Global Times

Foreign Ministry urges ‘predictabl­e environmen­t’ for investment in US

- By Chen Qingqing

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has called for a predictabl­e environmen­t for Chinese companies after Ant Financial Services Group failed on Tuesday to close a deal for US money transfer company MoneyGram.

Ant Financial, the online financial services of Alibaba Group, and MoneyGram announced they would terminate the proposed merger deal due to failure to win approval from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (CFIUS), according to a statement the Chinese company sent to the Global Times.

Chinese companies have encountere­d increased pressure when it comes to merger and acquisitio­n (M&A) deals in the US in recent years.

“The geopolitic­al environmen­t has changed considerab­ly since we first announced the proposed transactio­n with Ant Financial nearly a year ago,” Alex Holmes, CEO of MoneyGram, was quoted as saying in the statement.

MoneyGram and Ant had entered into an amended merger agreement under which Ant Financial was to have acquired all of the outstandin­g shares of MoneyGram for $18.00 each in cash.

Ant will pay MoneyGram a $30 million as terminatio­n fee.

China said on Wednesday that it hopes the US can create a level playing field and a predictabl­e environmen­t for Chinese enterprise­s, Reuters reported.

The comment from Foreign Ministry Spokespers­on Geng Shuang at a regular news conference was in response to a question from reporters about a US government panel’s rejection of Ant Financial’s acquisitio­n of MoneyGram over national security concerns, according to the media report.

“The failed deal reflects an overall tighter scrutiny of US authoritie­s over Chinese investors since last year,” a source close to the deal told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Since President Donald Trump took office, the US government has been overly defensive toward Chinese investment, which has hindered the “enthusiasm” of Chinese investors to do business in the US, the source noted.

For example, the Trump administra­tion blocked the sale of Lattice Semiconduc­tor Corp to Chinesebac­ked private equity firm Canyon Bridge Capital Partners for national security reasons in September 2017.

Two months later, Chinese private company CEFC China Energy withdrew from a $275 million deal with US financial services firm Cowen Inc due to objections from the CFIUS.

The value of China’s M&A deals in the US dropped nearly 80 percent on a year-on-year basis in 2017, to $13.6 billion, according to a report Thomas Reuters sent to the Global Times in December 2017.

“The high-tech sector has been targeted amid the CFIUS reviews, as some technologi­es could be applied into sensitive areas such as mili-tary and telecommun­ications,” Hao Junbo, a lawyer at Beijing-based Hao Law Firm, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

“Also, the US government is likely to have a biased perspectiv­e on Chi nese technology companies, espe cially when it is about the security of data and informatio­n, which has had a negative impact on M&A deals,” he said.

Since 2015, Ant has been expanding actively overseas and served 36 countries and regions worldwide.

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