Khaleej Times

Samsung, Huawei supply majority of own modem chips

- Stephen Nellis

san jose (California) — The two largest smartphone makers in the world supply a majority of their own modem chips to help their devices connect to wireless data networks, according to evidence presented at an antitrust trial for chip supplier Qualcomm.

A trial between the US Federal Trade Commission and Qualcomm kicked off in a federal courtroom in California, with the regulators arguing that Qualcomm engaged in anticompet­itive patent licensing practices to preserve a monopoly on modem chips. The case is being closely watched because it may shed light on the likely eventual outcome of the global legal battle between Apple and Qualcomm.

Apple has alleged that Qualcomm engaged in illegal business practices, and Qualcomm in turn has allegged Apple violated its patents, scoring victories in China and Germany last month.

Qualcomm has argued its licensing practices follow long-establishe­d industry norms and that it charges broadly the same licensing rates that it had for many years before it ever started selling chips.

That has become a big market for Qualcomm, which controlled 59.6 per cent of the $15.3 billion market for 4G modem chips in 2017, according to IDC’s Phil Solis, who studies mobile chips for the research firm.

But Bob Van Nest, an attorney representi­ng Qualcomm in the case, also sought to show that Qualcomm is not dominant in the world’s two biggest handset makers. —

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