Google antitrust ruling may pose $20 billion risk for Apple
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[August 07, 2024] By
Aditya Soni
(Reuters) - Apple's lucrative deal with Google could be under threat
after a U.S. judge ruled that the Alphabet-owned search giant was
operating an illegal monopoly.
A potential remedy for Google to avoid antitrust actions could involve
terminating the agreement, which makes its search engine a default on
Apple devices, Wall Street analysts said on Tuesday.
Google pays Apple $20 billion annually, or about 36% of what it earns
from search advertising made through the Safari browser, for the
privilege, according to Morgan Stanley analysts.
If the deal is undone, the iPhone maker could take a 4-6% hit to its
profit, the analysts estimated.
The pact runs until at least September 2026 and Apple has the right to
unilaterally extend it for another two years, according to media reports
in May that cited a document filed by the Department of Justice in the
antitrust case.
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"The most likely outcome now is the judge rules Google must no longer
pay for default placement or that companies like Apple must proactively
prompt users to select their search engine rather than setting a default
and allowing consumers to make changes in settings if they wish,"
Evercore ISI analysts said.
Apple's shares were trading flat on Tuesday, underperforming a recovery
in the broader market after Monday's global selloff. Alphabet was little
changed, after falling 4.5% in the previous session.
"The message here is that if you've got a dominant market position with
a product, you'd better avoid the use of exclusive agreements and make
sure any agreement you make gives the buyer free choice to substitute
away," said Herbert Hovenkamp, a professor of law at the University of
Pennsylvania.
To be sure, the "remedy" phase could be lengthy, followed by potential
appeals to the U.S. Court of Appeals, the District of Columbia Circuit
and the U.S. Supreme Court. The legal wrangling could play out into
2026.
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An Apple logo is pictured in an Apple store in Paris, France, March
6, 2024. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo
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AI TILT
Still, if the tie-up is scrapped, Apple will have several options
including offering customers alternatives such as Microsoft Bing to
customers, or potentially a new search product powered by OpenAI.
Analysts agree that the ruling will speed up Apple's move towards
AI-powered search services. It recently announced that it would
bring OpenAI's ChatGPT chatbot to its devices.
In a shift away from exclusive deals that would help Apple ward off
regulatory scrutiny, the company has said it is also in talks with
Google to add the Gemini chatbot and plans to add other AI models as
well.
Apple is also revamping Siri with AI technology, giving it more
control to handle tasks that had proven tricky in the past such as
writing emails and interacting with messages.
While those efforts are expected to make little money in the coming
years, they could help capitalize on the new technology.
"Apple could see this as a temporary setback, especially since it
earns a lot from the Google search deal, but it is also an
opportunity for them to pivot to AI solutions for search," said
Gadjo Sevilla, analyst at Emarketer.
(Reporting by Aditya Soni in Bengaluru; additional reporting by
Priyanka G in Bengaluru and Kenrick Cai in San Francisco; Editing by
Sayantani Ghosh and Anil D'Silva)
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