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EU slaps antitrust charge on Amazon

- By Adam Satariano Adam Satariano is a New York Times writer.

European Union regulators brought antitrust charges against Amazon on Tuesday, saying the online retail giant broke competitio­n laws by unfairly using its size and access to data to harm smaller merchants that rely on the company to reach customers.

The European Commission, the executive branch of the 27nation bloc, said Amazon had abused its dual role as both a store used by scores of vendors and a merchant that sells its own competing goods on the platform. Authoritie­s accused Amazon of harvesting nonpublic data from sellers who use its marketplac­e to spot popular products, then copy and sell them, often at a lower price.

“We must ensure that dual role platforms with market power, such as Amazon, do not distort competitio­n,” Margrethe Vestager, the commission’s vice president for digital issues, said in a statement. “Data on the activity of third party sellers should not be used to the benefit of Amazon when it acts as a competitor to these sellers.”

The case, which had been expected for months, is the latest front in a transAtlan­tic regulatory push against Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google as authoritie­s in the United States and Europe take a more skeptical view of their business practices and dominance of the digital economy. Last month, the U. S. Justice Department brought antitrust charges against Google, and Apple and Facebook are also facing investigat­ions in both Washington and Brussels.

Many in Europe will be watching to see how the Amazon announceme­nt is received by the incoming administra­tion of Presidente­lect Joe Biden, who is expected to pursue policies that limit the industry’s power. The Trump administra­tion has criticized Vestager for aiming at U. S. companies like Apple, even as it initiated its own investigat­ions of the industry.

In the Amazon case, the announceme­nt Tuesday is preliminar­y and just one part of the regulatory process. Amazon now has a chance to respond to the charges. It can take many months, or even years, before a fine and other penalties are announced. The commission also could reach a settlement with Amazon, or the case could be dropped.

The European Commission said it had also started a parallel investigat­ion of Amazon policies around its “buy box,” an important piece of real estate on Amazon’s website that makes it easy for consumers to quickly click to make a purchase.

The commission is studying whether Amazon gives preferenti­al treatment for the buy box to its own products and those of other sellers that pay to use Amazon’s logistics services.

Amazon denied any wrongdoing and said it supported thousands of businesses in Europe.

In Brussels, Amazon has been gearing up for a legal fight. It has hired a team of lawyers and economists, including several who in the past were encouragin­g tougher enforcemen­t against Google and Microsoft.

“We disagree with the preliminar­y assertions of the European Commission and will continue to make every effort to ensure it has an accurate understand­ing of the facts,” the company said in a statement. “No company cares more about small businesses or has done more to support them over the past two decades than Amazon.”

About 2.3 million merchants around the world use Amazon to reach customers, including about 37% that rely on the company as their sole source of income, according to a U. S. congressio­nal report published last month. In the European Union, Amazon has informatio­n on about 800,000 active sellers using its platform, covering more than 1 billion products, according to the European Commission.

Vestager has warned that the biggest companies will only grow stronger without tougher antitrust enforcemen­t and new regulation­s, blocking new companies and innovation­s from emerging.

Next month, the European Commission is expected to unveil one of the world’s most sweeping set of regulation­s of the tech industry. The package of laws could include rules prohibitin­g the selfprefer­encing of products and requiring the biggest companies to share data with smaller rivals.

European authoritie­s spent two years investigat­ing Amazon’s dual role as both a store and seller of its own goods.

Amazon argues that it makes up only a small sliver of the global retail market, and that for many smaller merchants the company is the main gateway to online sales.

Worries about Amazon’s power have only grown during the pandemic, as internet sales have become increasing­ly vital to businesses grappling with lockdowns and lost foot traffic. Since 2015, ecommerce sales in the European Union have nearly doubled to about 720 billon euros, or about $ 850 billion.

Sellers have long raised concerns that if Amazon sees a particular product doing well on its website, the company creates its own version, sells it at a lower price and then gives it better placement on the Amazon website.

The European Commission said those concerns were supported by a review of data on more than 80 million transactio­ns and 100 million products. Vestager said it showed how Amazon used the data from outside sellers to determine what computer accessorie­s, kitchen tools or other products to introduce, as well as where to set prices and how to manage inventory.

The realtime informatio­n that Amazon collects includes order totals, number of visitors to certain products and a merchant’s revenue.

“This is a case about big data,” Vestager said. She said the investigat­ion centered on Amazon’s behavior in France and Germany, where she said Amazon has a “dominant” position in the market.

Critics of Amazon cheered the European decision.

“Amazon, by using its very powerful position on ecommerce markets and its dual role as both retailer and marketplac­e, is making it more difficult for independen­t retailers to compete fairly,” said Agustin Reyna, director of legal and economic affairs at the European Consumer Organizati­on, a group that has been urging regulators to act against Amazon.

 ?? Olivier Hoslet / Pool / AFP / Getty Images ?? Margrethe Vestager, European Commission vice president, outlines the antitrust action.
Olivier Hoslet / Pool / AFP / Getty Images Margrethe Vestager, European Commission vice president, outlines the antitrust action.

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