1) If your costs are legitimately less than the competition then charging less is not illegal. If you're taking a loss to gain market share and then upping the price once the competitors go out of business that's a problem.
2) Have you seen gas stations? If setting your price to be the same was illegal there'd be so many convicted people.
3) I don't remember profiteering being illegal. Literally a ton of companies have been recording record profit and certainly people have been complaining but who was fined/imprisoned? Martin Shkreli wasn't convicted of profiteering cause it's not a crime.
Sold after they were practically run out of business by Amazon's pricing.
> Quidsi could now taste its own blood. At one point, Quidsi executives took what they knew about shipping rates, factored in Procter & Gamble’s (PG) wholesale prices, and calculated that Amazon was on track to lose $100 million over three months in the diaper category alone.
You're right it has not been demonstrated. Maybe some governing body should investigate and come to a conclusion about whether Amazon engages in unfair methods of competition such as what is purported by Quidsi.
Is a retailer now obliged to run every single product they sell at a profit? So Costco can't do their chicken deal (which costs them millions and customers love), nobody is allowed loss leaders?
I'm saying: Amazon's diaper thing was the same as Costco's chicken thing. Retailers shouldn't be obliged to run every single product at a profit just in case there is a single product retailer.
I'm saying that no one ever said you shouldn't be allowed to do loss leaders. Predatory pricing is a specific set of actions in a specific context that happen to do with selling products at a loss for a period of time.
e.g. Driving a car is legal, driving the getaway car for a bank robbery is not.
I believe you have a good understanding of the nuances here. But I also believe that the nuances can be used by career hungry folks at the relevant agencies to bring bogus cases against companies almost at will (current case against Meta is an example) and any extra power granted (or taken) is a bad thing.
1) If your costs are legitimately less than the competition then charging less is not illegal. If you're taking a loss to gain market share and then upping the price once the competitors go out of business that's a problem.
2) Have you seen gas stations? If setting your price to be the same was illegal there'd be so many convicted people.
3) I don't remember profiteering being illegal. Literally a ton of companies have been recording record profit and certainly people have been complaining but who was fined/imprisoned? Martin Shkreli wasn't convicted of profiteering cause it's not a crime.