Takealot Sellers in SA Nailed for Alleged Price Fixing

Takealot Sellers in SA Nailed for Alleged Price Fixing
Photo: https://techcentral.co.za/takealot-revenue-jumps-41-despite-lockdown-restrictions/177625/ 27.01.2023 583

The Competition Commission of South Africa has referred two companies selling items through online retailer Takealot to the Competition Tribunal for prosecution over allegations of collusion and price fixing.

The commission alleges that at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic Medmart Health and BabyBug colluded to fix prices of face masks and divided the market by allocating customers in contravention of the Competition Act.

“It is alleged that in or around December 2020, Medmart and BabyBug entered into an agreement and/or engaged in concerted practice to fix prices and divide markets by allocating suppliers. This is an offence in terms of sections 4(1)(b)(i) and (ii) of the Act,” 

the commission said.

Medmart and BabyBug sell PPE products, including face masks, on Takealot. Competing companies place their products on the platform and, through an algorithm that takes variables such as price and stock availability into account, are then visible to customers on the platform.

For example, a supplier with a cheaper product and available stock will likely have its product more visible to customers who enter the Takealot platform than a supplier with a higher price and less stock, the commission said.

The commission also said it is alleged that on 3 December 2020, during a telephone conversation between representatives of BabyBug and Medmart, the two companies agreed to manipulate their respective prices in such a manner that they would be able to make a profit selling 3-ply disposable face masks on the platform.

The commission alleges that the two companies allocated days to each other on which each company would adjust its respective prices and stock availability accordingly, this would limit competition between themselves. They also allegedly agreed to alternate the days each would price higher than the other. This meant BabyBug and Medmart would each have a day to charge a higher price, followed by a day to charge a lower price. The switching would be at 17h00 each day.

Takealot suspended BabyBug from its platform on 8 December 2022, and Medmart was suspended on 14 June 2021 on suspicion of collusion.

“This type of collusive conduct is harmful to consumers as it deprives them of the benefits which arise from competition, ” 

the competition watchdog said.

The Commission has asked the Tribunal to impose a maximum penalty.

Source: BusinessTech

digital markets  South Africa 

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