China Daily

Ant Financial drops bid for MoneyGram

US national security panel’s roadblocks to deal come as Washington toughens stance toward Chinese buyers

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Ant Financial Services Group is calling off its acquisitio­n of US-based MoneyGram Internatio­nal Inc, after failing to gain approval from Washington’s national security panel, which is increasing­ly obstructiv­e toward Chinese investment in US firms.

The demise of the deal is the latest example of political concerns trumping business factors at a time when the White House has toughened its stance on the sale of entities to Chinese buyers, experts said.

The two companies announced on Wednesday the terminatio­n of their merger agreement following the inability to obtain the required approval from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, and instead plan to work together on strategic initiative­s in the remittance and digital-payment markets.

In a written statement, MoneyGram Chief Executive Officer Alex Holmes attributed the failure to a changing “political environmen­t”, saying that the CFIUS will not approve this merger “despite our best efforts to work in cooperatio­n with the US government”.

China hopes the United States can create a level playing field and a stable environmen­t for Chinese enterprise­s, Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said on Wednesday in response to the rejection of the deal.

The proposed transactio­n first surfaced last January, when the Chinese payment giant agreed to pay $880 million for the deal. But it upped its offer to $1.2 billion, or $18 per share in cash, after a US company offered a counterbid in April.

Doug Feagin, president of Ant Financial Internatio­nal, said cooperatio­n on global remittance capabiliti­es will still make its services more accessible to under-banked and underserve­d communitie­s globally, even if a direct ownership relationsh­ip is currently absent.

But the decision still deals a heavy blow to Ant Financial, backed by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s founder Jack Ma, as it seeks to expand internatio­nally to shed reliance on the home market and compete with Tencent Holdings Ltd’s rival payment system.

“It’s more of a political issue than a legal one,” said Ling Xiao, partner of Hui Ye Law Firm. “The future really depends on where the foreign policy of US President Donald Trump is heading.”

Ling said that financial services would be one sector that is vulnerable to getting clearance from the committee, given its backbone status in the US economy and the integrity of personal data.

The collapse of the highprofil­e deal is the latest in a string of Chinese acquisitio­ns of US companies that were torpedoed by the CFIUS. Following US government opposition, aluminum manufactur­er Zhongwang USA LLC dropped its bid to buy US metals producer Aleris Corp in November.

Chinese outbound investment is likely to face more headwinds, as countries including the US tighten their rules and increase their scrutiny of foreign investment, said Han Qi, a researcher at Shanghai Chamrich Equity Investment Fund Management Co Ltd.

For example, newly introduced screening mechanisms have given Germany more time to probe takeover bids and extend the range of deals eligible for examinatio­n by the authoritie­s, he said. “But the judgment of whether a deal breaches national security is highly subjective,” said Han. “Even additional measures and protocols from companies to address concerns could fail to reassure the inspection agencies,” he said.

It’s more of a political issue than a legal one.” Ling Xiao, partner of Hui Ye Law Firm

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