Bangkok Post

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Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu off the hook

- NICK WADHAMS

US plans to ban investment in Alibaba and Tencent were shelved.

US officials deliberate­d but ultimately decided against banning American investment in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Tencent Holdings Ltd, a person familiar with the discussion­s said, removing a cloud of uncertaint­y over Asia’s two biggest corporatio­ns.

The Treasury Department blocked a Pentagon effort to add the two internet firms on grounds they aided the military, the person said, asking not to be identified discussing private talks.

Officials also debated blocking search leader Baidu Inc but dropped the plan, the person added.

The decision removes uncertaint­y hanging over Chinese social media and gaming leader Tencent and Alibaba, the e-commerce titan founded by billionair­e Jack Ma that’s now under intense regulatory scrutiny by Beijing regulators.

President Donald Trump has signed an amended version of his executive order banning investment in Chinese military-linked companies, the White House said in a statement on Wednesday that didn’t mention any company by name.

Imposing a ban on the pair would have marked the most dramatic escalation yet by the outgoing administra­tion, given the sheer size of the two firms and the difficulty unwinding positions.

At more than $1 trillion, their combined market value is nearly twice the size of Spain’s stock market, while the firms together account for about a 10th of the weighting for MSCI Inc’s emerging markets benchmark.

Citing national security, Trump previously signed an executive order in November requiring investors to pull out of Chinese companies linked to that nation’s military.

“The Defence Department will add more companies to the roster,’’ the person said without elaboratin­g.

That would further fray the relationsh­ip between the world’s two largest economies, which have clashed over everything from Covid-19 to Hong Kong.

Authoritie­s in Washington have ramped up efforts to deprive Chinese companies of US capital in the final months of the Trump administra­tion, adding to economic tensions as President-elect Joe Biden prepares to take over this month.

Hasty measures have at times sown confusion in markets and prompted price swings, such as when the New

York Stock Exchange reversed course twice on a decision to delist three Chinese telecommun­ications companies.

The NYSE is now proceeding with its original delisting plan after US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin disagreed with its decision to give the firms a reprieve.

Trump’s order banned trading in affected securities starting Jan 11. If Biden leaves Trump’s executive order in place, US investment firms and pension funds would be required to sell their holdings by Nov 11.

And if the US determines additional companies have military ties in the future, investors will be given 60 days to divest.

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