News

EU fines Samsung, Philips and others for smartcard cartel participation

EMVpictureAMSTERDAM (09/03/2014) – Smart card producers Samsung Electronics, Philips and Infineon were fined €138 million (about US$181 million) by the European Commission on Wednesday for forming a cartel. Renesas, also part of the cartel, escaped a fine by revealing the existence of the cartel.

Smart cards are used by almost everybody in mobile phones as SIM cards, bank cards, identity cards and passports as well as pay TV cards among other applications.

“It is crucial that the companies producing them focus their efforts on how to outperform their competitors by innovating and providing the best products at the most attractive prices. If instead companies choose to collude, at the expense of both customers and end consumers, they should expect sanctions,” Joaquín Almunia, Commission Vice President in charge of competition policy, said in a statement.

The companies involved in the cartel conspired through a network of contacts in order to determine their responses to customers’ requests to lower prices, the Commission said. They also discussed and exchanged sensitive commercial information on pricing, customers, contract negotiations, production capacity or capacity utilization and their future market conduct, it added.

This kind of conspiracy breaches European Union rules prohibiting cartels and restrictive business practices, the Commission said.

The cartel ran between September 2003 and September 2005 and was brought to light by Renesas, at the time a joint venture of Hitachi and Mitsubishi. The Commission said Renesas benefitted from full immunity under the its 2006 Leniency Notice for revealing the existence of the cartel.

This means that Renesas avoided what would have been a fine of more than €51 million for its participation in the cartel. Samsung’s fine was reduced by 30 percent to around €35 million because it cooperated in the investigation.

Philips was fined over €20 million. It still remains liable for what happened during the period of the infringement even though it has divested its smart card chips business after the infringement, the Commission said. Infineon was fined €82.8 million.

Previous ArticleNext Article

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

GET TAHAWULTECH.COM IN YOUR INBOX

The free newsletter covering the top industry headlines