The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Amazon faces U.K. investigat­ion over anti-competitiv­e concerns

Watchdog to probe company’s treatment of third-party sellers.

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LONDON — Britain’s competitio­n watchdog is investigat­ing whether Amazon is harming competitio­n and hurting consumers by giving an unfair advantage to merchants that pay for extra services.

The Competitio­n and Markets Authority’s formal investigat­ion said Wednesday that it will look into concerns that the ecommerce giant is abus- ing its dominance to undermine rivals, echoing similar investigat­ions carried out by the European Union’s executive Commission and Germany’s antitrust agency.

Amazon said it will work closely with the CMA during the investigat­ion.

“We believe we’ve always worked hard to help small businesses selling on Amazon to succeed, which is in both their and our best inter- ests,” the company said. “We remain proud of the contin- ued support we provide to businesses of all sizes across the U.K.”

While Amazon supplies some of the products that it sellsonlin­e, many others are from third-party merchants and retailers, and Amazon provides them with essential services to make sales.

The watchdog said it will consider whether Amazon gives an unfair edge to mer- chants using optional ser- vices that cost extra, includ- ing storage, packaging and delivery.

millions of customers in Britain, “it’s right that we carefully investigat­e whether Amazon is using third-party data to give an unfair boost to its own retail business and whether it favors sellers who use its logistics and delivery services — both of which could weaken competitio­n,” the watchdog’s general counsel, Sarah Cardell, said in a prepared statement.

It’s also important to have a competitiv­e market for British merchants selling on Amazon, Cardell said. “Any loss of competitio­n is a loss to consumers and could lead to them paying more for products, being offered lower quality items or having less choice.”

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