Even Bratz victory has a price for Mattel
By Aarthi Sivaraman - Analysis
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Mattel Inc seems poised to win a chunk of damages from MGA Entertainment over the Bratz brand, but may pay a price for victory if it gets control of the edgy dolls and sells them as well as its classic Barbie.
Jury deliberations began this week on Mattel's demand that MGA forfeit nearly $2 billion in profits from the Bratz dolls, plus damages, with a verdict possible as early as Friday.
Last month, a jury awarded Mattel rights to all but four of the drawings and models from a former employee that were used to create the best-selling Bratz dolls.
Mattel could win the rights to the dolls once the jury decides, but that could deeply complicate its efforts to boost the Barbie brand, soon marking its 50th year on store shelves.
"Mattel seems clean-cut, all-American, and non-controversial," said Wedbush Morgan Securities analyst Chris White. He referred to Bratz, considered provocative by some parents for their oversized heads, lips and eyes, as an "anti-Barbie."
"I don't know if Bratz fits in with the way they (Mattel) perceive themselves, even if Bratz is successful financially," he said. "Money is not everything."
One possible outcome is that Mattel wins rights to the dolls but MGA retains the Bratz name.
That could be a "lose-lose" situation, unless the two companies seal some sort of a deal to sell the Bratz dolls and split the proceeds, said Stephen Smith, an entertainment and intellectual property lawyer with Greenberg Glusker.
"I think it's more likely ... that they will strike a deal. They will both make a ton of money, but MGA will make much, much less money than it would have otherwise," said Smith, who has worked on two other unrelated cases against MGA.
"What they will do is just put some distance between them," he said. "If they had to, they could create a subsidiary that is not even called Mattel to market and sell Bratz."
MATTEL'S BRATZ TEMPTATION
The entire toy industry has kept close tabs on the case, which will determine the future of the popular doll franchise, whose annual sales top $1 billion, according to MGA.
Mattel won a near-total victory in the first phase, gaining rights to all but four Bratz drawings, which it alleged were done by designer Carter Bryant while he was still under contract to the world's largest toy company.
Shares of Mattel are up nearly 5 percent since its early court win in late May.
The Bratz line has weakened Barbie's foothold in the doll market ever since its 2001 launch. Annual Bratz sales are equivalent to about a sixth of Mattel's 2007 revenue of nearly $6 billion. Continued...



