National Post (National Edition)

Intel judgment critical for EU antitrust cases

Top EU court to decide if rebates illegal

- FOO YUN CHEE Reuters

BRUSSELS • Europe's top court will rule on Wednesday whether U.S. chipmaker Intel offered illegal rebates to squeeze out rivals in a judgment that could affect EU antitrust regulators' cases against Qualcomm and Alphabet's Google.

The ruling by the Luxembourg-based Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) could also provide more clarity on whether rebates are anti-competitiv­e by nature or whether enforcers need to prove the anticompet­itive effect.

The European Commission in a 2009 decision said that Intel tried to thwart rival Advanced Micro Devices by giving rebates to PC makers Dell, Hewlett Packard, NEC and Lenovo for buying most of their computer chips from the company.

It handed down a 1.06 billion euro (US$1.3 billion) fine, a record that was subsequent­ly eclipsed by the 2.4 billion euro fine levied on Google in June this year.

A lower court upheld the EU competitio­n authority's decision in 2014, but last year an ECJ court adviser backed Intel's arguments.

An adverse ruling for the Commission on Wednesday could result in a radical review of ongoing cases, said Andrew Ward, a partner at Madrid-based law firm Cuatrecasa­s.

“A loss in such a highprofil­e case would be embarrassi­ng (for the regulator),” he said, adding that it might mean that long-establishe­d theories and processes would need to be reassessed.

“Losing against Intel would clearly be a blow to the Commission and a confidence boost for Google, since on the face of it the theory of harm is much more establishe­d in the Intel case.”

Google has come under fire from the EU over its Android smartphone operating system and online search advertisin­g.

U.S. chipmaker Qualcomm, meanwhile, faces EU charges of using anti-competitiv­e methods to squeeze out British phone software maker Icera and of making illegal payments to a major customer for exclusivel­y using its chipsets since 2011.

It would be a rare departure, however, for the ECJ to go against the Commission.

“If the Commission wins, it will be business as usual. They will be even more confident in their agenda,” another lawyer said. A ruling this week by Europe’s top court on Intel rebates for use of its chips could affect other EU antitrust cases.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada