(Bloomberg) --

Apple Inc. was fined a record 1.1 billion euros ($1.2 billion) by French antitrust regulators for anti-competitive agreements with suppliers that thwarted independent resellers.

The French competition authority also fined two of Apple’s wholesalers -- Tech Data and Ingram Micro -- 62.9 million euros and 76.1 million euros for taking part in the sales curbs.

“Apple and its two wholesalers agreed to not compete against each other and prevent resellers from promoting competition between each other, thus sterilizing the wholesale market for Apple products,” Isabelle de Silva, head of the French agency, said in a statement on Monday.

The Apple fine is the latest crackdown on U.S. tech giant by the French watchdog. It fined Google 150 million euros late last year for setting “opaque” rules for its Google Ads advertising platform that it applied unfairly and randomly.

Apple didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The fine comes after Apple said Saturday it’s closing its hundreds of retail stores outside of Greater China until March 27 and is moving to remote work in order to help reduce the spread of coronavirus.

Monday’s fine dwarfs the previous record antitrust penalty in France for a company -- 350 million euros -- which was handed down to Orange SA in 2015.

The French regulator said the Apple case was prompted by a complaint lodged by eBizcuss, an Apple premium reseller, in 2012.

--With assistance from Helene Fouquet.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gaspard Sebag in Paris at gsebag@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Anthony Aarons at aaarons@bloomberg.net, Peter Chapman

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