News

PriceRunner Sues Google For €2.1 Billion, Prepares For Long Fight

Pricerunner Klarna

Swedish price comparison firm PriceRunner said on Monday it is suing Alphabet-owned Google for about 2.1 billion euros ($2.40 billion), the latest firm to take legal action alleging the search giant manipulated search results.

Google in November lost an appeal against a 2.42-billion-euro fine it received in 2017 which found using its own price comparison shopping service gave the company an unfair advantage over smaller European rivals.

“They are still abusing the market to a very high extent and haven’t changed basically anything,” PriceRunner CEO Mikael Lindahl told Reuters in an interview.

PriceRunner, which is in the process of being bought by fintech Klarna, said a lawsuit it filed in Sweden aims to make Google pay compensation for the profit it has lost in the UK since 2008, as well as in Sweden and Denmark since 2013.

A Google spokesperson said the company would defend the lawsuit in court.

“The changes we made to shopping ads back in 2017 are working successfully… PriceRunner chose not to use shopping ads on Google, so may not have seen the same successes that others have,” the Google spokesperson said.

Lindahl said PriceRunner is prepared to fight for many years, has secured tens of millions of euros in external financing, and has steps in place in the event it does not win.

The European Commission’s 2017 fine was the result of a seven-year investigation triggered by scores of complaints that Google distorted internet search results to favour its shopping service, harming both rivals and consumers.

The Commission found that Google had systematically given prominent placement to its own comparison shopping service and demoted rival comparison shopping services in its search results.

Axel Springer’s price comparison shopping service Idealo then sued Google in 2019 for 500 million euros.

Investment firm Creades in November agreed to sell PriceRunner to Swedish payments firm Klarna for 1.06 billion Swedish crowns ($124.36 million).

The deal is expected to close in the first quarter.

($1 = 0.8749 euros)

(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee, European Technology & Telecoms Correspondent, based in Stockholm; editing by Simon Johnson and Jason Neely)

Supantha Mukherjee
Related News
Related sized article featured image

Debbie Weinstein, the company’s UK and Ireland managing director, said Google was ‘engaged actively’ with the Government on the topic of AI.

Anna Wise
Related sized article featured image

The pop-up will be next door to where it plans to open a new large store in spring 2025.

Anna Wise