Google's proposals to increase competition in online shopping are bearing fruit, Europe's antitrust chief said on Friday, suggesting that the company may be able to avoid further fines.
Alphabet's Google last year offered to allow price-comparison rivals to bid for advertising space at the top of a search page, giving them the chance to compete on equal terms, seeking to appease regulators after the European Commission fined it a record EUR 2.4 billion ($2.8 billion) for favouring its own service.
The US company submitted a second progress report at the end of September and failure to comply with the EU competition enforcer's order could expose it to fines of up to 5 percent of its average daily global turnover.
European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said she saw further improvement since Google's first report in June showed some rivals had benefited from the company's action.
"We had another compliance report ... and we see improvements in numbers but we are still following it very, very closely and have taken no decision yet," Vestager told a briefing on the sidelines of the Globsec Tatra Summit.
Google is offering discounted shopping advertisements to comply with the EU antitrust order, Baird Equity Research wrote in a September 30 note
But some competitors in Britain, France, Germany and the United States say Google's changes do not go far enough, and Vestager said she was aware of such complaints.
"I take a keen interest in what some of the other shopping comparison services say. Having met with a couple of them, of course that raises new questions for us," she said.
© Thomson Reuters 2018
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