
by Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
BRUSSELS (Worthy News) –
The case stems from 2016 when the European Union’s executive European Commission ordered Ireland to recover the missing billions.
The European Court of Justice’s decision resulted from some ten years of legal wrangling. It came hours after the company unveiled new products to revitalize its iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPod lineups.
The news also renewed questions about Berkshire Hathaway, the firm of U.S. top investor Warren Buffett, which sold half of its Apple shares in the second quarter for a total of $76 billion.
Data showed that as Apple stock went up in the second quarter, the portfolio value of Berkshire Hathaway’s stake went from $135 billion to $84 billion.
While some shrugged off those moves, saying Apple remains an important part of Buffet’s portfolio, critics wondered whether the legendary investor knew bad news was coming for Apple.
COMPETITION DIRECTORATE
Tuesday’s ECJ move also revitalized debates about the EU’s perceived strict and complicated rules for companies seeking to expand their economic clout.
In 2016, the European Union’s competition directorate decided that Ireland had granted Apple a sweetheart tax deal that enabled it to pay a corporate tax rate as low as 0.05 percent on its European profits.
Like most Big Tech firms, Apple’s EU base is in Ireland, which offers comparatively generous tax terms and light-touch regulation.
The European Commission found that Dublin had given Apple an even sweeter tax deal than usual to preserve thousands of jobs in the country.
The Commission argued that Apple’s special treatment amounted to “illegal, market-distorting” state aid that needed to be paid back. Four years later, Apple’s appeal to the EU’s General Court, which handles appeals of Commission decisions, proved successful.
The Commission’s ruling was overturned, with the General Court finding that it hadn’t proven Ireland gave Apple a particular advantage over its peers after Apple CEO Tim Cook called it “total political crap.”
However, the European Commission then appealed to the Court of Justice of the EU, the bloc’s highest court.
OVERTURNING RULING
The ECJ agreed with antitrust commissioner Margrethe Vestager that Apple must pay 13 billion euros and that Ireland must collect it.
The ECJ also upheld the 2.4 billion euro ($2.7 billion) fine that her department levied on U.S. tech giant Google in 2017.
The court agreed that Google had been favoring its comparison shopping service in its regular search results by downranking rivals when the user searched for clothes or washing machines.
“Today is a big win for European citizens and for tax justice,” Vestager said.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei’s statement following the signing of a memorandum of understanding with the United States is being viewed by analysts not as an embrace of peace, but as a carefully crafted declaration that preserves Tehran’s revolutionary posture while allowing the regime to regroup.
The United States imposed new sanctions Thursday on individuals and entities linked to Hezbollah, accusing them of using political and financial influence to obstruct Lebanon’s peace process and delay the Iran-backed group’s disarmament.
Ukraine launched one of its largest drone attacks on Moscow since the war began, hitting a key oil refinery and other targets around the Russian capital, leaving at least one person dead and numerous others injured, Russian officials said.
Russian President Vladimir Putin hosted Southeast Asian leaders in Kazan this week as Moscow moved to deepen ties with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and promote its vision of a “multipolar world order” aimed at countering U.S. global dominance.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that Israeli troops will not withdraw from southern Lebanon and will maintain a security zone there for as long as Israel’s defense needs require, placing Jerusalem at odds with both Tehran and the terms of a U.S.-Iran memorandum that calls for an end to hostilities in Lebanon.
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told NATO leaders Thursday that the Pentagon is launching a six-month review of U.S. force posture and basing in Europe, signaling a major push by the Trump administration to ensure European allies assume primary responsibility for defending the continent.
President Donald Trump has invoked the Cold War-era Defense Production Act to accelerate the production of U.S. munitions, missiles, interceptors, and critical defense components as American stockpiles face mounting strain from the war with Iran and years of heavy weapons transfers to allies, including Ukraine and Israel.