China approves Google's Motorola Mobility bid

21 May 2012
By Sofia Mitra-Thakur
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Google homepage displayed on Motorola handset

Google

Google said that China has approved its $12.5 billion purchase of Motorola Mobility Holdings.

Chinese authorities were the last regulatory hurdle for in the deal top internet search engine Google, which will now be able to develop its own line of smartphones.

Google, which will be the newest entrant to the handset market, announced plans for the acquisition last year in a bid to secure Motorola's valuable patents and pave the way for a pairing of Google's Android mobile software and Motorola's handset business.

U.S. and European regulators approved the deal in February, leaving only the Chinese regulators as potential spoilers.

"Our stance since we agreed to acquire Motorola has not changed, and we look forward to closing the deal," Google spokeswoman Niki Fenwick said, confirming that the Chinese had approved the deal.

Google, whose Android software is the top operating system for internet-enabled smartphones, wants phone-maker Motorola for its 17,000 patents and 7,500 patent applications, as it looks to compete with rivals such as Apple and defend itself and Android phone manufacturers in patent litigation.

A main condition of the deal is that the Android system remain free and open for five years, said a source who is familiar with the Chinese approval but not authorized to discuss it.

"We are pleased that the deal has received approval in all jurisdictions and we expect to close early next week," Motorola spokeswoman Jennifer Weyrauch-Erickson said.

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