$1bn wiped off Samsung market value after Obama vetoes Apple ban

The South Korean tech giant loses $1 billion market value on Monday after the US decision to veto an import ban on some Apple products. Obama’s surprise veto sparked concerns in Seoul over Samsung patent rights.
  The presidential veto was issued in response to
  June’s ruling by the US International Trade Commission (ITC) that
  approved Samsung’s request to ban older iPhones and iPads, on
  which Apple infringed Samsung’s patents. That order affected only
  AT&T iPhone models that included iPhones prior to the iPhone
  4S that was released in US in November 2011, as well as
  3G-enabled versions of the iPad 1 and 2, also released in 2011.
  The ban was supposed to come into effect this week.
  
  After the veto the South Korean government said on Monday 
  it will closely watch  an ITC decision on Friday, when the
  trade body is expected to decide on a potential ban of certain
  Samsung Galaxy mobile products from the US following an Apple
  complaint alleging patent violation, the WSJ reports.
  
  "We hope to see a fair and reasonable decision on the
  matter," the newspaper quotes the government statement.
  
  The South Korean government's statement suggests the legal
  dispute between the two technology giants could escalate into a
  political issue depending on the outcome of the ITC's decision,
  according to the WSJ article.
  
  Obama's veto is likely to ease the intensity of patent wars, the
  WSJ says. The newspaper notes that patent chicanery has increased
  dramatically in recent years: patent lawsuits in the US in 2012
  have increased by 30% to 5189, according to PwC data.
  
  Apple and Samsung are getting tougher on each other as they
  compete  for a share of  the global smartphone market,
  business daily  Vedomosti reports. The companies are
  involved in legal argument in dozens countries. The South Korean
  company controls almost twice the market share in terms of sales of
  smartphones - 32% vs.14% for Apple.













