Amazon Lent $1 Billion To Merchants To Boost Sales On Its Marketplace (reuters.com)
An anonymous reader shares a report: Amazon.com Inc has stepped up lending to third-party sellers on its site who are looking to grow their business, a company executive said in an interview on Wednesday. The e-commerce giant has doled out more than $1 billion in small loans to sellers in the past 12 months, compared with more than $1.5 billion it lent from 2011 through 2015, said Peeyush Nahar, vice president for Amazon Marketplace. Sellers have used the money to expand their inventory or discount items on Amazon, he said. Boosting sales for third-party merchants is lucrative for Amazon, which takes a cut of transactions on its site. It also has made a business out of handling more leg work for sellers, too. They pay Amazon to fulfill their orders and boost their placement in search results, without which sellers might struggle to grab shoppers' attention. More than 20,000 small businesses have received a loan from Amazon and more than half of those have taken a second loan from the company, it said.
>> The loan program is invitation-only.
I hope they're staying clear of "red line" regulations...
Amazon's stock price is based on belief in perpetual growth. If they can achieve that by giving money to people to buy their stuff, they probably will.
Amazon has become the company store. Does this make them a monopolistic institution?
At least it is a step up from what Alibaba does. At least they do not implicitly suggest that this money is given to make store owners to buy stuff from themselves.
I don't know about the rest of you, but when I go to Amazon I go to buy from Amazon. If I wanted ebay, I'd go there.
This is exactly what Amazon does.
Their fees are already ridiculously high. $1 fixed plus 15% of sale. They take another 10% of the anemic $4.50 shipping voucher. It's tough to send anything for $4, let alone priority to make the delivery time they demand, lest they refund the buyer no questions asked at your expense. You have no control over shipping regions, blocking fraudulent buyers, limiting quantities, etc. When it sends you a fraudulent buyer, you need $8 of signature confirmation, double insurance, and video footage to have a chance in hell of winning the A-Z claim. If you lose, forget appealing, robots automatically cancel them within the hour.
Should you, despite all of this, have any level of success, Amazon merely steps up its attacks. It gates categories. It enforces pricing scales. It locks your account and demands suppliers and invoices and utility bills and DNA samples so it can squeeze you out. If that doesn't work, it floods your market segment with Chinese scammers who don't have to out up with any of that bullshit.
Amazon is a monster and Americans keep feeding it without a care in the world for what will happen when it inevitably turns on them.
Only after Faux are in front of a firing squad for promoting that TRAITOR Trump into office!!
According to TFA, interests rates are between 6% and 14%. That seems huge. Why would anybody want to borrow at that rate while banks loans are cheaper?
Why do you think so many counterfeit products are sold on Amazon?