Intel Hit With $1.45 Billion Fine In Europe

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JORDAN ROBERTSON | May 13, 2009 06:09 PM EST | AP

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In this combo made from file photos, Intel CEO Paul Otellini, left, and AMD CEO Dirk Meyer are shown. The European Union fined Intel Corp. a record €1.06 billion ($1.45 billion) on Wednesday, May 13, 2009, and ordered the world's biggest maker of computer chips to stop illegal sales tactics that shut out Silicon Valley rival AMD. (AP Photos/Paul Sakuma)

SAN FRANCISCO — Intel Corp. was fined a record $1.45 billion by the European Union on Wednesday for using strong-arm sales tactics in the computer chip market _ a penalty that could turn up the pressure on U.S. regulators to go after the company, too.

The fine against the world's biggest chip maker represents a huge victory for Intel's Silicon Valley rival, Advanced Micro Devices Inc., or AMD, the No. 2 supplier of microprocessors to PC makers.

AMD has sued Intel and lobbied regulators around the world for the past five years, complaining that Intel was penalizing PC makers in the U.S. and abroad for doing business with AMD.

Although the U.S. Federal Trade Commission is also investigating, AMD seems to have found its most sympathetic ear in Europe.

EU Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said Intel has harmed millions of European consumers by "deliberately acting to keep competitors out of the market."

"Intel did not compete fairly, frustrating innovation and reducing consumer welfare in the process," she said.

The commission told Intel to immediately stop some sales practices in Europe, though it wouldn't say what those were. Intel said it was "mystified" about what it was supposed to change but would comply while it appeals the fine.

The Santa Clara, Calif., company also defended its sales practices _ which include rebates to big Intel customers _ as legitimate.

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"This is really just a matter of competition at work, which is something I think we all want to see, versus something nefarious," Intel CEO Paul Otellini said in a conference call with reporters.

AMD Chief Executive Dirk Meyer said the decision was "an important step toward establishing a truly competitive market."

"We are looking forward to the move from a world in which Intel ruled, to one which is ruled by customers," Meyer said in a statement.

The biggest previous fine levied by the European Union for anticompetitive behavior was $1.3 billion, brought against Microsoft Corp. last year.

Whether Intel could face punishment in the U.S. remains to be seen. But the EU's fine against Intel could push the issue to the forefront for the Obama administration.

"If there was ever a time not to appear to be a large firm behaving badly, this would be it, as the financial collapse has the U.S. and EU competing for which government is the most proactively protecting consumer rights," warned Rob Enderle, a technology industry analyst. "This judgment makes Intel the ball in what is likely an international game of one-upmanship."

The Obama administration signaled this week that antitrust enforcement would be pursued more vigorously than in the Bush administration, whose Justice Department filed only three anti-monopoly cases, all involving mergers. Yet the Justice Department has been silent on whether it is investigating Intel.

The Federal Trade Commission investigation of Intel could result in the agency asking a court to order Intel to alter its practices. A spokeswoman for the FTC declined to comment.

Stephen Kinsella, a lawyer specializing on European antitrust law, cautioned that Europe is known for its aggressive antitrust enforcement and that a case brought against Intel in the U.S. or elsewhere might be milder.

The EU fine is "hugely significant because it's Intel, and the amounts at stake are enormous," he said. But "it is known that the commission takes a very hard line on this type of behavior."

The Intel-vs.-AMD fight exposes an ugly part of the business for microprocessors, which essentially are the brains of personal computers.

Unlike other parts of the PC industry that have lots of competitors, microprocessors come from only two sources. Intel has about 80 percent of the market, and AMD _ headquartered a few miles away in Sunnyvale _ has the rest. That means a victory for one is a defeat for the other.

The process of getting a chip into a computer and onto the shelves has two main steps, and AMD has cried foul about Intel's behavior at both stages.

First, a computer maker has to agree to buy the chips. In that stage, AMD has alleged, Intel has illegally used its dominant position by offering huge rebates to PC makers that promise to buy lots of Intel's chips. AMD argues that the discounts can effectively make some chip orders free, and that it would have to lose money on sales in order to keep up.

The case before the European Commission alleges that Intel illegally undermined AMD with computer makers Acer, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo and NEC.

In AMD's U.S. lawsuit against Intel, set to go to trial next year in Delaware, executives from Gateway complained that Intel's threats of retaliation for working with AMD beat them "into guacamole." The lawsuit also quotes Toshiba officials saying Intel's financial incentives amounted to "cocaine."

Second, chip makers help persuade stores to carry PCs with their processors inside, and pay the retailers to help promote the machines. In the case before the EU, regulators said Intel paid Germany's biggest electronics retailer to stock only Intel-based computers at its MediaMarkt superstores _ even in Dresden, where many AMD chips are made.

Kinsella, the specialist on European antitrust law, said "loyalty rebate" programs are common, but become a problem when dominant companies use them. In a similar European case, tire maker Michelin was fined in 2001 over its rebate program in France.

Kinsella said the accusation that Intel paid companies specifically not to use AMD's products would set this case apart from others.

"If that's true," he said, "that would be pretty far out there in terms of examples of abuse."

Investors were expecting the Intel fine and seemed unfazed. Intel stock lost 8 cents to close at $15.13. AMD was up 3 cents at $4.38.

___

AP Business Writers Aoife White in Brussels and Christopher S. Rugaber in Washington contributed to this report.

SAN FRANCISCO — Intel Corp. was fined a record $1.45 billion by the European Union on Wednesday for using strong-arm sales tactics in the computer chip market _ a penalty that could turn up the ...
SAN FRANCISCO — Intel Corp. was fined a record $1.45 billion by the European Union on Wednesday for using strong-arm sales tactics in the computer chip market _ a penalty that could turn up the ...
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- sposton I'm a Fan of sposton 194 fans permalink
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Those Europeans are killing the monopolistic capitalist system - the wealth creation engine! Without it how can they afford their national health care systems? ;-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 AM on 05/15/2009

How much of this - if any - will they actually pay? If ever...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 05/14/2009
- mbondr1 I'm a Fan of mbondr1 4 fans permalink
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Again justice comes from Europe, not the US. The corruption in the FTC is killing our industry and our country. Baby boomers are such short term thinkers! I will be glad when their generation is gone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 05/14/2009

This is push back from the EU. Europeans are sick and tired of the US
shoving everything down their throat. The American Brand will have to
clean up their image, rest of the world does not have to buy American Brand
products, such as IBM, Coke, Intel, etc.

Having friends in Iceland, Ireland, England, Switzerland, and Germany they
all know they made it long before America came along.

These Wall St. and Wash DC geniuses NEVER factor into their devious calculations
Human Emotion and Behavior.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 AM on 05/14/2009
- The Lorax I'm a Fan of The Lorax 8 fans permalink

Intel has a plant in Ireland.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 AM on 05/16/2009

well
if intel changes to( intel investment bank ) it will be safe, it can do what it likes

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 05/14/2009
- kewe I'm a Fan of kewe 10 fans permalink
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Utter nonsense. Instead of whining about it, AMD should just start making a better product. I work for the PC company that has the largest share of PC market right now, and we sell PCs with either. AMD-based PCs are cheaper. Consumers make the choice. AMD remains number 2. Whatever..­.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 AM on 05/14/2009

This started back when AMD unquestionably HAD the better product.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 05/14/2009
- frantaylor I'm a Fan of frantaylor 22 fans permalink

Opteron IS the better product for performance/watt.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:28 AM on 05/15/2009
- The Lorax I'm a Fan of The Lorax 8 fans permalink

:) I'm building my i7 965 today :) Woohoo! And it is the best

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 AM on 05/16/2009

It is like the business media here has not learned anything from this crisis. While there may be good reasons to but question the European decision, CNBC has once again proved it is just a corporate cheerleader.

Rather than reading the complaint and asking the Intel executive to defend itself against the charges, they were trying to get him to accuse the Europeans of a "shake down".

So much for holding corporate executives accountable for illegal behaviour!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 AM on 05/14/2009
- Disdain I'm a Fan of Disdain 10 fans permalink
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Care to take a guess how many people would loose their jobs as a result of this nonsense!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:28 AM on 05/14/2009
- frantaylor I'm a Fan of frantaylor 22 fans permalink

One can only vaguely imagine how much better computers would be today if they weren't held back by Microsoft and Intel in their mad power grab. For goodness sake, Windows still has drive letters and even a modern Core 2 machine has 8086 instruction hardware so it can boot MS-DOS.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 AM on 05/15/2009
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From the article:

"First, a computer maker has to agree to buy the chips. In that stage, AMD has alleged, Intel has illegally used its dominant position by offering huge rebates to PC makers that promise to buy lots of Intel's chips. AMD argues that the discounts can effectively make some chip orders free, and that it would have to lose money on sales in order to keep up."

Geez, Intel is being unfair because it offers lower prices.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:51 AM on 05/14/2009

The report also said it paid/gave rebates to manufacturers for buying nearly all of their chips from Intel and delaying products with cometing processors.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 05/14/2009
- eilish I'm a Fan of eilish 17 fans permalink
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AND more jobs bite the dust.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 AM on 05/14/2009
- mbondr1 I'm a Fan of mbondr1 4 fans permalink
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The net market remains unchanged. It just shifts towards AMD a bit. So maybe they go to work for AMD?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 05/14/2009
- Erdgeist I'm a Fan of Erdgeist 82 fans permalink
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Intel is doing what any graduate is taught to do in an American MBA program in a similar situation: lie, cheat and steal -- and cook the books.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 AM on 05/14/2009

and what do they teach lawyers in harvard?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 AM on 05/14/2009
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And what do community organizers / Chicago politicians learn?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:50 AM on 05/14/2009
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I can definitely see where AMD is coming from. I use one of their processors because I built my desktop. My laptop on the other hand is an Intel, and I didn't have a choice in the matter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 PM on 05/13/2009
- frantaylor I'm a Fan of frantaylor 22 fans permalink

I have 8 AMD Opteron server cores and 32 Gb of ECC RAM in my workstation. Intel is for juvenile gamers. AMD is where the real computing power is done.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 AM on 05/15/2009
- dukeitout I'm a Fan of dukeitout 3 fans permalink

Why haven't we, the good ole US of A, also fined Intel for trying to bribe their American customers to "shut out" the competition? This is clearly illegal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 PM on 05/13/2009
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I did not know there was intelligence outside of intel. Oh it is high time they had some competition.

Maybe computing will make another real leap.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 PM on 05/13/2009
- frantaylor I'm a Fan of frantaylor 22 fans permalink

The 64-bit technology in modern Intel chips is there because they bought the technology from AMD.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 AM on 05/15/2009

Its about time someone started to police corporations. Maybe the EU can get them in shape so our legislators won't have to do anything.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 PM on 05/13/2009
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