When Apple and indian gay sex videoQualcomm unexpectedly settled their long-standing legal feud on the day opening arguments were supposed to begin in court, the companies did not disclose the amount that Apple was paying Qualcomm to end their war once and for all.
Now, thanks to Qualcomm's Q2 earnings report, we know that Qualcomm expects to get $4.5 - $4.7 billion from the settlement — a financial boon for Qualcomm, that costs cash-rich Apple relatively little.
SEE ALSO: What Apple and Qualcomm's settlement means for the 5G iPhoneApple and Qualcomm had been engaging in a tit-for-tat fight in the courts over what Apple argued were exorbitant royalties that Qualcomm was charging Apple for the use of its chip technology, on top of the price of the actual chips. In a surprise settlement, The companies agreed to end all legal action, worldwide, on April 16. The settlement included a six year licensing agreement, "multi-year" chip supply, and a cash payment from Apple, the amount of which the companies did not specify.
Qualcomm's Q2 earnings report gives us an idea of the price Apple is paying for peace — and its 5G future. Qualcomm's released its Q2 earnings report Wednesday, which included projected one-time cash revenue of $4.5 - $4.7 billion from the Apple settlement. Qualcomm says that figure is not set in stone, since it includes cash payment as well as the release of money that Qualcomm has to pay Apple. But it is reporting the number as revenue, or cash, that it expects to receive from Apple.
"While we continue to assess the accounting impacts of the agreements, our financial guidance for the third quarter of fiscal 2019 includes estimated revenues of $4.5 billion to $4.7 billion resulting from the settlement (which will be excluded from our Non-GAAP results), consisting of a payment from Apple and the release of our obligations to pay or refund Apple and the contract manufacturers certain customer-related liabilities," the report reads.
This is pretty dang huge for Qualcomm. Last quarter, Qualcomm earned $5 billion in revenue. The settlement effectively doubles their earnings for Q3. $4.5 billion is big money for Qualcomm.
So what's it costing Apple? The settlement shows that, among tech giants, the word "billions" is relative. Even in a down quarter, Apple still made $225.4 billion in cash in Q2. That means that, even if the majority of the ~$4.7 sent to Qualcomm is cash direct from Apple, that's about 2 percent of its quarterly revenue. Think Tim can spare it?
Qualcomm's earnings report also indicates that the licensing agreement might not have been as big a win for the company as the cash payment. Although revenue for Q3 is expected to double from 2018, the New York Times points out that the projections indicate that Apple is not necessarily paying more in licensing than it was before.
While we can't say for sure, perhaps Qualcomm made out with cash in the short term, so Apple could get chip supply and licensing agreements for its 5G iPhones that it could live with. After all, Apple's projected revenue for Q3 was pretty much unaffected by the loss of that five bil. Must be nice!
Topics 5G Apple iPhone
Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2022 finalists: All the otherworldly photosThe world's largest fish is very mysterious and endangeredHow to change VPNsBest garage camera deal: Take 42% off the myQ Smart Garage Door Video Keypad at AmazonWeChat claims 500 million monthly users actively playing inGeneral Motors’ China joint venture launches TeslaTerribly named 'murder hornet' finally gets a new nameDoes your device support Apple Intelligence?Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2022 finalists: All the otherworldly photosMeituan set to enter Riyadh as early as September · TechNodeHow to change VPNsIn deep sea video, scientists capture a squid mom doing something very rareGoogle is letting you dig through the treasured Vogue image archiveNASA reveals latest design for returning samples from MarsWordle today: The answer and hints for June 12The world's largest fish is very mysterious and endangeredAdobe to update terms of service amid backlash'The Boys' Season 4 review: A punishing season of televisionTaobao loosens “refundNASA identifies strange object its rover found on Mars John and Yves Berger on Painting by John and Yves Berger Issue No. 250: A Crossword by Adrienne Raphel A Painter Is Being Beaten: Freud and Kantarovsky by Jamieson Webster Six Handbags by Simon Wu New Theater, New York, January 2025 by Rhoda Feng More from Scraps by Abdulah Sidran from Lola the Interpreter by Lyn Hejinian A Very Precious Bonjour Tristesse by Mina Tavakoli The Matter of Martin by Lora Kelley How Do You Write an Opera Based on Moby Glimmer: In Siena by Cynthia Zarin Rouen’s Municipal Library, 1959–1964 (or, The Formative Years) by Annie Ernaux The Erotics of (Re)reading by Peter Szendy A Journey Through Four Gyms by Vivian Hu I Killed Wolf’s by Todd McEwen On An African Abroad by Toye Oladinni There Is Another World, But It Is This One by Luke Allan Passion, Jealousy, Love, and an Unquestionable Disdain for Art by Olivia Kan Do Dogs Know What Art Is? by Laura van den Berg The Living Death Drug by Lisa Carver
1.0718s , 8611.6484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【indian gay sex video】,Feast Information Network