Business World

Lawmakers ask US Treasury to block Chinese takeover of Lattice Semiconduc­tor

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WASHINGTON — More than 20 US Congress members wrote to US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew on Monday asking for the acquisitio­n of US chip maker Lattice Semiconduc­tor Corp. by a fund with ties to China’s government to be blocked over security concerns.

The letter follows a Reuters report last week that revealed that Canyon Bridge Capital Partners, the buyout fund that agreed to acquire Lattice for $1.3 billion, is funded partly by cash originatin­g from China’s central government and has indirect links to its space program.

In their letter, the 22 lawmakers wrote that the deal could disrupt the US military supply chain and possibly lead to a reliance on foreign-sourced technologi­es for many critical US Defense department programs.

They also pointed to a warning last month by US Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker that the United Stated will not accept China’s “$150-billion industrial policy designed to appropriat­e this industry.”

“Anything other than a rejection of the acquisitio­n of Lattice by this People’s Republic of China-front entity would seem to undermine Secretary Pritzker’s public commitment,” the lawmakers’ letter stated.

The members of Congress, Republican and Democrat, wrote to Lew in his capacity as chairman of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), a government panel that scrutinize­s the acquisitio­ns of companies by foreign firms on national security grounds.

Representa­tives for CFIUS and Canyon Bridge did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. Lattice declined to comment.

Portland, Oregon-based Lattice makes programmab­le chips known as “field programmab­le gate arrays” that allow companies to put their own software on silicon chips for different uses. It does not sell chips to the US military, but its two biggest rivals — Xilinx, Inc. and Intel Corp.’s Altera — make chips that are used in military technology.

China has been working to develop its space program for military, commercial and scientific purposes. As a result, the United States has been wary of China’s motives in semiconduc­tor deals, and this skepticism is expected to grow after US President-elect Donald Trump, which has already taunted China on issues ranging from trade to relations with Taiwan, is inaugurate­d next month.

In their letter, the lawmakers called on CFIUS to act as decisively as it did in the case of German semiconduc­tor equipment maker Aixtron SE. Last week, US President Barack Obama upheld a recommenda­tion by CFIUS to block Aixtron’s €670-million ($ 717- million) sale to Fujian Grand Chip Investment Fund over national security concerns. —

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