The National - News

EU hits Apple with antitrust charges over harmful mobile payment practices

- Alkesh Sharma

The EU hit Apple with antitrust charges for abusing its dominant position in the mobile wallets market by restrictin­g competitio­n.

The 27-nation bloc’s executive arm, the European Commission, said Apple had restricted competitio­n by limiting third-party access to key technology necessary to develop rival mobile wallet solutions on Apple’s devices.

The iPhone manufactur­er deliberate­ly prevented app developers from gaining access to the hardware and software (near-field communicat­ion or “tap and go” technology) on its devices in a move designed to benefit Apple Pay, the commission said.

Apple Pay, the California-based company’s mobile wallet solution on iPhones and iPads, enables contactles­s payments in physical shops and online channels.

“Mobile payments play a rapidly growing role in our digital economy. It is important for the integratio­n of European payments markets that consumers benefit from a competitiv­e and innovative payments landscape,” said Margrethe Vestager, the European Commission’s executive vice president in charge of competitio­n policy.

“We preliminar­ily found that Apple may have restricted competitio­n, to the benefit of its own solution Apple Pay. If confirmed, such conduct would be illegal under our competitio­n rules,” said Ms Vestager.

A mobile or digital wallet stores users’ credit and/or debit card informatio­n and links it to a payment gateway to allow purchases at a point of sale. Similar to credit cards, mobile wallets only work at merchants that accept them as a payment method.

Google was the first major company to launch a mobile wallet in 2011. Today, consumers have a number of digital wallets to choose from, including Samsung Pay, PayPal and Apple Pay. Consumer spending through digital wallets is expected to reach more than $10 trillion in 2025 – up from $5.5tn in 2020, a 2021 report by Juniper Research showed.

The European Commission said Apple’s iPhones, iPads and software form a “closed ecosystem” and the company controlled every aspect of the user experience.

Apple Pay was the only mobile wallet solution that had access to the necessary nearfield communicat­ion input on the company’s iOS operating system, it said.

“This has an exclusiona­ry effect on competitor­s and leads to less innovation and less choice for consumers for mobile wallets on iPhones,” the commission said.

If confirmed, Apple’s conduct would infringe on Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functionin­g of the EU, which prohibits the abuse of a dominant market position.

The current charge sheet, known as a statement of objections, was filed on Monday and considered only issues with access to near-field communicat­ion by third-party developers.

It does not take into account the “online restrictio­ns nor the alleged refusals of access to Apple Pay for specific products of rivals” that the commission voiced concern with when it started an in-depth investigat­ion into the matter in June 2020.

EU regulators accuse Apple of restrictin­g competitio­n by limiting third-party access to key technology

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