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TechAmazon

Amazon will no longer underwrite loans for sellers in its $140 billion Marketplace business

Jason Del Rey
By
Jason Del Rey
Jason Del Rey
Tech Correspondent
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Jason Del Rey
By
Jason Del Rey
Jason Del Rey
Tech Correspondent
Down Arrow Button Icon
March 7, 2024, 5:14 PM ET
A female Amazon worker sorts customer orders in boxes that are traveling along a conveyor belt.
Amazon sellers accounted for more than 60% of goods sold through the shopping site in the fourth quarter. They’ll now have one fewer option for funding their business.Nathan Stirk—Getty Images

More than a decade after first offering loans to merchants who sell goods through its online marketplaces, the Amazon Lending division will cease underwriting its own loans to merchants, according to an email sent to some sellers that was viewed by Coins2Day. 

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Amazon spokesperson Deniz Sonmez confirmed the news in an email to Coins2Day.

“We regularly evaluate our programs and services, and have made the decision to discontinue term loans underwritten by Amazon for Amazon sellers in the U.S. And U.K.,” the spokesperson said in a statement. “This change will begin to take effect March 6, 2024.”

Sonmez couldn’t immediately comment on any regions where Amazon will continue to underwrite loans.

Amazon Lending will continue to service existing loans for sellers that the company has already underwritten, as well as those that have recently been offered to sellers. But no new loan offers will be made.

The spokesperson added that Amazon will still market financing solutions offered by other “trusted third-party providers with deep experience in lending and servicing financing programs.”

Last year, Business Insider reported that some economists working at Amazon had raised concerns about the level of defaults that the program was exposing Amazon to.

“The increased uncertainty of business repayment ability” by sellers “necessitates higher inspection of our on–balance sheet credit/lending products,” noted the document viewed by Business Insider.

But at the time, an Amazon spokesperson seemed to dismiss the internal concerns saying, “The document in question does not reflect the company’s position on the economy and where it’s headed … This document simply reflects the thoughts of some of our economists.”

Perhaps not.

Amazon had initially pulled back drastically on loan offers during the early days of pandemic, but eventually reversed course.

Amazon began offering loans of thousands of dollars to select U.S.-based sellers back in 2011, providing funds quicker than a typical bank might and automatically deducting repayments from a merchant’s Amazon account. Independent sellers are the invisible secret behind the massive selection on Amazon’s marketplace, accounting for more than 60% of all goods sold on Amazon for the first time ever in the fourth quarter of 2023.

Amazon generated $140 billion in revenue last year from fees it charges sellers for everything from listing products for sale, to handling storage and shipping of orders, to loans. Last week Coins2Day reported that many top Amazon sellers are furious about a new slate of fees that Amazon recently announced, requiring sellers to either start using an additional Amazon warehousing service or pay additional new fees.

Do you have thoughts on this topic or a tip to share? Contact Jason Del Rey at [email protected], [email protected], or  through secure messaging app Signal at  917-655-4267 . You can also message him on LinkedIn or at @delrey onX.

Coins2Day Brainstorm AI returns to San Francisco Dec. 8–9 to convene the smartest people we know—technologists, entrepreneurs, Coins2Day Global 500 executives, investors, policymakers, and the brilliant minds in between—to explore and interrogate the most pressing questions about AI at another pivotal moment. Register here.
About the Author
Jason Del Rey
By Jason Del ReyTech Correspondent
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Jason Del Rey is a technology correspondent at Coins2Day and a co-chair of the Coins2Day Brainstorm Tech and Coins2Day Brainstorm AI conferences.

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