Even worse: Migros loses trademark dispute against US giant Target

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Brand dispute lost: Sullen faces at Migros headquarters in Zurich.
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Andreas Güntert

trade newspaper

Coop, Aldi, Lidl – these are generally Migros’ biggest competitors. Plus, of course, the navy of German merchants in southern Germany who sucked up and absorbed the purchasing power of Switzerland.

As of September 2022, Migros also faced a rival doing business thousands of kilometers away from Switzerland: US discount store Target, which is considered the country’s sixth largest retailer with sales of $108 billion. The reason why Migros fights with the big retailer: Small “g”.

Migros, in particular, was disturbed by Target registering the Good & Gather food brand in Switzerland. According to Migros, the logo contains a lowercase letter “g”, which was unusually similar to the lowercase “g” of Migrolino’s new trading format, Gooods. The orange giant then broke through the barricades and demanded that the US giant cancel the trademark of various foods and beverages.

The surprising thing is: Why is there so much fuss over a lowercase “g”? Why attack a rival in Switzerland that is not active and is unlikely to ever be active? Migros says, “An objection was made against the dilution of our G brand.”

Two leaves opposite graphic ellipse

As is usual in such trademark disputes, this dispute became a case of the Swiss Federal Institute for Intellectual Property (IGE). In this case, it was clear that Migros should pay attention to the leaves coming out of the letter “g” as well as the same letter.

Article from “Handelszeitung”

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This article was first published on the paid service of handelszeitung.ch. Blick+ users have exclusive access as part of their subscription. You can find more exciting articles at www.handelszeitung.ch.

This is also because, as the IGE notes, “individual letters are essentially unregistrable because of their vulgarity, lacking any concrete distinctiveness.” The mark derives its distinctiveness solely from the aforementioned graphic design of two leaf-shaped letters almost growing from the letter at the top right.

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A pass to Migros defended the following claim: In the controversial brand, the design of the dominant lowercase letter “g” is also characterized by the leaf element growing practically in the upper right. IGE certainly noticed this smallness, took a closer look at the two plants and saw the distinction: “two leaves and a graphic ellipse”.

The US giant, however, took aim at the increasingly blamed lowercase letter, defending itself by saying Target’s “g” was displayed in a “broken font with spaces” and also had different rounding rates.

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IGE: No risk of confusion

IGE, in its opinion, is biased towards Target from Migros: the character similarity is due only to the similarity of the characters in the lowercase letter “g”; “Otherwise the comparison symbols differ enough.” Or in short: Gooods works with two pages, Good & Gather works with ellipses; This should be enough to distinguish them. Migros’s objection was therefore rejected.

That’s a different story, of course: Since Migros does most of its business in Switzerland, where Target has yet to set foot, the two brands will probably never be able to compete with each other.

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The orange giant acts like a good loser and decides to take the Double-G case to the next higher authority, St. Gallen does not want to allow the appeal to the Federal Administrative Court: “The IGE refused and we took this into account. “We will not proceed based on the decision.”

Source :Blick

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Tim

Tim

I'm Tim David and I work as an author for 24 Instant News, covering the Market section. With a Bachelor's Degree in Journalism, my mission is to provide accurate, timely and insightful news coverage that helps our readers stay informed about the latest trends in the market. My writing style is focused on making complex economic topics easy to understand for everyone.

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