Apple Magazine

US TREASURY ISSUES NEW RULES ON FOREIGN INVESTMENT­S

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The Treasury Department issued new rules on foreign investment­s into American companies that will give the government more power to block foreign transactio­ns on national security grounds.

The rules, which represent the latest escalation in an intensifyi­ng economic conflict between the United States and China, will implement a program for tougher reviews of foreign acquisitio­ns that Congress approved this summer.

The regulation­s will require foreign investors to alert a Treasury-led interagenc­y committee to all deals that would give the foreign investors access to critical technology covering 27 industries, including semiconduc­tors, telecommun­ications and defense.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the new interim rules will “address specific risks to U.S. critical technology” while also giving officials critical informatio­n they can use in developing the final rules.

The law Congress passed in August did not single out China, but it was clear lawmakers and the Trump administra­tion had Beijing in mind. The administra­tion has accused China of using predatory tactics to steal American technology.

The administra­tion has imposed penalty tariffs on about $250 billion of Chinese imports, triggering retaliatio­n by China, as a trade war between the world’s two biggest economies has widened.

As part of the trade battle, President Donald Trump had initially ordered the Treasury Department to draft investment restrictio­ns aimed specifical­ly at China. But in June, Trump decided to back Congress’ effort to tighten existing investment restrictio­ns by increasing the powers of the existing Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or CFIUS.

This Treasury-led inter-agency panel was given the power to review investment­s that grant foreigners access to a U.S. company’s hightech secrets. Before the law was strengthen­ed, the committee could only review foreign investment­s that were big enough to give the foreign group control of the U.S. company.

The new rules , published Wednesday in the Federal Register, will go into effect on Nov. 10 and will implement a pilot program covering an initial 27 industries. Officials will use the experience gained from these reviews to craft expanded regulation­s which will fully implement the new law.

The legislatio­n received strong bi-partisan support in Congress, with lawmakers from both parties expressing concerns about the need to prevent China from obtaining American technology by buying or investing in U.S. companies.

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Image: Mihai Andritoiu
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Image: Jonathan Hayward
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