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COMPETITION

Engineering firm ABB sees profits rise as expected

Net profits at Swedish-Swiss engineering group ABB jumped 12 percent in the third quarter to $1.03 billion, the company announced on Thursday.

The results were in line with expectations.

The third quarter profit compared with $927 million for the same period last year.

The group set aside $850 million in December for likely costs from US and EU probes into alleged cartel activities, a tax dispute and asset writedowns, it said 10 days ago. But it has now reduced the provisions to $380 million.

The group was fined €33.75 million ($50 million) by the European Commission over anti-competitive practices in the power transformer market.

ABB added that its third-quarter earnings would be hit by an increase in charges incurred by its business in Russia.

“As a result, ABB continues reviewing the situation and assessing its business model in Russia,” it said.

In July, the group posted net profits of $675 million for the second quarter.

The outlook for ABB’s businesses over the rest of 2009 and into 2010 remains uncertain,” said the group.

While all regions continue to need energy-efficient power infrastructure, the group said it was “unclear” when and how soon capital investment by customers will recover from the economic downturn.

“In addition, the volatility of raw material prices and the limited availability of project funding continue to influence the timing of many power and industrial investment decisions, especially among small- to medium-sized companies,” ABB said.

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COMPETITION

Amazon under investigation by Italy’s competition watchdog

Italy's competition authority said on Tuesday it had opened an investigation into Amazon for possible abuse of its dominant position in online commerce and logistics.

Amazon under investigation by Italy's competition watchdog
Did Amazon unfairly profit from its market dominance in Italy? Photo: Philippe Huguen/AFP

The authority said it suspected that the retail giant had been giving preferential exposure to third-party vendors on its platform only if they subscribed to Amazon's logistics service.

READ ALSO: Amazon promises to bring 1,700 new jobs to Italy

“These practices would have allowed Amazon to profit unfairly from its dominant position” in online commerce platforms “in order to significantly curtail competition” on storage and dispatch markets, said the Italian competition authority, Antitrust. These practices would have in the end harmed consumers, it added.

The investigation is likely to last a year, said Antitrust. The authority's agents inspected various Amazon sites on Tuesday, accompanied by members of the financial crime unit.

The Italian case follows probes by authorities in Japan, France, Austria and the EU Commission into practices by Amazon and other tech giants like Google, Apple and Facebook.

In June 2017, the EU Commission hit Google with a fine of €2.42 billion for abuse of its dominant market position, the first such sanction for the company in Europe. 

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