Amazon punished its own sellers to limit Walmart's reach, FTC says
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[November 03, 2023] By
Siddharth Cavale and Arriana McLymore
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc punished its own sellers to limit
Walmart's reach as Walmart got into e-commerce, according to the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC).
In addition to making $1 billion by using a secret algorithm called
"Project Nessie" to push up the prices that U.S. households pay, Amazon
may have also succeeded in curbing Walmart's ambitions.
In 2014, the arrival of Jet.com triggered fear at Amazon that Jet.com
would be able to offer shoppers lower prices online, the FTC said on
Thursday, kick-starting Amazon's strategy of removing sellers’ offers
from the Buy Box if shoppers could find the same products at lower
prices on Jet.com. The Buy Box is the button that allows shoppers to
make a purchase directly from a seller.
Walmart acquired Jet.com in 2016.
"Given Amazon's size and a scale, their quantitative analytical might,
and particularly, against the background that they had not made a profit
on (Amazon.com) for the first 20 years, it's not surprising that they
would resort to such tactics against competitors," retail consultant
Burt Flickinger said.
Like Amazon, Walmart operates a third-party online marketplace, with
merchandise from thousands of independent sellers. On Amazon, millions
of independent merchants currently sell goods its marketplace. Both
Walmart and Amazon collect fees and commissions from the merchants on
their platforms.
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A Walmart store is seen in Encinitas, California April 13, 2016.
REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo/File Photo
By not collecting seller commissions, Jet.com could offer prices
that were 10% to 15% lower than what Amazon advertised, the FTC said
in a less-redacted version of a previous complaint against Amazon.
This, Amazon realized, could result in sellers passing on those
savings to customers, the FTC said.
To hamstring Jet.com, Amazon removed some third-party sellers'
offers from its Buy Box. The complaint cites one Amazon seller who
adopted a policy of making "absolutely sure that our products are
not priced lower on Walmart than they are on Amazon" because of
pressure from Amazon.
Amazon also deployed what the FTC described as anti-competitive
algorithms against Jet.com's most popular products leading to Jet
revising its strategy to match the lowest prices elsewhere, the FTC
said.
Amazon spokesperson Tim Doyle said the FTC "grossly
mischaracterizes" the pricing tool and the company stopped using it
several years ago.
Walmart shut down Jet in 2020 and incorporated it into its wider
e-commerce business.
Walmart declined to comment as it was not part of the FTC
litigation, a spokesperson said.
(Reporting by Siddharth Cavale and Arriana McLymore in New York;
Editing by Vanessa O'Connell and Lisa Shumaker)
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