US online retailer Amazon and tech giant Apple issued statements denying wrongdoing a day after Italy’s main competition regulator announced it had raided their Italian offices looking for evidence of anti-competitive behavior.
Italy’s Authority for Competition and Markets announced it had carried out unannounced raids on the local offices of both Amazon and Apple, as part of a probe into whether the companies engaged in price-fixing for Apple-made products and those from headphone maker Beats.
According to a statement from the regulator, the companies are alleged to have artificially inflated prices on those products while making it more difficult for other retailers to sell the products at lower prices.
On Thursday, July 23, a statement from Amazon denied wrongdoing while stating the company was “fully collaborating” with Italian regulators. Apple’s statement said the company obeyed applicable laws in all countries where it operated, including Italy.
The investigation is one in a series of regulatory threats against the companies in Europe. In June, the European Commission announced it had launched two separate probes into Apple for the rules it applies in its online App Store and with the Apple Pay platform.
Full Content: The Star
Want more news? Subscribe to CPI’s free daily newsletter for more headlines and updates on antitrust developments around the world.