It is nearly impossible to think about the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) without thinking about the chaos caused by the non-compete ban it approved last year over vociferous dissent only to have the ban vacated and set aside nationwide by the Northern District of Texas. Curiosity remains about what the impact of the change in administration will have on the FTC’s approach to this issue of paramount importance to employers. But with President Trump’s appointment of Andrew Ferguson to lead the FTC, what follows is some insight on the current state of play and the FTC’s probable mindset.
Where We Were Last Year
As a recap, the FTC’s “Final Rule” announced on April 23, 2024, would have banned nearly all non-compete provisions and provisions functioning as non-competes (in the FTC’s view). That Final Rule, which was set to go into effect on September 4, 2024 (the “Effective Date”), would have impacted not only traditional restrictive covenant agreements with employees and contractors but likely also agreements with employee equity holders as well as claw-back and repayment agreements with employees presented with signing bonuses or training and education opportunities.
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