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Qualcomm's NXP Deal Is Said to Be Approved by Chinese Regulators

Qualcomm Inc.’s $43 billion acquisition of NXP Semiconductors NV has been approved by Chinese regulators

Qualcomm's NXP Deal Is Said to Be Approved by Chinese Regulators
A NXP Semiconductors NV controller chip, center, of an Apple Inc. iPhone 6 smartphone in seen in an arranged photograph in Bangkok, Thailand.(Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Qualcomm Inc.’s $43 billion acquisition of NXP Semiconductors NV has been approved by Chinese regulators, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified. The stocks rallied in extended trading, with gains continuing into Friday.

Clearance from China would remove the final regulatory hurdle for the purchase, which has been pending for more than 18 months. The decision by Chinese regulators will allow the transaction to be completed ahead of a July deadline set by NXP, which said it would abandon the deal if it wasn’t approved by then. Qualcomm and NXP declined to comment on an earlier report about the approval by the South China Morning Post.

San Diego-based Qualcomm is offering $127.50 a share in cash for its Dutch rival. The U.S. company’s shares were up 1 percent at 4.22 a.m. in pre-market trading in New York Friday. NXP’s U.S. shares were up 3 percent at the same time, after surging 10 percent in after hours trading.

Qualcomm's NXP Deal Is Said to Be Approved by Chinese Regulators

China’s review of Qualcomm’s largest-ever acquisition has been languishing amid an escalating trade fight with the U.S., with NXP and Chinese telecom giant ZTE Corp. becoming bargaining chips in the negotiations. ZTE shares began trading again in Hong Kong earlier this week after the company agreed to a settlement with the U.S. Commerce Department over its business practices, but Senate lawmakers are pushing to keep stiff sanctions on the company, leaving the agreement’s prospects unclear.

Late last month, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News that Chinese regulators had cleared all factual investigations on the NXP deal and were satisfied with the remedies Qualcomm offered. China would approve the deal if it was assured the seven-year ban on ZTE would be lifted, the people said.

Qualcomm, which had promised investors that it would have the deal closed by the end of 2017, wants NXP to diversify its sources of revenue. NXP would give it a stronger presence in the growing market for automotive chips and lessen its dependence on the slowing market for smartphones. If the deal falls apart, Qualcomm would owe NXP a $2 billion breakup fee.

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