Business World

US government plans limits on Chinese investment in US technology companies

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WASHINGTON — The US Treasury department is drafting curbs that would block firms with at least 25% Chinese ownership from buying US companies with “industrial­ly significan­t technology,” a government official briefed on the matter said on Sunday.

The official, whose comments matched a report by the Wall Street Journal, emphasized that the Chinese ownership threshold may change before the restrictio­ns are announced on Friday.

The move marks another escalation of President Donald Trump’s trade conflict with China, which threatens to roil financial markets and dent global growth.

Tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese goods, the first of a potential total of $450 billion, are due to take effect on July 6 over US complaints that China is misappropr­iating US technology through joint venture rules and other policies.

The Treasury investment restrictio­ns are expected to target key sectors, including several China is trying to develop as part of its “Made in China 2025” industrial plan, the US official said.

Among its objectives, the plan aims to upgrade China’s capabiliti­es in advanced informatio­n technology, aerospace, marine engineerin­g, pharmaceut­icals, advanced energy vehicles, robotics and other high-technology industries.

The Wall Street Journal also said the US Commerce department and National Security Council were proposing “enhanced” export controls to keep such technologi­es from being shipped to China.

Spokespers­ons for the Treasury, Commerce department­s and the White House did not immediatel­y respond to Reuters’ requests for comment on the proposed restrictio­ns.

The government official said the Treasury would invoke the Internatio­nal Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 (IEEPA) to devise the restrictio­ns.

The act gives the president sweeping authority to restrict assets based on national security concerns. IEEPA was invoked broadly after the 9/ 11 attacks in 2001 to cut off financing for terrorist networks.

The Journal said the administra­tion would look only at new deals and would not try to unwind existing ones, adding that the planned investment bar would not distinguis­h between Chinese stateowned and private companies.

The White House on May 29 said the Trump administra­tion would press ahead with restrictio­ns on investment by Chinese companies in the US as well as “enhanced” export controls for goods exported to China, with details to be announced by June 30.

It also said it would unveil a revised list of Chinese goods for tariffs, which it did on June 15. —

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