Brexit and Amazon FBA – Fulfilment By Amazon
Laurent Christen
Repeat Entrepreneur, Investor, Advisor & Board Member. Founder of Dark Venture, Dark Studio, Embley, Active Rock, Maison du Vélo & Rebel Skin.
Amazon stops all UK transfers the other European logistics hubs
The European Union and the United Kingdom parted ways in January 2021 through the Brexit agreements. The United Kingdom left the single market. The impact of Brexit is real since then for Amazon sellers using FBA (Fulfilment by Amazon) services. Read more about the?impact on VAT here.
A key element of FBA is that Amazon not only takes care of packaging and shipping, but also the distribution of the products within the European Union based on their popularity. In other words, the eCommerce giant moves stock of your products from one distribution center to another distribution center in another country without noticing you. The use case focuses on how many units of a specific product merchants sell in which Prime country. Amazon does not leave semi-empty trucks move around Europe. They will move products to position them the closest to customers.
As an example, if you ship sun screen protection to a distribution center in the Netherlands, the likelihood that sales in Italy or Spain is higher than in the Netherlands. They will move the merchandise to a location in Italy or Spain. By doing so, Amazon fulfils customer orders from a location the closest to customer’s address.
Amazon UK has split from EFN
EFN is Amazon Fulfilment Network. In short, the company headquartered in Seattle will no longer transport goods of British sellers to the European locations. Vice versa, they will not move goods from European distribution centers to the United Kingdom.
Consequences for sellers
The consequences of Brexit are:
Brexit does not have an impact on:
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Minimising the impact of Brexit
The non-exhaustive list here below highlights actions that sellers can take to mitigate the impact for cross-border sales:
Has Amazon made billions thanks to Brexit?
The London Economic published an article early February 2021 claiming that the eCommerce giant is set to earn billions from Brexit (link to the article?here). Based on their research, small UK businesses are shifting to FBA for selling into Europe. They claim that “Amazon will be faster in overcoming distribution obstacles”. Furthermore, “UK businesses are left with little choice” given the logistics, VAT and cost burden that Brexit imposes on them.
I personally believe that the London Economic is right in relation to the mechanics of why more businesses use FBA. However, it is a fact that UK exports dramatically sunk from January 2021 onwards. According to Bloomberg, food and drink exports to Germany, Ireland and Italy fell by more than 80% (article on?Bloomberg.com?22nd March 2021).
Keep up cross-border trade
The current pandemic has boosted online sales. Sellers should continue to serve the UK market. Running a dual track UK-EU is complex but is the way to go. The UK is one of the largest market in the EMEA region. Also, it is one of the most mature one.
Read the Amazon?Brexit Guidance?documentation during a rainy day.
Hope you enjoyed reading. Stay well and safe!
PS: this article was also posted on my website:?https://laurentchristen.com/blog/brexit-and-amazon-fba-fullfilment-by-amazon
Disclaimer: this post does not deal with the additional complexity for sellers in the Republic of Ireland (import fee deposits) or the special of Northern Ireland).