+86 15546883080 (China mainland) +852 6554 1700 (Hong Kong)  [email protected]

New seller terms worldwide after German antitrust action

Amazon made sweeping changes to its suspension policy for third-party sellers this week, following an intervention by Germany’s Federal Cartel Office.

As part of a settlement it reached with German antitrust authorities over its marketplace policies, Amazon said it will now give a 30-day notice to sellers facing suspensions and provide specific reasons to those who are blocked for “alleged legal infringements.” Until now, Amazon could terminate seller accounts at any time “without justification,” according to the agreement announced by The Federal Cartel Office of Germany, reports CNBC.

 The changes will become effective August 16th

Third-party merchants now account for 58% of items sold on Amazon, up from 31% a decade ago, and produce higher margins than Amazon’s retail model.

But with millions of new sellers sourcing products from tons of unvetted manufacturers, counterfeits have flooded the marketplace, leading to a swarm of infringement claims. As Amazon has cracked down on the counterfeit problem by aggressively suspending abusers, many honest sellers have gotten kicked off as well.

Germany’s antitrust office wrote in the agreement that it looked into the suspension problem mainly because “numerous sellers complained about the unsubstantiated and surprising cancellations and resulting loss of turnover.”

More Amazon news

Amazon speeds up same-day delivery

Amazon speeds up same-day delivery

Amazon expands same-day delivery with the new network of mini warehouses Amazon unveiled its latest initiative to speed up delivery times on millions of items for its Prime members. Amazon has quietly built smaller versions of its fulfillment centers...

read more
The Court examines Amazon’s third-party liability

The Court examines Amazon’s third-party liability

Who's responsible for what you buy on Amazon? The court is to decide Federal judges will determine if Amazon holds responsibility for damages caused by goods sold on Amazon Marketplace. According to CNN, the U.S. Third Court of Appeals in Philadelphia is...

read more
China Coronavirus Update

China Coronavirus Update

Chinese companies start to get back to work Monday is the first official day back to work in China after the authorities extended the holidays in attempt to limit the spread of the coronavirus. In some provinces factories gradually start to resume...

read more