BIRA is suing Amazon for $1.3B, claiming misuse of data and unfair Buy Box manipulation. The case, filed on June 6, 2024, involves thousands of retailers and spans from 2015 to present. Amazon denies wrongdoing.
On June 6, 2024, the British Independent Retailers Association (BIRA) filed a massive $1.3 billion lawsuit against Amazon. BIRA, representing thousands of small retailers, accuses Amazon of illegally using their data to benefit its own sales. This is not Amazon’s first brush with such issues; it recently settled with the UK competition watchdog over similar concerns. However, this lawsuit, filed in the Competition Appeal Tribunal in London, is a significant escalation.
The heart of BIRA’s complaint is Amazon's "Buy Box" system, which decides which retailer’s product appears for the "Buy Now" option. BIRA claims that Amazon manipulates this system to favor its own products. Andrew Goodacre, CEO of BIRA, stated, "Small retailers knew about the large commissions, but not about their trading data being used against them." Retailers pay a 30% commission to Amazon for every sale, making it hard for them to compete.
This lawsuit covers the period from October 2015 to present, aligning with amendments to the UK’s Competition Act. It follows a 2022 probe by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) into Amazon’s practices. Although Amazon reached a settlement with the CMA, this class action allows retailers to seek damages. BIRA’s complaint includes 1,150 pages of evidence, arguing that Amazon's actions hurt innovation and squeezed small businesses out of the market.
Boris Bronfentrinker from Willkie Farr & Gallagher, representing BIRA, emphasized the case’s significance: "This claim will deliver back more than a billion pounds in damages." Amazon, with $33.6 billion in UK revenues in 2023, denies the allegations, claiming their practices are fair. The outcome of this case could reshape the e-commerce landscape, ensuring fair treatment for small retailers. As Bronfentrinker noted, "Retailers were entitled to be treated better and fairly by Amazon."
Is Amazon unfairly using its market power against small retailers?
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