China
has launched an antitrust probe against one of the world's biggest chipmakers,
the US firm Qualcomm.
The
firm said that it was "not aware or any charge" by the regulators
that it had broken the law.
China
has increased scrutiny of business practices that lead to higher prices for
consumers.
In
August, Chinese regulators levied a record fine of 670m yuan ($109m; £71m) on
six foreign producers of baby milk formula for price-fixing.
China's
National Development and Reform Commission, the body which is probing Qualcomm,
also launched a pricing investigation into the pharmaceutical industry earlier
this year.
4G launch
The investigation against
Qualcomm also comes at a time when China is gearing for the launch of 4G Long Term
Evolution (LTE) Networks.
The
country will start commercial 4G mobile communications services on 18 December.
China
Mobile, the country's biggest mobile operator with over 700 million users, will
be the first one to offer the services to its subscribers.
That
will be followed by China Unicom and China Telecom, the country's other two
major carriers.
The US
firm is a key player in the area and some analysts suggested the probe against
it may be an attempt to help domestic players in China.
"We
suspect this investigation is related to the forthcoming launch of TD-LTE by
China Mobile... and the negotiations on chip pricing and license pricing
between Qualcomm and Chinese-based handset [manufacturers] that are likely
occurring right now," said Travis McCourt an analyst with Raymond James
& Associates.
Cody
Acree, an analyst with Williams Financial, added: "You're getting ready to
have this battle over 4G royalties and now you have this antitrust
investigation".
"It
may well be that this reform commission is beginning to throw up reasons and
excuses for why China doesn't pay royalties on 4G."
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