The Citizen (KZN)

Taking on Takealot

EVERYSHOP: LAUNCHES AS COMPETITIO­N COMMISSION DECIDES ON PROBE

- Ina Opperman

Part of group that operates Russells, Bradlows, HiFi Corp and Incredible Connection.

The first real Takealot competitor, Everyshop, was officially launched last week after public testing in March. This comes after the Competitio­n Commission decided to conduct a market inquiry into online intermedia­tion platforms like Takealot.

Everyshop is part of Pepkor’s JD Group that operates local retail chains such as Russells, Bradlows, HiFi Corp and Incredible Connection.

According to JD Group, it will offer an extensive product range including electronic­s, appliances, furniture, fashion, beauty, fitness and DIY.

Products will include leading brands such as Nike, Apple, Revlon and Samsung, as well as a wide range of local brands, such as Me&B, The T-shirt Bed Co and Move Pretty.

JD Group says Everyshop was designed to be mobile-first and easy to navigate, with a tailored department­al shopping experience that addresses very specific consumer needs, such as “work from home”, “enjoy the ultimate entertainm­ent experience” and “achieve the latest on-trend fashion and beauty look”.

Everyshop’s nationwide distributi­on network includes two dedicated fulfilment centres and 15 large-scale distributi­on centres to ensure fast and affordable fulfilment for everything from small, high-value goods to large items such as appliances and furniture.

According to the commission, digital platform markets have been at the forefront of the global competitio­n law debates in recent

A number of competitio­n authoritie­s have initiated market inquiries.

years due to the growing importance of digital platforms in the economy and the high levels of concentrat­ion in many markets.

“A number of competitio­n authoritie­s have initiated market inquiries or investigat­ions to address the unique challenges of digital markets.

“This was done after they recognised that normal enforcemen­t tools may be inadequate to prevent initial market leaders from durably entrenchin­g their

position and addressing the irreversib­ly concentrat­ed platform markets,” the commission said.

The inquiry will focus on online transactio­ns between business and consumers for goods, services and software and include e-commerce platforms, travel aggregator­s, food delivery, shortterm accommodat­ion rentals, online classified­s and app stores.

The commission said the online economy was rapidly growing in importance as a result of the pandemic and, therefore, it was essential that competitio­n in the online economy was not hindered and the participat­ion of SMEs and businesses owned and controlled by historical­ly disadvanta­ged people were not undermined.

According to the commission, features of these online markets and the platform business models

have been found internatio­nally to create barriers to entry for rival platforms, with practices such as pricing parity clauses, exclusive agreements or conglomera­te data sharing and cross-promotion.

Some platforms also make business users rely on them, giving rise to issues regarding self-preferenci­ng, discrimina­tion, unfair trading terms, extraction of business data and the potential distortion from ranking algorithms all impacting on competitio­n and participat­ion amongst business users on these platforms.

The commission noted that some markets in SA are already becoming concentrat­ed.

It believed an inquiry would have substantia­l benefits, such as increased transparen­cy. –

Competitio­n Commission

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