- Legal action brought on behalf of millions of UK consumers
alleges Amazon and Apple struck a secret deal in 2018 that has
unlawfully increased the price of Apple products
- The two companies are colluding, legal action claims, with
Amazon culling its community of independent merchants selling
products by Apple and its headphones brand Beats
- This secret arrangement allegedly helps Apple by reducing
the availability of discounted Apple and Beats devices, keeping
prices high
- In return, Apple gives Amazon preferential wholesale prices
on Apple and Beats products for its own direct-to-customer sales
business
- This anti-competitive pact has hit UK consumers in the
pocket and breaches UK and EU competition laws, according to the
legal action
- The claim, filed at the specialist competition court in
London, seeks redress of at least £500 million for the millions of
UK consumers who bought Apple and Beats products since October
2018
- The deal hatched by these corporations covered several
countries (including the UK) and is the subject of a US class
action lawsuit, infringement decisions by the Italian and Spanish
competition authorities, and ongoing regulatory proceedings in
Germany
Alleged ongoing collusion between Amazon and Apple is revealed
in a new collective action filed today in the UK Competition Appeal
Tribunal, which demands compensation for millions of consumers.
The collective action seeks at least £500m for UK consumers
impacted by a secret deal between the global corporations, which
saw Amazon restricting sales of popular Apple products by
independent merchants on its popular marketplace. In return, Apple
offered Jeff Bezos’s firm preferential wholesale prices on all
Apple and Beats products, which it could sell directly to customers
via its own retail business.
The claim alleges that, by January 2019, almost all independent
merchants of Apple and Beats products disappeared from the Amazon
marketplace as a result of Apple and Amazon’s collusion. This led
to a decrease in the discounts provided to customers by the limited
number of independent merchants remaining, and a significant
increase in the sales of Apple and Beats products at undiscounted
prices.
This deal was struck in October 2018, and its continuing effect
is to keep the prices of Apple and Beats products, including
iPhones, iPads and MacBooks, artificially high for the benefit of
Apple and at the expense of UK consumers. Amazon also benefited, as
the deal enabled it to sell more Apple and Beats products at higher
prices directly to consumers.
Because of the market power enjoyed by the two Tech giants, and
the drastic reduction of discounted offerings on Amazon’s platform,
more than 7 million British customers have paid (and continue to
pay) higher prices for Apple and Beats products when purchasing
them from Amazon. The claim estimates that the compensation owed to
these customers is almost £500 million. The claim also alleges that
a further 29 million British customers have paid higher prices for
Apple and Beats products when purchasing them from other retailers
(e.g., Apple, Curry’s, etc.) either online or in-store, with total
compensation for such customers to be quantified in due course.
The legal action has been filed on behalf of UK consumers by
Professor Christine Riefa, a consumer law expert who teaches at the
University of Reading. Professor Riefa is represented by Hausfeld
& Co LLP.
Who is eligible
Any consumer in the UK who purchased new Apple or Beats products
since October 2018 is an eligible member of the claimant class. In
accordance with Competition Appeal Tribunal Rules, the collective
action is being filed on behalf of all potential claimants. The
claim is brought on an opt-out basis whereby all UK class members
are included by default unless they decide to opt-out. To find out
more information on this claim please visit
www.ukappleamazonclaim.co.uk.
The case against Apple and Amazon
The claim alleges that Apple and Amazon have breached
competition law by entering into and implementing unlawful
anticompetitive agreements on 31 October 2018, which restricted
third parties from reselling Apple and Beats products on Amazon’s
marketplace. As a result of these agreements, customers paid (and
continue to pay) higher prices for Apple and Beats products when
purchasing them from Apple, Amazon or other retailers.
All Apple and Beats electronic products are included within the
claim, including: iPhones; iPads; iMacs; MacBooks; Apple TVs;
HomePods; Apple Watches; iPods; AirPods; EarPods; Beats wired and
wireless headphones and earphones; and ancillary devices such as
chargers, keyboards, mouses etc. Purchases of Apple and Beats
products as part of mobile network operator contracts are not
included.
The claim is assisted by information and economic analysis
contained in a decision dated 16 November 2021 by the Italian
competition authority (Autorità Garante della Concurrenza e del
Mercato), which found that Apple and Amazon had entered into and
implemented unlawful agreements in breach of EU competition law,
and further reference may also be made to the analysis in the
Spanish competition authority’s decision of 18 July 2023, which
made similar findings.
The evidential record resulting from the Italian competition
authority’s decision is a significant source of information about
the unlawful agreements between Apple and Amazon and their
widespread impact on competition not only in the UK but also
several other countries. Whilst the Italian competition authority’s
decision was subsequently overturned on appeal on 1 June 2022, the
appeal succeeded on purely procedural grounds, without any
criticism of the decision’s factual or economic findings. For a
copy of the Italian competition authority’s decision and its
English translation, please visit www.ukappleamazonclaim.co.uk.
About the proposed class representative
Professor Christine Riefa is a Professor of Law at the
University of Reading and an established academic in the field of
consumer protection law and policy. She has an extensive background
in researching and promoting effective consumer law enforcement
within digital markets, including its intersection with competition
law. She serves on the United Nations Working Group on Consumer
Protection in E-Commerce.
Statements
Christine Riefa, the proposed class representative in the
action, said:
“Millions of consumers in the UK enjoy the services and products
of Apple and Amazon. They do not suspect that those companies
collude to make them pay more for their electronics and reduce
their choice. I believe that big businesses like Apple and Amazon
should behave fairly and compete on merits, not by using underhand
tactics.
Each company has an effective stranglehold over its market, and
they are misusing that advantage to shut out competition from
independent merchants – unlawfully lining their wallets at the
expense of consumers. It’s a betrayal of their customers’
loyalty.
At a time when families are under huge financial pressure from
high inflation, mortgage and energy costs, it is more important
than ever for consumers to be treated fairly. I decided to bring
the claim because consumers individually would never have been able
to and the two Tech giants would have continued to line their
pockets with their unlawful behaviours going unchecked.”
Wessen Jazrawi, Partner at legal firm Hausfeld & Co LLP, who
is leading the litigation, said:
“Apple and Amazon have worked together to exclude competitors on
the Amazon platform and to reduce the availability of discounted
products, at their customers’ expense. We look forward to working
with Christine Riefa to return money to those who have lost out and
to making these companies accountable for their unlawful
conduct.”
Further information
Affected consumers, on whose behalf the class action is brought,
will not pay costs or fees to participate in this legal action,
which is being funded by a commercial litigation funder.
The proposed class representative has instructed the law firm
Hausfeld & Co. LLP to represent it in the claim, as well as
barristers Thomas de la Mare KC, Tom Coates (both of Blackstone
Chambers) and David Went (Exchange Chambers). The proposed class
representative is also advised by expert economist Dr Chris Pike
(Fideres Partners LLP).
To learn more about the claim, please visit
www.ukappleamazonclaim.co.uk.
About Hausfeld & Co LLP
Hausfeld is a leading disputes-only law firm specialising in
competition law, with significant expertise in all aspects of
collective redress and group claims, including litigation against
Big Tech and other large corporates. The firm pioneered the Trucks
Cartel litigation in the UK, Germany and the Netherlands and has
acted on some of the most complex damages claims of the last
decade: on the “Interchange Fee” litigation against Visa and
Mastercard; against six financial institutions over their
participation in unlawful price-fixing of the foreign exchange
currency markets; and against Google, Apple, Amazon and Qualcomm in
relation to alleged anti-competitive behaviour in a wide range of
abuse of dominance actions. For more information about Hausfeld’s
collective redress practice, see here.
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Media enquiries Conal Walsh / Andreas Grueter / Victoria
Fell / Will Matthews, Palatine Communications
UKAAclaim@palatine-media.co.uk