Olufemi Adeyemi
EU antitrust regulators will not appeal a court ruling scrapping its 997-million-euro ($991 million) fine against Qualcomm, people familiar with the matter said, in a major win for the U.S. chipmaker that ends a long-running saga.
The Luxembourg-based General Court, Europe's second-highest,
in its June judgment was scathing of the European Commission's handling of the
case, saying procedural irregularities had affected Qualcomm's rights of
defence.
Judges also invalidated the Commission's analysis that
payments made by Qualcomm to Apple were anti-competitive because the regulator
had not taken into account all the relevant facts.
It would be very difficult for the EU competition watchdog
to win on both counts in an appeal, the people familiar with the matter said.
The judgment was a major setback for EU antitrust chief
Margrethe Vestager, who has handed out billion-euro fines to Alphabet unit
Google and opened investigations into Amazon, Apple and Facebook owner Meta as
part of her crackdown on Big Tech.
The European Commission, which can appeal to the EU Court of
Justice (CJEU) on points of law, declined to comment. Qualcomm found itself in
the EU's crosshairs in 2015.
The Commission's decision not to contest the Court finding
was not surprising, said Peter Alexiadis, visiting professor at King's College
in London.
"Even if the Commission were to succeed on the
substantive grounds of appeal, such a victory would be nothing more than
Pyrrhic, given the fact that the Commission decision would nevertheless
inevitably be annulled on the procedural grounds, where the Commission's case
seems to be weak," he said.
An appeal might, however, force the court to clarify which
exclusivity relationships held by dominant firms were problematic, Alexiadis
said.
"It is nevertheless disappointing that the antitrust
Bar does not have a chance to benefit from a CJEU ruling on the question of
economic incentives to pursue exclusivity strategies," he said.
The EU competition enforcer, in its 2018 decision, said
Qualcomm paid billions of dollars to Apple from 2011 to 2016 to use only its
chips in all its iPhones and iPads in order to block out rivals such as Intel
Corp.
Vestager faces her next test on Sept. 14, when the General
Court will rule on Google's challenge against a record 4.34-billion-euro
antitrust fine imposed for using its Android mobile operating system to squeeze
out rivals.
