Jamaica Gleaner

Amazon’s bid to buy iRobot called off amid pushback in Europe

-

AMAZON CALLED off its purchase of robot vacuum maker iRobot on Monday, blaming “undue and disproport­ionate regulatory hurdles” after the European Union (EU) signalled its objection to the deal.

The companies said in a joint statement that they were disappoint­ed but mutually agreed to terminate the acquisitio­n.

The deal faced antitrust scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic, but strongest in Europe, where regulators investigat­ing competitio­n concerns were expected to issue a final decision by February 14.

Amazon announced in 2022 that it would buy iRobot, maker of the circular-shaped Roomba vacuum, for $1.7 billion in cash. But the value of the deal fell 15 per cent after iRobot incurred new debt.

Amazon will pay the Bedford, Massachuse­tts-based company a previously agreed terminatio­n fee of $94 million, iRobot said in a separate announceme­nt, which also disclosed that it would lay off about 31 per cent of its staff and see its CEO depart.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm and top antitrust enforcer, had informed Amazon last year of its “preliminar­y view” that the iRobot acquisitio­n would hurt competitio­n in the industry.

While British antitrust regulators cleared the purchase in June, it also still faced scrutiny in the United States (US) by the Federal Trade Commission.

The European Commission did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment. It had been concerned that Amazon could reduce the visibility of an iRobot competitor’s product or limit access to certain labels, such as ‘Amazon’s choice’, that may attract more shoppers.

The commission said last year that Amazon also might have found ways to raise the costs of iRobot’s rivals to advertise and sell their products on its platform.

David Zapolsky, Amazon’s general counsel, lashed out at regulators and said consumers would lose out on “faster innovation and more competitiv­e prices”.

“Mergers and acquisitio­ns like this help companies like iRobot better compete in the global marketplac­e, particular­ly against companies, and from countries, that aren’t subject to the same regulatory requiremen­ts in fast-moving technology segments like robotics,” he said.

He added that “undue and disproport­ionate regulatory hurdles discourage entreprene­urs, who should be able to see acquisitio­n as one path to success, and that hurts both consumers and competitio­n – the very things that regulators say they’re trying to protect”.

Now that the deal has been called off, iRobot said it would undergo a restructur­ing plan designed to stabilise the company.

As part of those changes, the company will lay off roughly 350 employees.

Colin Angle, iRobot’s chairman and CEO, will also step down. Glen Weinstein, the company’s executive vice-president and chief legal officer, will serve as interim CEO.

Consumer rights groups had voiced concerns about the AmazoniRob­ot deal, saying it would broaden the e-commerce giant’s dominance in the smart-home market.

Amazon has purchased other smart-home companies in the past, including home security camera maker Blink, doorbell camera maker Ring, and the mesh-networking Wi-Fi company Eero.

This is the latest example of a deal involving US companies that fell apart after facing scrutiny from European regulators.

Last year, Adobe abandoned its plan to buy online design company Figma for $20 billion because of EU and British antitrust concerns. Biotech giant Illumina was forced to undo its $7.1-billion purchase of cancer-screening company Grail after losing legal battles with antitrust enforcers in both Europe and the US.

 ?? AP ?? This file photo shows a Roomba 980 vacuum-cleaning robot presented during a presentati­on in Tokyo on Tuesday, September 29, 2015. Amazon on Monday called off its proposed acquisitio­n of iRobot, which was facing antitrust scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic.
AP This file photo shows a Roomba 980 vacuum-cleaning robot presented during a presentati­on in Tokyo on Tuesday, September 29, 2015. Amazon on Monday called off its proposed acquisitio­n of iRobot, which was facing antitrust scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica