European Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager due to announce fine in Brussels. AFP
European Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager due to announce fine in Brussels. AFP

Google faces EU fine of more than €4bn over apps for Android



Google will be fined about €4.3 billion (Dh18.35bn) by the European Union on Wednesday over apps for Android mobile devices, setting a record for anti-trust penalties, according to a person familiar with the EU decision.

The penalty - the same amount the Netherlands contributes to the EU budget every year - is due to be announced by EU Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager at 1pm in Brussels.

The EU’s decision would bring the running total of Google fines to $6.7bn after last year’s penalty over shopping-search services. It could soon be followed by more fines from a probe into online advertising contracts.

Google has built a huge business of banner and videos ads, thanks largely to its central role on Android devices. Google will account for a third of all global mobile ads in 2018, according to research firm eMarketer, giving the company around $40bn in sales outside the US. Google risks losing that traction if it is forced to surrender its real estate on millions of Android phones.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai had a call with EU Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager late Tuesday for a so-called state of play meeting, a usual step to alert companies of an impending penalty, according to one of the people, who asked not to be named. The inquiry targets Google’s contracts with smartphone manufacturers and telecoms operators.

The European Commission exceeds last year’s then-record €2.4bn penalty following an investigation into Google’s shopping-search service. Google owner Alphabet and the commission both declined to comment on the Android fines.

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Despite being a record fine, Alphabet generated about the same amount of money every 16 days in 2017, based on the company’s reported annual revenue of $110.9bn for the year.

Levies are based on revenue in the market being probed and can’t exceed 10 per cent of a company’s global annual revenue. Google raked in around €25bn in digital advertising in Europe in 2017, equity research firm Pivotal Research estimates.

More significant than a blockbuster fine could be an accompanying order freeing up phone manufacturers to choose non-Google apps to install on Android phones. That would yield crucial real estate for app developers given that about 80 per cent of smart mobile devices use Android.

EU officials have been investigating Google contracts that require manufacturers of Android phones to take Google’s search and browser apps and other Google services when they want to licence the Play app store.

The EU is also targeting Google’s payments to telecoms operators and manufacturers who exclusively install Google search on devices and contracts that prevent handset makers selling phones using other versions of Android.

Google has a market share of more than 90 per cent for general Internet search, licensed smart mobile operating systems and app stores for Android software, the EU said in 2016.