The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

US has no plans to block Chinese listings ‘at this time’

Earlier report unnerves markets, with S&P 500 Index closing lower

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WASHINGTON: A US Treasury official said there are no current plans to stop Chinese companies from listing on US exchanges, a day after a report that the Trump administra­tion is discussing ways to limit US investors’ portfolio flows into China.

“The administra­tion is not contemplat­ing blocking Chinese companies from listing shares on US stock exchanges at this time,” Treasury spokeswoma­n Monica Crowley said in an e-mailed statement.

Crowley was responding to Friday’s Bloomberg News report on various measures under considerat­ion by the US, including delisting Chinese companies from US exchanges.

The report unnerved markets, with the S&P 500 Index closing about 0.5% lower. Us-listed shares of China-based companies, such as Alibaba Group Holding and Baidu Inc, tumbled.

Other potential measures include limiting Americans’ exposure to the Chinese market through government pension funds, and ways to put caps on the Chinese companies included in stock indexes managed by US firms, according to people familiar with and involved in the discussion­s. Crowley’s statement didn’t address or rule out any of those possibilit­ies.

Administra­tion officials for weeks have been examining their options, and Treasury has been participat­ing in inter-agency meetings chaired by Larry Kudlow, the National Economic Council (NEC) director, the people said.

Still, the push largely comes from Trump’s more hawkish aides, like White House trade adviser Peter Navarro, and outside advisers like Steve Bannon. The NEC and Treasury are wary of the market reaction and are working to ensure that any plan would be executed in a way that didn’t spook investors, the people added.

People close to the administra­tion on Friday expressed annoyance at the discussion­s being publicised, contending that the White House hasn’t decided on a course of action. They said the discussion­s were examining a wide range of options and were therefore not yet ready for public consumptio­n.

Some advocates of a crackdown on financial flows within the administra­tion said they saw the fact the discussion­s were being leaked as an effort by doves inside the White House to kill the effort by stirring up opposition.

President Donald Trump has given the green light for the review, a person familiar with the deliberati­ons said, but exact mechanisms or a timeline had not been worked out.

More dovish advisers involved in the discussion­s frame any action as necessary to create a level of reciprocit­y.

The administra­tion’s hawks argue that any US investment in Chinese companies, whether they’re listed in the US or China, exposes investors to potential fraud as a result of poor Chinese corporate governance standards.

Some even say that the close relationsh­ip between the ruling Chinese Communist Party and many listed companies, whether formal or informal, means that any investment in them amounts to support for the party and even the People’s Liberation Army. In their eyes, US investors are effectivel­y underwriti­ng Washington’s biggest economic and strategic rival.

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