Amazon hands goodwill to eBay with move to shut
Australians out of overseas sites
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[July 19, 2018]
By Byron Kaye and Tom Westbrook
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian home
entertainment installer Paul Boon has relied for years on Amazon.com
Inc's <AMZN.O> U.S. website for cheap wall racks and other parts to keep
his costs down.
But Amazon's recent move to stop Australians from shopping on its
foreign websites, due to a new law that requires it to collect taxes, is
turning away once-loyal customers like Boon.
He's considering a switch to eBay Inc <EBAY.O>, adding that prices for
wall mounts were 40 percent higher on Amazon's Australia site if they
appeared there at all.
"I'll be going somewhere else to get that regular stuff," said Boon by
telephone from the northern city of Brisbane, where he runs his
business.
Amazon's launch of an Australian site in December, followed by last
month's introduction of its Prime service for faster delivery, has been
heralded as a game changer for the country's retail industry. But it has
gotten off to a choppy start.
For customers like Boon, the retail giant has lost years of goodwill by
forcing shoppers onto a local site with a product range roughly one
ninth of the U.S. site and which sells some goods at higher prices.
It has also given online marketplace eBay, Amazon's bigger and more
established rival in Australia, the opportunity to swoop in and capture
that goodwill, building its first automatic tax collection and payment
system and wooing local customers with discounts.
TAXING ISSUES
Australia is the first market where Amazon, the world's second-most
valuable company worth $890 billion, has responded to a sales tax on
internet purchases by shutting out customers based on where they live.
An Amazon spokesman said in an email the company would continue to build
its range of goods and services through its Australian site, and that it
was "thrilled with the reception it has received from Australian
customers" since introducing Amazon Prime.
The Australian government extended its 10 percent goods and services tax
(GST) to all goods bought online from overseas, effective July 1,
requiring online retailers to collect the tax. It was previously
applicable only to overseas purchases over A$1,000 ($745).
Amazon also gave Australians just one month's notice that they would be
shut out of its global network - sales are cut off when an Australian
delivery address is entered - even though the government's plans were
announced a year ago.
Critics say the decision was an excuse to drive traffic to its new local
site and promote its Amazon Prime service.
"I've no doubt that Amazon will be successful here in time, but I don't
believe that this strategy is what's going to catapult them to success,"
said Ryan Murtagh, CEO of Neto, a provider of data and logistics support
for about 3,000 online retailers in Australia.
"I think actually it potentially could damage them in the long term."
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A web page featuring
Amazon's Australian URL is pictured in this photo illustration April
20, 2017. REUTERS/Jason Reed/Illustration/File Photo
Amazon has some 550 million products on its U.S. site including those sold by
Amazon and third-party sellers, according to Boomerang Commerce, an artificial
intelligence technology firm in California. That compares with the 500-600
million offers from third-party sellers on eBay, which includes duplicate
products.
EBAY'S EDGE
Ebay said the decision to build the new tax collection and payment system had
paid off with early figures suggesting Australian shoppers were not swayed by
the new tax.
"It was a big change and it was a global change that needed to be done," said
eBay's local managing director, Tim MacKinnon, adding that the effort was led by
its California headquarters.
"A lot of people worked on it, a lot of different teams. We're really proud that
we hit the July 1 deadline."
He added its decision to offer Australian shoppers a 10 percent discount on its
local, British and U.S. websites for the first week of July had helped generate
business.
"All of our sites have accelerated," said MacKinnon.
While neither Amazon nor eBay provide data on visitors to their sites and
estimating their share of Australia's A$26 billion-a-year online retail market
is difficult, customer dissatisfaction with Amazon Australia is not hard to
find. Its Facebook page is overrun with negative comments.
Amazon's move has also prompted non-Amazon freight forwarders who buy items from
the U.S. store domestically and mail them to Australia to seize new
opportunities. One such firm, New York's Big Apple Buddy, this week set up a new
site for Australian shoppers.
Securities analysts argue, however, that Amazon plays a long game and that given
its track record in dominating online retail in many countries, whatever
missteps it makes can be fixed over time.
"It is highly likely they will get it right in Australia over the longer term,
and prices will be competitive, service will be outstanding, and they will eat
eBay's lunch," Michael Pachter, managing director of equity research at Los
Angeles-based Wedbush Securities, said by email.
(Reporting by Byron Kaye and Tom Westbrook; Additional reporting by Jeffrey
Dastin in San Francisco and Nicholas Ford in Sydney; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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