China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chipmakers may face fines for monopoly

Regulator probing possible price fixing by Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron

- By WANG YANFEI and MA SI wangyanfei@chinadaily.com.cn

The top antitrust agency might slap fines on three dominant chipmakers including Samsung because of possible monopolist­ic behavior in the past one or two years, but further action has nothing to do with protecting domestic companies or Sino-US friction on intellectu­al property rights, according to people taking part in the ongoing investigat­ion.

The investigat­ion conducted by the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation focuses on possible price fixing behavior by South Korea’s Samsung, SK Hynix, and US-based Micron in the past one to two years, according to a source who declined to be named as they lacked authority to speak to the media.

The source played down earlier market speculatio­n such as that the regulator was protecting domestic companies or putting pressure on foreign companies to conduct some tech transfer as a bargaining chip in the ongoing Sino-US trade talks.

“The regulator has already had some informatio­n before speaking to chip manufactur­ers in late December as the price surge has aroused the government’s concern, but only launched an official investigat­ion after the report was filed,” the source said. “Further action really depends on concrete clues on pricing behavior, other than some inaccurate guesses.”

There is no specific timetable for further action, and no final decision has been made on issuing fines, the source said.

None of the three companies under investigat­ion responded to immediate inquires.

China Daily reported in December that the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, one of the three top market pricing supervisor­s at the time, paid close attention to the factors surroundin­g a surge in the price of mobile phone storage chips.

The NDRC said the government would pay more attention to future problems that may be caused by “price fixing” in the sector, after the price of storage chips rose at an astonishin­g pace over the past 18 months.

The NDRC’s pricing bureau did not take immediate action to launch an investigat­ion in December, and later combined with the pricing bureau under the Commerce Ministry in the nation’s new top market pricing supervisor.

Xiang Ligang, CEO of telecoms industry website Cctime, said the investigat­ion is meant to ensure fair competitio­n in the memory chip sector, which is now dominated by South Korean and the US companies.

“The price of memory chips, which are widely used in smartphone­s, personal computers and data servers, has been surging for two years. Though the rise has slowed a little bit recently, such a longtime surge is rare, given that the manufactur­ing techniques for DRAM chips have already matured,” Xiang said.

Fan Feifei and Wang Zhuoqiong contribute­d to this story

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