After two decades building affiliate sites, I've learned to spot market disruptions before they become obvious. And right now, we're witnessing what I believe is the most significant arbitrage opportunity in Google Shopping since… well, since Amazon first started advertising there.
Let me walk you through exactly what happened, why it matters, and most importantly—why this creates a massive window for sophisticated comparison shopping affiliates to step back into Google Shopping ads.
Here's the chronological sequence that most people missed:
May 2025: Amazon began reducing their Google Shopping ad spend by 50% in the US—the early warning sign that everyone ignored.
July 21-23, 2025: Amazon executed a complete global withdrawal from Google Shopping ads across 20 international domains. In 48 hours, their impression share dropped from 60% to zero in the US, 55% to zero in the UK, and similar drops across Germany and Japan.
August 25, 2025: Exactly one month later, Amazon resumed Google Shopping campaigns—but only for international markets. The US remains completely dark.
This wasn't a technical glitch or budget issue. This was a calculated market test with precision timing that would make any affiliate marketer jealous.
The Optmyzr study analysing 6,137 advertiser accounts revealed something fascinating—and it's exactly what creates our arbitrage opportunity.
The Volume Trap Reality:
Why? Because Amazon-trained consumers brought Amazon-level expectations that most retailers simply couldn't meet. They wanted rock-bottom prices, next-day delivery, and frictionless returns. When competitors couldn't deliver, conversion values plummeted.
The Category Winners Tell the Story:
This data pattern is crucial—it reveals exactly where the arbitrage opportunity exists.
As someone who's run comparison shopping sites since the early 2000s, I recognise this setup. Here's why larger shopping comparison affiliates are uniquely positioned to capitalise:
Regular retailers are struggling because they can't match Amazon's operational excellence. But comparison shopping affiliates don't need to. Our value proposition has always been different: comprehensive choice and transparent comparison.
When consumers can't find what they want on Amazon (because Amazon isn't advertising it), they're more willing to compare options. That's exactly what we do best.
With 30% lower CPCs across major markets, the economics of Google Shopping ads have fundamentally shifted. Products that were unprofitable to advertise against Amazon's massive budgets are now viable.
Amazon's continued absence from US Google Shopping creates an unprecedented window. For the first time in years, major product categories don't have Amazon dominating the auction.
This isn't just theory—I'm seeing 7-12% CPC decreases in categories where Amazon used to spend heavily.
Based on my experience scaling affiliate operations and observing the current market data, I believe larger comparison shopping affiliates have fundamental advantages that direct retailers lack in this environment.
The Categories Reveal the Pattern:
The Key Insight: These categories saw traffic growth but value decline for direct retailers because they couldn't meet Amazon-trained consumer expectations. Comparison shopping affiliates don't need to compete on Amazon's operational terms—we compete on comprehensive choice and transparent comparison.
When consumers can't find what they want on Amazon (because Amazon isn't advertising it), they become more willing to evaluate alternatives. That's exactly the value proposition comparison shopping has always delivered.
Here's where experience matters. Amazon's month-long test suggests they're measuring incrementality—testing whether Google ads actually drive incremental sales or just expensive traffic they'd get anyway.
My Prediction:
The opportunity isn't just about the current gap—it's about positioning for the new competitive landscape when Amazon returns with more targeted spending.
Amazon's exit triggered substantial conversion volume increases, but retailers couldn't maintain value because they couldn't match Amazon-trained consumer expectations. Electronics thrived because Best Buy and Apple could compete head-to-head with Amazon on price, delivery, and trust. Other categories fell into the volume trap.
For comparison shopping affiliates, this represents a fundamental shift in competitive dynamics. We're built for exactly this scenario—connecting consumers with merchants when the dominant player steps back, without needing to compete on Amazon's operational terms.
The Market Reality: Amazon's strategic withdrawal isn't just creating headaches for direct retailers—it's validating the core value proposition that comparison shopping has always offered. When consumers can't rely on a single dominant marketplace, they need comprehensive comparison and choice.
After 20 years in this business, I've learned that the biggest opportunities come disguised as other people's problems. The question isn't whether this opportunity exists—the data proves it does.
The question is whether the comparison shopping affiliate model can evolve quickly enough to capitalize on what may be the largest market disruption we've seen since Amazon first started dominating Google Shopping auctions.