By Nikki  Tait in 
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It will  be the climax of a near-decade-long investigation into the group's marketing  practices. Lawyers say the fine could top those heaped on Microsoft, which,  combined, exceeded €1bn ($1.36bn).
The  Intel investigation dates back to 2000, when its closest rival, Advanced Micro  Devices, filed a complaint that it was being driven out of the market by  Intel's practices.
Four  years later, the case gathered steam and, after a series of raids, Intel was  formally charged in July 2007. It had allegedly abused its dominant market  position and offered illegal rebates to computer manufacturers, which had shut  AMD out of the market.
After  further raids last year, the European Commission accused Intel of using rebates  to persuade a leading European retailer to sell only Intel-based personal  computers. Intel has consistently denied behaving illegally. "Our business  practices are lawful, pro-competitive and good for consumers," it says.
In  deciding how to shape and enforce a "cease-and-desist" order, the EU  regulator will confront a web of incentives and rebates offered by Intel to  customers that have helped it dominate the market for PC microprocessor chips.
Opinions  are divided on how specific the Commission will be. In theory, if its final  decision goes against the company, the fine could be as much as 10 per cent of  Intel's annual worldwide revenues. These totalled $37.6bn in 2008, meaning the  maximum level could approach $4bn. However, that 10 per cent level is rarely  reached.
Intel  has refused to discuss whether it would appeal against an adverse decision. After 
Last  June, South Korea's fair trade commission fined Intel Won26bn ($21m) for  abusing its dominant market position there and offering discounts to two Korean  PC makers to drive AMD out of the market. This decision is under appeal. Intel  had $10.3bn in cash and securities at the end of the first quarter.
Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/b5dd5e88-3dc2-11de-a85e-00144feabdc0.html
 
 

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