STOCKHOLM, July 1 (Reuters) - A Swedish court on Wednesday ordered Alphabet's Google (GOOGL.O), opens new tab to pay about $1.5 billion in antitrust damages to PriceRunner, the price comparison business owned by payments platform Klarna (KLAR.N), opens new tab.

The award, ​equivalent to around 14.3 billion Swedish crowns, comes amid growing scrutiny of ​U.S. Big Tech companies in Europe. It is the largest award ⁠by a Swedish court in a competition case, though well below the ​78 billion crowns PriceRunner had sought, including accrued interest.

The damages are, despite the fact ​that PriceRunner has not achieved full success with its action, without a doubt the largest that has been awarded in a Swedish competition case," said Alderman Linda Kullberg, a court ​official.

PriceRunner sued Google in 2022, seeking about €2.1 billion in damages and alleging it manipulated ​search results. Three months earlier, Google had lost an appeal against a €2.42 billion EU antitrust ‌fine ⁠imposed in 2017 over findings that it gave its own shopping comparison service an unfair advantage over smaller European rivals.

A Google spokesperson said the company had made changes to its shopping advertisements since 2017 that were working well and supporting ​jobs and growth ​for comparison shopping ⁠services.

We don't agree with the court's decision, we are reviewing and will consider our legal options," the spokesperson said.

PriceRunner, bought ​by Sweden's Klarna in 2022, sought compensation for profits it ​said it ⁠lost in Britain since 2008, and in Sweden and Denmark since 2013.

While Klarna welcomed the ruling, the award remains subject to appeal. Klarna's legal team was not ⁠immediately available ​for comment.

Alphabet shares were down around 0.4% in ​U.S. premarket trading, while Klarna shares were up about 7.5%.

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