Intel’s €1.06 billion antitrust fine overturned by EU’s General Court

Intel Core i9-11900K reviewSource: Harish Jonnalagadda / Windows Central

The European Union’s General Court overturned a €1.06 billion fine issued against Intel in 2009. The fine was levied against Intel after the European Commission determined that the company “abused its dominant position on the worldwide market for x86 2 processors” to exclude competing chipmakers.

The Commission claimed that Intel used a combination of restrictions and conditional rebates to get companies to purchase all or almost all of their CPUs from Intel. Dell, Lenovo, HP, and NEC were said to have strategic agreements with Intel.

The General Court ruled today, January 26, 2022, that “the analysis carried out by the Commission is incomplete and, in any event, does not make it possible to establish to the requisite legal standard that the rebates at issue were capable of having, or were likely to have, anticompetitive effects, which is why the General Court annuls the decision.”

The court added that it’s not in a position to identify how much of a fine would be appropriate solely for the naked restrictions. As a result, the court overturned the fine.

Intel appealed the 2009 fine in 2014, but the General Court dismissed that move.

The Wall Street Journal notes that the decision could still be appealed, so Intel’s legal battle surrounding the rebates and agreements with OEMs may not be over.

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