- State filed antitrust suit against e-commerce giant Wednesday
- AG Rob Bonta cited pricing agreements with third-party sellers
California sued
State Attorney General
“Amazon coerces merchants into agreements that keep prices artificially high, knowing full-well that they can’t afford to say no,” Bonta said in a statement. The suit, filed in state court in San Francisco, seeks an order blocking Amazon from continuing to engage in anticompetitive behavior and compensation for California consumers.
The suit comes three years after Bloomberg reported that the company’s pricing policies were forcing sellers to raise their prices on competing sites like
Bonta’s suit similarly stressed that merchants risked less prominent placement on Amazon or even removal from the site if they charged less on rivals like Walmart, Target, eBay, and, in some instances, their own websites.
It’s not the first time that Amazon’s policy towards merchants has drawn scrutiny. The California suit is similar to one filed last year by Washington, D.C., Attorney General
“Similar to the D.C. attorney general -- whose complaint was dismissed by the courts -- the California attorney general has it exactly backwards,” Amazon representative Alex Haurek said in a statement Wednesday. “Sellers set their own prices for the products they offer in our store.” Haurek said the relief Bonta was seeking “would force Amazon to feature higher prices to customers, oddly going against core objectives of antitrust law.”
In response to an antitrust price-fixing investigation by the Washington state attorney general, the company agreed to pay a $2.25 million fine in January and shutter a program in which it agreed on pricing with third-party sellers, rather than compete with them. Separately, a group of Amazon customers filed a proposed class-action lawsuit in federal court in Seattle in July, accusing Amazon of violating antitrust laws through agreements with sellers that guaranteed Amazon a minimum margin.
‘Vicious Anticompetitive Cycle’
The Federal Trade Commission, which has both antitrust and consumer protection mandates, has also been investigating Amazon on several fronts. A probe into the e-commerce giant’s retail business, started in 2019 under the Trump administration, has since expanded under Chair
In August, the company accused the FTC of harassing founder Jeff Bezos and Chief Executive Officer Andy Jassy with “unduly burdensome” information requests.
Bonta highlighted Amazon’s market dominance in the California suit, calling the 160 million members of its Prime subscription service “the most lucrative customers online.” The state attorney general noted that half of Amazon’s third-party sellers derive more than 80% of their revenue from the site.
“For hundreds of thousands of third-party sellers, Amazon sales are effectively their entire business -- lose Amazon, and they lose their livelihood,” Bonta said in the suit. As a result, the company was able to dictate terms, leading to “a vicious anticompetitive cycle in which Amazon wins and its third-party sellers, its wholesale suppliers, consumers, and competition lose.”
Jason Boyce, CEO of Avenue7Media, which helps about 100 small businesses sell products online, said the California suit was a welcome development. He said many merchants avoid putting their products on competing sites out of fear of hurting their sales on Amazon, where they do most of their business.
“Amazon’s practices, in my opinion, raise prices across the entire internet,” Boyce said. “It hurts small businesses and hurts consumers. The only one that doesn’t get hurt is Amazon.”
(Updates with comment from Amazon.)
--With assistance from
To contact the reporters on this story:
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Anthony Lin, Peter Blumberg
© 2022 Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
Learn more about Bloomberg Law or Log In to keep reading:
See Breaking News in Context
Bloomberg Law provides trusted coverage of current events enhanced with legal analysis.
Already a subscriber?
Log in to keep reading or access research tools and resources.