Amazon Seeks Divorce, $750M from Toys R Us 121
theodp writes "Responding to a Toys R Us lawsuit accusing Amazon of breaching exclusivity provisions of its $50M-a- year tenancy agreement, Amazon has countersued the giant toy retailer, asking the Court to terminate its Toysrus.com partnership and award it damages of more than $750M, arguing that Toysrus.com's failure to effectively choose top toys and baby products and to keep products in stock leaves Amazon with no other choice but to enable more sellers to sell these products."
Why can't they learn to play nice and share? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why can't they learn to play nice and share? (Score:5, Funny)
Somebody's going to have to sit in the time-out chair.
divorce.. (Score:5, Insightful)
how much does amazon claim it lost because of this partnership though? $750 M sounds a bit too high to me, even for this "exclusivity" partnership..
Re:divorce.. (Score:5, Insightful)
The fact that a party doesn't respect his piece of the contract is no reason to not respect yours. It is a reason to break the contract, but until it's broken, you got to respect it...
Looks like Amazon will have a hard time proving that TRU didn't respect his piece...
Re:divorce.. (Score:2)
amazon's about to get waxed.
Re:divorce.. (Score:2, Insightful)
-If
Re:divorce.. (Score:1)
+5 funny.
You know, I used to think the same thing. (Score:2)
Then, after reading three seperate books on the subject, and getting three contradicting answers as to what needed to be done (with filing fees attached to each attempt.), I just went to a lawyer and paid a fairly reasonable sum to get it taken care of.
I guess if I wanted to sink a week's worth of effort into a DIY attempt, and maybe waste more money than the lawyer wo
No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:5, Informative)
Happy Trails!
Erick
Re:No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the big picture. It's nice to see a market that isn't so dominated by monopolies (yet: Wal-Mart is scary) acting in jerky but understandable ways.
Re:No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:2)
Re:No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:5, Interesting)
I somewhat disagree, amazons anticompetitive behavior is great for the consumer. I was searching for a movie (Waking Life) and due to a deal with borders, I was able to reserve a copy of the movie at any of the local borders stores (with addresses listed, along with how far away it is).
These kind of features are what makes amazon successful, sure we'd be better off with an open system so prices stay competitive, but until someone (pricewatch? pricegrabber? froogle?) steps up and opens up a system that actually has the whole process bundled in one easy to use page, don't expect amazon to stop dominating any time soon.
Re:No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:2, Informative)
Do a tiny bit of research on Toys R Us stock price over the last 5 years. Yes, it went up during the dot com days and then fell back down, but other than that it has been remarkably steady. Clearly, it is no 'sinking ship.' Actually, it is the best brand in toy retailing and the ca
Re:No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:5, Informative)
I don't know of a single brick and mortar TRU location nearby any more.
Re:No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:1, Informative)
It was a restructuring deal that was going on at the time but i honestly never saw it come to fruition. In a shopping district close to me they had all 3 stores located within a 5 mile radius of each other. Both ToysRU and KidsRU closed down and boarded up. But BabiesRU is still selling the baby goods and n
Objection. Irrelevant. (Score:2)
Re:Objection. Irrelevant. (Score:2)
Re:No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:2, Informative)
Why in the world would Amazon purposely get rid of friends when facing the prospect of going head to head with Wal-Mart online. If I were Amazon I'd wanna be making deals with all kinds of brick & mortar retailers.
Re:No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No fun being on a sinking ship (Score:2)
I don't care if there are scanners located throughout the store. I want to know how much something costs when I look at it.
Since when does exclusive not mean exclusive? (Score:5, Insightful)
A deal is a deal - at least it used to be back when we knew the definition of "is."
Re:Since when does exclusive not mean exclusive? (Score:5, Informative)
Exclusivity is only part of the issue (Score:4, Insightful)
Since I haven't seen the contract, I don't know for sure, but this is what it is sounding like.
Re:Exclusivity is only part of the issue (Score:3, Interesting)
It's no secret that hot toys sell out at Xmas.
Toys'R'Us (bricks) maintained one of the highest in-stock percentages through the season. In contrast, Walmart was out of up to 25% of key items, iirc.
Sometimes you can't even choose to maintain higher inventories--suppliers have none to give.
I'd like to see the contract (if some has a link to it, pls post it). But I'm skeptical when someone countersues after breaking a contract and their basis is most simply
Re:Exclusivity is only part of the issue (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't sign a contract for which you can't meet your obligations. It doesn't matter WHY you are failing to meet your obligations if you guarantee in a contract that says you are.
If I take money from you and I contractualy guarantee you I will always have Furbies, I better meet that promise.
Again, this depends on the language of the contract. As sympathetic as your argument may seem, it is irrelevent if Toys-R-Us didn't meet its obligations.
Re:Exclusivity is only part of the issue (Score:1)
That said, I doubt that a X% in stock is in the contract, since that can be out of Toys'R'Us's control.
Re:Exclusivity is only part of the issue (Score:1)
Now, does that or should that make it easier for Amazon to win? Beats me. It's just something to consider.
Kierthos
Re:Exclusivity is only part of the issue (Score:1)
Toysrus.com sells merchandise to the public via the Internet at www.toysrus.com, www.babiesrus.com, www.imaginarium.com, www.sportsrus.com, and www.personalizedbyrus.com. We opened our on-line doors to the public in 1998. In order to provide better customer service and order fulfillment, we entered into a strategic alliance with Amazon.com, Inc. and launched a co-branded toy store in 2
Re:Since when does exclusive not mean exclusive? (Score:4, Interesting)
The first question is whether Toys-R-Us violated any contract terms by it's behavior such as not having toys in stock or whatever. If so, Amazon may have a good position.
Even without a direct contract violation, the courts have a concept of "best efforts" which might apply. To my knowledge, the concept of best efforts was first used in a Lucy Lady Duff-Gordon case where the exclusive US licensee was required to use it's best efforts to make profits. Since Toys-R-Us had an exclusive right to sell toys on Amazon, maybe the same doctrine would apply.
Re:Since when does exclusive not mean exclusive? (Score:1)
However, it's also true that Toys'R'Us probably would rather sell more toys than fewer. They probably tried their "best." And selling more toys is not necessarily good business if you have to take too much inventory risk to do it, anyway.
It doesn't have to be the best qualified person's best efforts. Just theirs, even if they are not the most qualified. It's kind of like the right to counsel in that respect.
Anyone wanna bet (Score:5, Interesting)
Hell, with the $3.6 BILLION Target's getting for marshall Fields, I wouldn't be surprised if Target bought Amazon.
Re:Anyone wanna bet (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's the thing though, Target can't keep toys in stock either, nor can Wal-Mart. No single vendor can. Amazon had every reason to realize this up front. Amazon can't keep all of its own product in stock. The issue is that Amazon was payed for an exclusive relationship, which has nothing to do with keeping things in stock for Amazon's benefit. Amazon's benefit is in receiving the $50 mil a year without having to sell a damned thing from Toys (the symbol formerly knows as "R") Us.
Amazon has decided that it was a bad deal after the fact, they've learned the perils of vendor lock in, but they want to keep the money anyway and break the deal to deal with it, what's more, when their vendor objects to this they ask for even more money for "compensation" for themselves having violated the contract.
Having made a bad deal is not grounds for breaking a contract. Thousands of companies have been forced into bankruptcy by the courts enforcing bad deals. It happens to building contractors all the time. You submitted the bid Sparky. Now you have to live up to it. It isn't the contractee's fault that you cut your margins unrealisticly.
SCO obviously has enough legal crack to share.
BAD Amazon. No cassava meal donut.
KFG
Re:Anyone wanna bet (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Anyone wanna bet (Score:1)
I'll give Amazon this though, they do seem to know how to run a store. I've ordered a number of back ordered items from them, and even a couple of "front ordered" items, and they properly tell me up front that the item is not currently in stock, when I might expect it if they know, and that they don't know if they don't.
I wish they were a hair less legally repulsive.
KFG
Re:Anyone wanna bet (Score:1)
I had a few friends that took good paying temp jobs picking and packing toys for them, and then (remember, 1999) put "eCommerce experience" on their resume.
--H
Re:Anyone wanna bet (Score:1)
- Protecting language from idiots since 1984
From dictionary.com:
payed v. A past tense and a past participle of pay.
KFG
Re:Anyone wanna bet (Score:3, Interesting)
Looks like someone is not getting the concept of an online store at Toysrus.
Re:Anyone wanna bet (Score:4, Interesting)
Given Amazon's market capitalization of $20.98 Billion, I think that's a pretty silly idea. Target, for comparison, has a market cap of $40.60 Billion. It's kind of amusing, though, to see Target's P/E of 21.15 compared with Amazon's P/E of 143.49.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=TGT,AMZN&d=s [yahoo.com]
Re:Anyone wanna bet (Score:2)
Also, that $3.6 billion for Marshall Fields is cash. For fifty+ profitable brick-and-mortar stores. Target didn't jettison MF because they were losing money on the chain; they sold it because they weren't making money as fast as th
Exclusivity Deals (Score:4, Funny)
Excite Dealmakers:
"E-Trade: You are our exclusive provider of finanical information, we'll brand the finance section with E-Trade logos, you'll provide content, blah blah"
"Ameritrade: You are our exclusive provider of 'personal' financial information (sorry E-Trade but 'personal finance' is different that 'finance'). we'll brand the section with Ameritrade logos, you'll provide content, blah blah"
Excite must have been using their Bill Clinton dictionary, "It depends on what your definition of exclusive is"
Re:Exclusivity Deals (Score:1)
Not sure who to root for (Score:5, Interesting)
If Amazon's charges are true, then ToysRUs.com can't seem to operate ANYTHING. Back in 99/2000 (or 2000/2001?) they failed miserably at xmas two years consecutively. Both times relying on rather crappy ColdFusion (I had a friend with inside contacts to the web dev team at that time, and they just did not know how to scale a site - relying on CF wasn't a big help either).
So, they get rid of their net headaches, and can focus just on the business of management and fulfillment, and couldn't seem to do that right either (again, if Amaazon's charges are true).
Who do you root for here?
Re:Not sure who to root for (Score:2, Interesting)
-Andrew...
Re:Not sure who to root for (Score:2, Informative)
You may have 'a friend with inside contacts', but I was the Team Lead who wrote much of the TRU website. The CF code base was cutting edge;
Re:Not sure who to root for (Score:2)
Warehousing issues
Tomorrows Headline (Score:5, Funny)
Sources say the wedding was a 4 and a half star event, See all 146 customer reviews.
Hollywood insiders criticize the move, saying that the couple is "SOOOO 90's."
Who gets custody? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Who gets custody? (Score:2)
I thought it was gonna be... (Score:5, Funny)
Obligatory Family Guy quote: (Score:1, Funny)
Amazon dug their own hole (Score:3, Interesting)
This should be a lesson to all startups not to make a pact with the devil just to increase your profile.
Re:Amazon dug their own hole (Score:5, Insightful)
I know personally that the selection at Toys R Us is lacking at holiday time (last 2 years), this 'divorce' doesn't surpise me in any way.
Actually...yes it should (Score:2, Insightful)
I would say that it should indeed. Things run out of stock and not every product offered will fly off of the shelf. Therefore, to disolve the contract there needs to be meaningful criteria set out in the contract to do this. Cummon, its not like we are talking about Garage Toys Inc and Joe Webshingle Co! These are huge companies with lots o cash tied up in this agreement. Amazon can't just arbitrarily say "I don't like the job you are doing,
NOO! (Score:2, Funny)
Curses! This could be terrible! (Score:4, Insightful)
erm... I mean, if Toys R Us wins, then it could mean that Amazon will keep running out of stuff, and thre will be no option for the toy buying public but to go to one of the many other online retailers
No. Sorry... Why do I care?
The only one who profits from this... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The only one who profits from this... (Score:2)
Really, though... what more do you need?
With toys like the Nimbus 2000... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:With toys like the Nimbus 2000... (Score:2, Informative)
This reminds me.... (Score:1, Funny)
Toys-R-Us (Score:5, Funny)
I guess that's just how they choose to do business.
750m? (Score:2)
Dot-Com Divorce is *so* y2k (Score:2, Funny)
It looks like we're back to the era of Internet company shenanigans [satirewire.com].
WTF? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:WTF? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:WTF? (Score:2)
Re:WTF? (Score:2)
Re:WTF? (Score:1)
The truth continues... (Score:4, Insightful)
Think of the corporate landscape as an enormous singles bar, with an all-night wedding chapel on one side and an all-night divorce lawyer on the other. Companies frequently get together, pop on over to the wedding chapel to start a harmonious relationship, then after they've tried making it work for a while they pop on over to the divorce lawyer because they had no idea what a gold-digging tramp/slut/cheapskate/moron the other one was. Then they go back into the singles bar to cruise for another sugar-incorporated.
Lather, rinse, repeat. Now, if only on the honeymoon they didn't screw their customers...
Idea (Score:4, Interesting)
caption should read... (Score:1)
Smell that? Smells like shyster. (Score:2)
Amazon is the SCO of retail.
Amazon is the Wal-Mart of the future.
Re:Well, actually... (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Well, actually... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Well, actually... (Score:1, Funny)
a. On the edge of being funny
or:
b. Stupid
Please let me know.
Re:Well, actually... (Score:1)
There are several ways of running capitalism. I'm not sure any way survives many centuries without major catastrophes, but the one used in the US will definately be the best help to bring down itself. Violently.
If you have a look at Japan for instance, another country with widely implemented capitalism, suing isn't often even an option, they solve things in decent ways.
I'm just laying back watching the US break down, even tho I might have to wait another decade or so. What, to s
Re:Well, actually... (Score:2)
Amazon's response is that they had no choice but to violate their exclusivity agreement because of their partner's supposed inability to keep the items in stock, (and it is implied that their buyers
Wow (Score:1)
Re:What is this? (Score:4, Funny)
Think geek has a great selection but when I need the latest barbi... Xbox game I want toys R us to be there.
Re:What is this? (Score:1)
*cough*
Re:What is this? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:What is this? (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, since that's the only time I've ordered from Amazon, I don't really have a dog in this hunt. I will therefore root for chaos!