Apple's shares fell due to the antitrust proceedings of the US Department of Justice

Apple's shares fell due to the antitrust proceedings of the US Department of Justice

Kyiv  •  UNN

March 22 2024, 09:19 AM • 27911 views

Apple shares fell by almost 4%, the biggest drop since August 2023, after the US Department of Justice and 15 states sued the company for monopolizing the smartphone market.

Apple shares are under pressure after the US Department of Justice and 15 US states sued Apple, accusing the company of monopolizing the smartphone market. Apple shares have now lost almost 4%, recording the largest price loss since August 2023, UNN reports , citing Reuters, Finanzmarkt Welt, and Finance Yahoo.

Details

Apple's stock price falls as the Department of Justice and 15 US states sue Apple, accusing the company of monopolizing the smartphone market, the first major antitrust lawsuit against the iPhone maker.

Apple shares lost almost 4% during this time, recording the largest drop since August 2023

- Finanzmarkt Welt reports.

Up to $100 billion has been lost from Apple's market valuation. Yesterday, the stock's decline was recorded at 3.8%, which is enough to remove $100 billion from the tech giant's market capitalization, Finance Yahoo writes.

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The California-based company has also been under scrutiny by regulators in Europe, and earlier this month was fined €1.84 billion ($2 billion) for hindering competition in music streaming through restrictions on its App Store, Reuters notes.

Apple is appealing the fine, but faces more scrutiny under the block's Digital Markets Law, new rules for big tech that came into effect earlier this month.

Among other lawsuits against Apple  is a class action lawsuit filed on March 1 in a federal court in San Jose, California, which accuses the company of monopolizing the cloud storage market in its mobile devices.

Recall

This week, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) will file a lawsuit against Apple, the iPhone company, for allegedly violating antitrust laws. Apple is accused of creating obstacles for competitors to gain access to the iPhone's hardware and software features.