EBAY25.78, -1.24, -4.6%) raised the amount it charges to run an online store. By raising store fees an average of 6%, eBay was hoping many stores would close up shop, thus engineering a return to a mix of lots of auction listings -- its most profitable product -- and a tiny sliver of items listed for sale in stores, which generate much less revenue for the firm. Currently, there is about four times the number of items listed for sale in stores than in auctions on eBay. The imbalance has hit eBay hard. During the second quarter ending July 19, eBay said its profit dropped 14% from a year earlier. Shares of eBay closed down $1.22, or 4.5%, at $25.78. So far, the storefront rate increase appears to be achieving eBay's aim of shedding ties to independent stores. eBay stores closing by the hundreds |