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For many independent merchants who sell their goods on Amazon.com Inc.’s platform, there has long been deep concern that if the e-commerce giant saw a particular product selling well, the company would duplicate it, but at a lower price.

The European Union’s antitrust chief said on Wednesday there may be reason for worry.

Margrethe Vestager, the bloc’s Competition Commissioner, announced the start of an investigation into whether Amazon is unfairly using data collected about third-party sellers to make its own decisions about products to sell – information that would give it a potentially anti-competitive edge.

The announcement keeps Europe at the centre of a debate about how to regulate global technology platforms. Amazon, whose chief executive, Jeff Bezos, is the world’s wealthiest person, has become a particular focus of antitrust scrutiny, as the company’s vast and quickly expanding business dominates online retail and underpins much of the internet through a cloud computing division.

Ms. Vestager, the world’s most aggressive regulator of U.S. technology giants, said that Amazon’s dual position as host of the largest online platform for third-party sellers, as well as a retailer of goods, deserved a closer look from European investigators. Her office has sent a number of questionnaires to market participants to learn more about Amazon’s practices.

“The question here is about the data,” Ms. Vestager said at a news conference Wednesday. She said that she wanted to know whether Amazon used data collected from merchants to make its own calculation about “what is the new big thing, what it is that people want, what kind of offers do they like to receive, what makes them buy things?”

She called the investigation “preliminary,” and noted that a formal inquiry had not been started. European antitrust investigations can take years to complete.

“It is very early days in this antitrust investigation into Amazon’s business practices,” Ms. Vestager said.

Amazon had no immediate comment.

Most of the products sold on Amazon come from third-party sellers who use the platform to find customers. The practise has been mutually beneficial: Merchants get access to Amazon customers they would not otherwise be able to reach, while Amazon is able to offer a wider range of products and to collect a fee from any goods that are sold. Just more than half of the company’s unit sales globally come from third-party sellers.

But in recent years, the relationship has become more fraught. Amazon has expanded the number of goods it produces itself – clothing, bathroom and kitchen essentials, office supplies, electronics and more. And as it becomes more of a merchant, often competing directly with third-party vendors, there is a potential for anti-competitive behavior, Ms. Vestager said.

Amazon, she added, can use sales data about other merchants to improve its offerings.

The investigation fits into a broader argument of Ms. Vestager’s, that the value of data must play a more important role in antitrust enforcement because, in the digital economy, it can be used to block competition unfairly. She had previously investigated Apple Inc.’s acquisition of the music app Shazam over concerns about data, although she eventually approved the deal.

This is not the first time Amazon has been in Ms. Vestager’s sights. Last year, her office ordered Luxembourg to collect €250-million, or about $377.3-million at current exchange rates, in back taxes from the online retail giant.

The European Union has become the world’s most assertive check against the tech industry, penalizing companies including Apple, Facebook Inc., Alphabet Inc.'s Google and the semi-conductor maker Qualcomm Inc. While the approach has been criticized as an unfair attack on American businesses, it is increasingly seen as a possible model by some officials in the United States who want more oversight of the businesses at the centre of the digital economy.

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