Amazon is being investigated by the FTC for suppossed misleading discounting
Amazon’s discount policy
is being investigated by the Federal Trade Commission following a complaint made by a consumer advocate group.
A source reportedly close to the matter tells Reutersthat the probe, which is part of the FTC’s review of
Amazon’s agreement to purchase Whole Foods, was prompted by Consumer Watchdog.
The consumer
advocate group said it monitored around 1,000 products on Amazon’s website last
month and noticed that around 46 percent of them showed a “reference” price
(the original price before being marked down as part of a sale).
Consumer
Watchdog contends that in 61 percent of products with reference prices,
Amazon’s reference price was higher than the price the product had sold for in
the previous 90 days. In other words, the group claims that Amazon inflated the
reference price during a sale to make it appear as though the discount offered
by the sale was greater than what it regularly sells for.
The FTC has
specific guidelines in place that warn against using a “fictitious” list price
for the purpose of making a sale look like a better bargain than it actually
is.
A
spokesperson for Amazon told the publication that the conclusions reached by
the Consumer Watchdog group are flat out wrong. The spokesperson added that
they validate the reference prices provided by manufacturers, vendors and
sellers against actual prices recently found across Amazon and other retailers.
Amazon
settled a similar complaint with the Competition Bureau in Canada back in
January. The e-commerce giant was fined C$1 million ($756,658.60) as part of
that dispute.
Image courtesy Jaap Arriens, Getty Images
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