Business World

Qualcomm, Inc. ups ante in fight with Apple, sues four Taiwanese suppliers

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LOS ANGELES — Chipmaker Qualcomm, Inc. has escalated its patent battle with Apple, Inc., suing Foxconn and three other Taiwanese manufactur­ers that supply iPhone and iPad components for not paying royalties.

Apple filed a lawsuit against Qualcomm in January, accusing it of overchargi­ng for chips and refusing to pay some $1 billion in rebates — a move that came days after the US government accused the chipmaker of using anticompet­itive tactics to maintain a monopoly over key semiconduc­tors in mobile phones.

Qualcomm has called Apple’s suit baseless and has said the iPhone maker was encouragin­g regulatory attacks on its business.

On Wednesday, Qualcomm said in its complaint that Apple had advised the four contract manufactur­ers to withhold royalty payments and agreed to indemnify them against any damages resulting from the breach of their agreements with Qualcomm.

It did not disclose the sum of the alleged unpaid royalties in the complaint which was filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California. Qualcomm is seeking an order for the suppliers to comply with contractua­l obligation­s as well as damages.

Foxconn, formally known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co and one of Apple’s main suppliers, said it had not yet received documents regarding the lawsuit and declined further comment.

Wistron Corp. also said it had not received the relevant documents. Pegatron Corp. declined to comment, while Compal Electronic­s, Inc. did not offer immediate comment.

Last month, Qualcomm slashed its profit and revenue forecasts for the current quarter, saying it excluded revenue receivable from the four contract manufactur­ers.

Qualcomm, the largest maker of chips used in smartphone­s, said in its filing that Apple is trying to force the company to agree to an “unreasonab­le demand for a below-market direct license.”

Apple reiterated that it had been trying to reach a licensing agreement with Qualcomm for more than five years but the company has refused to negotiate fair terms.

Qualcomm’s shares fell 1% to $55.36 on Wednesday while Apple’s shares slid 3.4% to $150.25.

Shares in the Taiwanese suppliers fell between 0.4% and 2% in early Thursday trade except for Compal which rose 1.5%. —

 ??  ?? A QUALCOMM sign is pictured at one of its many campus buildings in San Diego, California, US April 18.
A QUALCOMM sign is pictured at one of its many campus buildings in San Diego, California, US April 18.

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