Qualcomm shares fall as reports say Apple may scrap its chips

Reuters 

By Supantha and Laharee Chatterjee

(Reuters) - Qualcomm Inc's shares fell 3 percent on Monday after two brokerages said might drop the chipmaker in favour of as the supplier for in its next generation of iPhones.

Qualcomm has been a supplier of components to Apple for years but the relationship turned sour last year when Apple accused Qualcomm of overcharging for chips and refusing to pay some $1 billion in promised rebates.

In a detailed note citing extensive channel checks with chip suppliers, brokerage said it anticipated that Apple would drop Qualcomm in favour of a handful of other suppliers, as it seeks to reduce materials costs for iPhones.

said it believed Apple would source all of its thin modems - half of which are currently supplied by Qualcomm - from Intel.

Intel shares were up 1.4 percent at $46.81. The world's biggest PC chipmaker was a late entrant into the market for mobile chips, but has recently been pushing aggressively into the space.

"There is speculation that Apple might drop Qualcomm altogether for its next generation phones and I think that's part of the reason the stock is down today," said Angelo Zino, an at

Qualcomm issued a revenue forecast last week that missed estimates.

It said the forecast already included the assumption that Apple could drop its chips for future products.

Apple will save more than $100 million in the next cycle by moving to cheaper Intel modem chips, said.

Broadcom Ltd, which is trying to acquire Qualcomm, will likely lose some $400 million worth of sales of Apple parts in the second half of the year to Qorvo Inc, Shah added.

The reports came as Broadcom on Monday sweetened its bid to buy Qualcomm to more than $121 billion from an earlier $103 billion.

Qualcomm was hit with a $1.23 billion fine by antitrust regulators last month for paying Apple to use only its chips, blocking out rivals such as Intel.

Intel began supplying to Apple from the 7 onwards.

reported in October that Apple had designed iPhones and that would drop chips supplied by Qualcomm. http://reut.rs/2nNkkGC

Analysts at said Intel's were less expensive than Qualcomm chips and also met Apple's standards, according to Apple website 9to5Mac. http://bit.ly/2FKdoBB

Sector analysts have said in the past that Intel may not be as well prepared for 5G networking as Qualcomm, and that iPhones with Qualcomm chips have performed better than models running on Intel chips.

did not rule out a return by Qualcomm to the supply chain, perhaps in the form of concessions in the patent lawsuit settlement.

Apple and Intel declined to comment. Qualcomm did not immediately responded to a request for comment.

(Reporting by Supantha and in Bengaluru; Editing by Patrick Graham, and Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, February 06 2018. 00:57 IST