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New Samsung S7 (right) and S7 edge smartphones are displayed at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, Feb. 21, 2016. REUTERS/Albert Gea/File Photo

The U.S. International Trade Commission is launching an investigation into mobile devices made by eight smartphone vendors, including Samsung Electronics Co., over an alleged patent violation, the trade panel said on its website.

The probe follows a complaint filed by Singapore-based Creative Technology Ltd. and U.S.-based Creative Labs Inc. that several handset makers have infringed on their patent, the ITC said in a statement.

The accused vendors are ZTE Corp., Sony Corp., Samsung, LG Electronics Inc., Lenovo Group Ltd., Motorola Mobility, HTC Corp. and Blackberry Ltd.

"The products at issue in the investigation are portable electronic devices, such as smartphones, with the capability of playing stored media files selected by a user from a hierarchical display," the ITC wrote.

The trade panel said it has not yet made any decision on the merits of the case and will decide a target date for completing investigation within 45 days after the institution of the investigation.

Creative Technology was not immediately available for comment. HTC said it cannot comment, as the case has entered the court process.

Samsung and LG said they are looking into the case and didn't have any other immediate comment. Sony declined to comment. ZTE, Lenovo and other vendors were not immediately available.

"It's rare to see so many vendors involved in one patent infringement case," Nicole Peng, an analyst at research firm Canalys, said.

While the share price reaction of most Asia-based companies was muted, Hong Kong-listed shares of ZTE tumbled 11 percent Friday to their lowest since July 2013. The Shenzhen-based company faced export restrictions imposed by the U.S. Commerce Department in March for allegedly violating sanctions against Iran.