Los Angeles Times

Feds support Qualcomm’s appeal

U.S. department­s urge district judge to hold off aggressive remedy in antitrust ruling against chipmaker.

- By Susan Decker and Edvard Pettersson Decker and Pettersson write for Bloomberg.

The Trump administra­tion urged a federal appeals court to put on hold an order that would force Qualcomm Inc. to change how it licenses its patents, saying the case “threatens competitio­n, innovation, and national security.”

The filing Tuesday with the U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco puts the administra­tion on the opposite side of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, an independen­t government agency that filed the antitrust lawsuit against the chipmaker.

The Justice Department said Qualcomm will probably win its appeal because the judge who found the company’s license practices were anti-competitiv­e ignored establishe­d antitrust principles and imposed an overly broad remedy. U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose refused to put her own May 21 ruling on hold while Qualcomm appeals.

Qualcomm declined to comment on the filing. Its stock rose as much as 5% in after-hours trading.

Koh’s ruling, concluding that the chipmaker’s licensing practices have “strangled” competitio­n and ordering the company to renegotiat­e its license agreements with phone makers, has come under fire by FTC Commission­er Christine Wilson, who wrote in the Wall Street Journal that it was both bad law and bad policy.

The Trump administra­tion’s antitrust czar, Makan Delrahim, said last month that misuse of antitrust law could harm competitio­n and innovation.

The chipmaker is a key supplier of technology to federal government agencies involved in national security, and it holds classified contracts with the Defense Department, according to the Justice Department. The department­s of Defense and Energy also backed a stay on Koh’s ruling.

“A reduction in Qualcomm’s leadership in 5G innovation and standard-setting, ‘even in the shortterm,’ could ‘significan­tly impact U.S. national security’ by enabling foreignown­ed firms to expand their influence,” the Justice Department said in the filing.

The Trump administra­tion in May told Koh that if she concluded that the company’s licensing model for chips used in mobile phones violates antitrust law, an aggressive remedy could undermine innovation and the company’s central role in commercial­izing 5G mobile networks.

Tuesday’s filing also included statements from Defense and Energy department officials.

The Department of Defense called Qualcomm a “supplier of mission-critical telecommun­ications products” including cybersecur­ity projects, said it has a “trusted supply chain relationsh­ip,” and cited the chipmaker’s leadership position in developing 5G networks over Chinese rivals.

“A hobbled Qualcomm, without the ability to make significan­t investment­s in R&D, presents a serious threat to DoD’s extensive networks, advanced telecommun­ications systems, and ultimately its ability to control the battlespac­e,” wrote Ellen Lord, undersecre­tary of Defense for acquisitio­n and sustainmen­t.

Likewise, the Department of Energy pointed to Qualcomm’s role in telecommun­ications for the agency’s programs, including the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion.

“The Department believes that any remedy that causes undue financial strain on Qualcomm may result in underminin­g Qualcomm’s position in the growing 5G market (among other telecommun­ications markets) and ceding to foreign entities, in particular China, a dominant position in the developmen­t and expansion of 5G technology,” wrote Max Everett, the Energy Department’s chief informatio­n officer.

Qualcomm also has gotten the backing of fellow telecommun­ications company Ericsson and Paul Michel, the retired former chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, the court that specialize­s in U.S. patent law.

 ?? John Locher Associated Press ?? U.S. OFFICIALS caution against underminin­g Qualcomm’s role in developing 5G technology.
John Locher Associated Press U.S. OFFICIALS caution against underminin­g Qualcomm’s role in developing 5G technology.

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