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Chipmaker Qualcomm tries to ban sale and manufacture of iPhones in China

by Ian King

Qualcomm has filed lawsuits in China seeking to ban the sale and manufacture of iPhones in the country, the chipmaker's biggest shot at Apple so far in a sprawling and bitter legal fight.

San Diego-based Qualcomm aims to inflict pain on Apple in the world's largest market for smartphones and cut off production in a country where most iPhones are made. The iPhone provides almost two-thirds of Apple's revenue.

Qualcomm filed the suits in a Beijing intellectual property court claiming patent infringement and seeking injunctive relief, according to a company spokeswoman.

"Apple employs technologies invented by Qualcomm without paying for them," she said. Apple shares initially gave up some gains from earlier on Friday before recovering, while Qualcomm stock maintained small losses.

Qualcomm's suits are based on three non-standard essential patents, it said. They cover power management and a touch-screen technology called Force Touch that Apple uses in current iPhones, Qualcomm said. The inventions "are a few examples of the many Qualcomm technologies that Apple uses to improve its devices and increase its profits," Trimble said.

'No merit'

Apple said the claim has no merit.

"In our many years of ongoing negotiations with Qualcomm, these patents have never been discussed," said an Apple spokesman. "Like their other courtroom manouevres, we believe this latest legal effort will fail."

Qualcomm made the filings at the Beijing court on September 29. The court has not yet made them public.

"This is another step to get Apple back to the negotiating table," said Mike Walkley, an analyst at Canaccord Genuity. "It shows how far apart they are."

There's little or no precedent for a Chinese court taking such action at the request of a US company, he said. Chinese regulators would also be concerned that a halt of iPhone production would cause layoffs at Apple's suppliers such as Hon Hai Precision Industry Company, which are major employers.

Conversely, supporting Qualcomm might help Chinese phone companies such as Guangdong Oppo Electronics to gain share against Apple, Walkley said.

Threat to supply unlikely

Investors aren't concerned about a disruption to iPhone supply because they believe Apple would immediately compromise if there was any threat to production.

"Apple's not going to miss one day of production," he said. 'If for any reason they get a negative judgment, they'd go back to paying Qualcomm in the short term. They're not going to risk their business model for this."

The two companies are months into a legal dispute that centres on Qualcomm's technology licensing business. While Qualcomm gets the majority of its sales from making phone chips, it pulls in most of its profit from charging fees for patents that cover the fundamentals of all modern phone systems.

The latest suits come at a crucial time for Apple. It just introduced iPhone 8 and X models aimed at reasserting leadership in a market that's steeped in competition from fast-growing Chinese makers.

Suppliers and assemblers in China are rushing to churn out as many new iPhones as possible ahead of the key holiday season, so any disruptions would likely be costly. The Greater China region accounted for 22.5 per cent of Apple's $US215.6 billion sales in its most recent financial year.

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