UPDATE 1-EU probes Taiwan LCD makers in price-fixing case
* AU, Chi Mei receive EU's anti-cartel documents
* Both companies to look into the matter
* Issue has little impact on AU, Chi Mei shares so far (Adds AU comment, details, closing prices)
By Argin Chang
TAIPEI, July 14 (Reuters) - Taiwan's top two LCD panel makers said on Tuesday they had received documents from the European Union as part of an EU investigation into price fixing by some of the world's biggest manufacturers in the sector.
AU Optronics (2409.TW), the world's third-largest LCD maker and Taiwan's biggest, and Chi Mei Optoelectronics (3009.TW), the island's second-largest, said they were looking into the charges by the European Commission.
"The company confirms that it has received such a document. The company is reviewing the relevant documents and will reply to the commission in due course," AU said in a statement filed to the Taiwan stock exchange after markets closed.
Earlier in the day, an official from Chi Mei told Reuters that it was looking into the matter, but declined to elaborate.
On Monday, the European Commission said it had sent statements of objections to a number of liquid-crystal display makers for suspected violation of anti-cartel rules, but did not name the companies involved.
South Korea's LG Display (034220.KS) and Dutch electronics company Philips (PHG.AS) said they had received statements from the commission regarding the issue. [ID:nLD622564]
A statement of objections is a formal step in EU anti-trust investigations through which the commission informs parties concerned about objections raised against them, though it does not prejudge the final outcome of the procedure.
The LCD manufacturing sector, one of the few bright spots in the weak global tech sector, is largely dominated by Asian players.
On Tuesday, AU shares ended 6.51 percent higher, while Chi Mei was up 4.14 percent. Both stocks outperformed the benchmark TAIEX share index's 1.66 percent rise as investors focused on prospects of better demand in the second half of 2009. (Writing by Lee Chyen Yee, editing by Will Waterman)
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