The Asian Age

Beware of legal hazards: Qualcomm

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Qualcomm Inc warned on Friday it could lose two large clients if it accepted chipmaker Broadcom Ltd’s revised $ 121 billion buyout offer and said it saw no path to regulatory approval of any deal.

In a filing that followed up on its letter to Broadcom Chief Executive Hock Tan rebutting his latest offer, the San Diego- based company laid out more detail on its reservatio­ns about the deal.

It said two customers who provide more than $ 1 Billion in chip revenue had said they would likely move designs away from Qualcomm if the deal went through, citing a lack of confidence in Broadcom’s ability to continue to lead in technology.

Broadcom, which makes connectivi­ty chips used in products ranging from mobile phones to servers, first approached Qualcomm in November. After its first offer was rejected, Broadcom nominated a slate of directors to replace Qualcomm’s board. Qualcomm shareholde­rs are scheduled to vote on the nomination­s on March 6. With that in mind, the company is seeking to strike a balance between continued resistance­s to Broadcom’s takeover and heeding the calls of shareholde­rs who have urged the company to engage with its rival in case it can clinch an attractive deal.

Qualcomm counts Apple Inc and Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd among its key customers. Other clients include Huawei Technologi­es, LG Electronic­s, Oppo, Sony Corp, Vivo and Xiaomi, all of which make smartphone­s. In rejecting Broadcom’s latest offer, Qualcomm offered to meet its rival to see if they can hammer out their difference­s. Broadcom welcomed the move but said it wanted to meet before Qualcomm’s proposed date on Tuesday, ahead of scheduled meetings with proxy advisory firms.

A date for a meeting between Qualcomm and Broadcom had not been finalised. In the filing, Qualcomm also raised concerns about potential antitrust issues and said Broadcom would damage, if not destroy, its licensing business that is valued at over $ 4 billion.

“Broadcom completely ignores the reality that in the last five years, several large, complex internatio­nal mergers involving multiple regulators have taken over 18 months. And at the moment, there is no ‘ next’ step,” Qualcomm said.

 ??  ?? The Qualcomm headquarte­rs in San Diego.
The Qualcomm headquarte­rs in San Diego.

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