The Mercury News

Intel fights $1.2B antitrust fine

- By Stephanie Bodoni

Intel attacked the European Commission for being unfair in a probe that led to a record $1.2 billion fine.

The key issue in the investigat­ion was loyalty rebates to lower retail prices, Daniel Beard, a lawyer for Intel, told the European Union’s Court of Justice in Luxembourg on Tuesday. But the European Commission failed to analyze “all relevant circumstan­ces” to see if the rebates shut out rivals, he said.

The world’s biggest chipmaker is making a final attempt to overturn the penalty doled out in 2009 for unfairly squeezing out Advanced Micro Devices. No date for a ruling has been set.

Two years ago, the EU General Court rejected Intel’s first appeal.

That ruling was a timely boost to the Brusselsba­sed European Commission, which is embroiled in lengthy probes of search engine giant Google and chip designer Qualcomm Regulators say Google gave financial incentives to telecommun­ications operators and phone makers that install its search app.

They also allege Qualcomm paid a smartphone and tablet manufactur­er to mostly use its chips.

The Intel case concerns whether a company with a very large market share “can pursue a commercial strategy, the focus of which is the marginaliz­ation or even the eliminatio­n of its only competitor,” the commission’s lawyer Nicholas Khan told the court Tuesday.

The evidence shows that the rebates prevented computer makers from seeking out lower prices “that might have been available,” he said.

The EU’s antitrust regulator in its decision said Intel had obstructed competitio­n by giving rebates to computer makers from 2002 until 2005 on the condition that they buy at least 95 percent of chips for personal computers from Intel. Intel then imposed “restrictiv­e conditions” for the remaining 5 percent, supplied by AMD, which struggled to overcome its rival’s hold on the market for PC processors, the EU said.

The computer makers coaxed to not use AMD’s chips included Acer, Dell, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Lenovo Group and NEC, the commission said in 2009.

The EU also said Intel made payments to electronic­s retailer Media Markt on the condition that it only sell Intel-based PCs. The EU also ordered Intel to stop using illegal rebates to thwart competitor­s, an instructio­n that Intel complained was unclear.

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