EU Commission Warns Amazon’s iRobot Acquisition May Crush Competitors

EU Commission Warns Amazon’s iRobot Acquisition May Crush Competitors

The European Commission ⁣(EC) has put Amazon on notice that regulators believe its proposed $1.4 billion acquisition of robot vacuum cleaners (RVCs)‌ iRobot may leave its European competitors in the dust.

EU legislators are worried that purchasing the makers of the popular Roomba vacuum, ⁣which Amazon said it aimed ⁣to do in August, might cause the online retail giant to restrict or discourage the sale‌ of competitive⁣ products on⁤ its European websites.

The commission sent a formal statement of objections to Amazon this week after it opened an investigation in July into⁣ the⁣ potential implications of the deal — originally valued at⁢ $1.7 billion before a ⁣reevaluation dropped the price.

“The⁤ Commission is concerned that Amazon may⁤ restrict competition in the European Economic Area⁢ (EEA)-wide and/or ⁣national markets​ for RVCs by hampering ⁤rival RVC suppliers’ ability to effectively compete,” according to ‌the statement.

Specifically, legislators are concerned that Amazon may have the ability and the incentive to foreclose iRobot’s rivals “by engaging in strategies aimed at preventing rivals from selling RVCs ⁣on Amazon’s online marketplace and/or at degrading their access to it,” the commission stated.

These may include delisting rival products or reducing their visibility ⁣in both paid and nonpaid advertising results displayed in Amazon’s marketplace. The online giant also could limit access to certain site ⁣widgets referring customers to related products from​ competitors.

Amazon may⁢ try to squeeze out rivals because of economic incentives, therefore restricting‌ competition‍ in the market for RVCs,⁢ “leading to higher prices, lower quality, and less innovation for consumers,” the Commission stated.

Cleaning Up the Details

The ⁣objections are ⁢not a sign that the deal is effectively squashed in⁢ Europe, although the ​Commission’s statement did ⁣send shares​ of iRobot tumbling nearly 20 percent after its release. The news⁣ also has come⁤ as a bit of a surprise to ⁣investors, as a report in Reuters published just last week predicted “unconditional support” by EU regulators for the deal.

The US Federal Trade⁤ Commission is still examining ⁣the deal,​ while the⁣ UK antitrust agency has already cleared the deal ⁤unconditionally​ after a ‍preliminary review.

Typically regulators put proposed⁣ buyouts by Big Tech companies of smaller‌ rivals under significant scrutiny over competitor concerns, as consolidation is known to stymie competition.

“It’s rare a tech deal gets away without this level of scrutiny⁣ these days,” noted Lewis Crofts, a​ correspondent for the MLex Market Intelligence news agency, in a comment on X, formerly known‍ as Twitter.

Indeed, formal objections are a way for purchasing companies to understand some ‍of the potential future competitive issues of a deal and to‌ give them a chance to clean up those details before delivering final approval or not.⁤ The ⁤EU​ Commission’s deadline to decide is February 14.

No…

2023-12-03 02:41:02
Link from www.computerworld.com rnrn

Exit mobile version