Qualcomm and Apple drop lawsuits against each other
On Tuesday in a San Diego courthouse, both Apple and Qualcomm have unexpectedly settled all their legal disputes. This was discovered when Apple and Qualcomm released a joint press release detailing their agreements to drop litigations, just as Qualcomms head lawyer finished delivering opening remarks.
According to the release, the settlement involves a payment from Apple to Qualcomm for an undisclosed amount, a six-year license agreement effective as of April 1 2019, which includes a two-year option to extend. The two also entered a multi-year chipset supply agreement.
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This unexpected news sparks life into rumors about whether Apples 2020 iPhones would indeed feature 5G modems built by Qualcomm or Intels as initially planned. Following initial lawsuits, Apple had to rely solely on Intel to provide LTE modems for iPhones, thus eliminating its reliance on Qualcomm, until now, it seems.
Perhaps now that Apple is well on its way to developing and manufacturing its own chipsets, it wont rely on Qualcomm as much as it had in the past. While Qualcomm and Apple can now work together, it doesnt mean that it will rely entirely on Qualcomm like the majority of Android smartphone makers do. For reference, Samsung and Huawei do produce their own chipsets while Apples proprietary chipsets are produced by TSMC a Taiwanese chip maker.
The first lawsuits from Apple against Qualcomm claimed that the chipmaker was charging excessive royalties. This followed by Qualcomm suing Apple for infringing on other patents due to a power management feature embedded in the OS - eventually, sales of older iPhones were banned in some regions. There was much back and forth over the past few years until this past November, when Qualcomm CEO said were on the doorstep of a resolution with Apple. Almost two years after Qualcomm CEO said that Apple would settle - it did.
Following Tuesdays news about Qualcomm and Apple. Qualcomms stock price shot up by 21% by the end of the day. Apples stock fluctuated throughout the day but remained unchanged by the NYSEs closing.