Indian e-sellers file fresh petition against Amazon
A group of more than 2,000 online sellers has filed an antitrust case against Amazon in India, alleging the US company favours some retailers whose online discounts drive independent vendors out of business, a legal filing seen by Reuters showed.
The case presents a new regulatory challenge for Amazon in India, where it has committed $6.5 billion in investment but is battling a complex regulatory environment.
In January, the Competition Commission of India (CCI) had ordered an investigation of Amazon and rival Flipkart, owned by Walmart, over alleged violations of competition law and certain discounting practices, which Amazon is challenging, according to court filings.
In the latest case, the All India Online Vendors Association, members of which sell goods on Amazon and Flipkart, allege Amazon engages in unfair business
practices. Reuters was first to report the case filing on Wednesday.
The group alleges that Amazon India’s wholesale arm buys goods in bulk from manufacturers and sells them at a loss to sellers such as Cloudtail. Such sellers then offer goods on Amazon.in at big discounts.
“This anti-competitive arrangement ... is causing foreclosure of competition by driving independent sellers out of the market,” the group alleged in its August 10 filing at CCI.
Amazon said in a statement it complies with all laws and its
India website is a pure thirdparty marketplace where sellers have discretion to decide product prices. Amazon's statement also said its wholesale unit allows businesses to buy products and anyone can register on it.
A Cloudtail spokeswoman said it was in “compliance with all applicable laws in its operations.” Unlike Indian court cases, filings and details of cases reviewed by the CCI are not made public. In the coming weeks, the CCI will review the case and could decide to launch a wider investigation or dismiss it.