Categories: eCommerceMarketing

Amazon Haul Offers ‘Crazy Low Prices’ To Counter Temu, Shein

Amazon has said it is “just getting started” with its new Amazon Haul shopping feature that offers products under $20 (£16), as it seeks to compete with the rising popularity of Temu and Shein ahead of the busy Christmas shopping season.

The service, launched currently for US customers as a mobile-only experience, comes amidst the broad popularity achieved by Temu and Shein with their ultra low-cost items usually shipped direct from China.

Similarly, Amazon Haul offers items with prices capped at $20, but with “the majority priced $10 and under” and some as low as $1, along with shipping times of one two two weeks.

The feature is available in an update to Amazon’s mobile app in the US or at www.amazon.com/haul on a mobile browser.

Amazon chief executive Andy Jassy. Image credit: Amazon

‘Crazy low prices’

The “crazy low prices” include a women’s belt for $1.99, touchscreen winter gloves for $3.21 and a pair of kitchen tongs for $4.99, Amazon said.

Users receive discounts for larger orders, with free shipping for orders of $25 or more and shipping of $3.99 on orders under $25.

“Amazon Haul aims to help make shopping for fashion, home, lifestyle, electronics, and other products even more fun, easy, and affordable,” said Amazon worldwide selling partner services vice president Dharmesh Mehta.

Mehta added that it is “early days for this experience” and that Amazon planned to refine it in the coming weeks and months.

Amazon has not yet commented on a possible launch for Haul in the UK or other markets.

In August Amazon reported slower online sales growth that it attributed in large part to low-cost competition.

The company’s online store sales rose 5 percent year-on-year in the second quarter to $55.4bn, down from 7 percent growth in the previous quarter.

Sales pressure

Chief financial officer Brian Olsavsky said at the time that sales were under pressure due to consumers searching for deals along with competition from the likes of Temu and Shein.

“We are seeing cautious consumers,” said Olsavsky. “They are looking for deals.”

Temu and Shein have been criticised for encouraging the consumption of mass-produced goods whose low cost makes them practically disposable, as well as for using international shipping loopholes to undercut competitors around the world.

EU officials have expressed concern about the volume and quality of products flooding the bloc from the two companies, and are reportedly studying possible actions including customs duties on items that fall below the 150 euro (£125) value threshold at which import taxes are currently applied.

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

US Releases Security Advice For AI In Critical Infrastructure

US Department of Homeland Security releases advice for development and deployment of AI in critical…

19 mins ago

Lenovo Beats Estimates, Raises Projections As PC Sales Recover

World's biggest PC maker Lenovo beats sales predictions, raises forecast for 2025 as AI capabilities,…

50 mins ago

China Chip Production Slows Ahead Of New US Sanctions

Chip production slows in China in October ahead of expected export controls, while annual EV…

1 hour ago

Which? Seeks £3bn In Apple iCloud Competition Claim

Apple effectively locked 40 million UK users into iCloud and overcharged them, claims £3bn legal…

2 hours ago

Northvolt Mulls US Bankruptcy Protection – Report

Troubled battery maker Northvolt reportedly considers Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the United States as…

3 days ago

FTC Plans Investigation Into Microsoft Cloud Business – Report

Microsoft's cloud business practices are reportedly facing a potential anti-competitive investigation by the FTC

3 days ago