling their smaller rivals, dominating industries, and ultimately harming the public by charging unfair prices or stifling innovation. Its enforcement has shaped the American corporate landscape for over a century.
Imagine the late 19th century—an era of explosive industrial growth in America, often called the Gilded Age. A few massive corporate empires, known as “trusts,” were seizing control of entire industries. The most famous was John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil, which at its peak controlled over 90% of the oil refining in the U.S. These trusts could crush any competitor and dictate prices at will. Public anger boiled over, leading politicians like Senator John Sherman to champion legislation to break their power. The resulting Sherman Act gave the government a powerful tool to promote fair play.
The law's power comes from two simple but sweeping prohibitions:
For the value investor, the Sherman Act is far more than a history lesson. It's a living force that creates both profound risks and spectacular opportunities.
Value investors are obsessed with finding companies that have a deep and durable competitive advantage, or a “moat.” The wider the moat, the more a company can fend off competitors and earn high, stable profits. Sometimes, a company's moat is so wide that it starts to look like a monopoly. Think of Microsoft in the 1990s or the modern-day dominance of Alphabet Inc. (Google) in search and Meta Platforms in social media. This very dominance is what puts a target on a company's back.
While antitrust action is a risk, it can paradoxically be a massive boon for shareholders. The most legendary example is the 1911 breakup of Standard Oil. The government used the Sherman Act to force the company to dissolve into 34 separate entities. Shareholders of the original trust received shares in all the new “Baby Standards” (which included the forerunners of modern giants like ExxonMobil and Chevron). The result? The sum of the parts proved to be worth far more than the whole. Freed from the constraints of a single massive entity, the individual companies innovated, competed, and flourished. An investor who held on saw their investment multiply many times over. This is the ultimate example of government action acting as a catalyst to unlock shareholder value. When analyzing a modern behemoth, a savvy investor might ask, “If the government forced a breakup, could the individual pieces (like AWS from Amazon, or Instagram from Meta) be worth more on their own?”
The Sherman Antitrust Act is the invisible referee of the capitalist playing field. For investors, it's a double-edged sword. It's the primary risk that threatens to erode the competitive moats of the most dominant—and often most profitable—companies in the world. At the same time, its enforcement can be the very trigger that unlocks immense hidden value by breaking up corporate giants. A deep understanding of its principles is essential for evaluating the long-term risks and potential catalysts embedded in the valuation of any market-leading business.