Los Angeles Times

PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel diverges from the global business community by stoking anti-China sentiment.

After missing out on investment­s, venture capitalist Thiel veers from convention by feeding into trade war.

- By Lizette Chapman Chapman writes for Bloomberg.

Peter Thiel is a self-described contrarian. This philosophy worked well when he helped establish an online bank — PayPal — at a time few people trusted anything on the internet and, more recently, with his bet on the ultimate longshot presidenti­al candidate, Donald Trump. Understand­ing where his latest gambit, a very public rebuke of the world’s second-largest economy, fits into this strategy is as complex as his belief system.

In a pair of recent public appearance­s and, on Thursday, a New York Times opinion piece, Thiel diverged from virtually everyone in the global business community by stoking anti-China sentiment and goading the Trump administra­tion to intensify the trade war. Thiel can take this position because, either by accident or by design, the Chinese economy is largely irrelevant to his business interests.

Thiel’s network of venture capital and personal funds manages more than $7 billion and has bet on hundreds of start-ups. Of those, there are only three known investment­s in Chinese companies, according to a study by market research firm PitchBook commission­ed by Bloomberg. The most recent was in a small Beijing biotech start-up early this year. None of the companies appears to be thriving.

Depending on how you look at it, Thiel’s new Chinese offensive is a bitter response to missing the investment opportunit­y of the decade or a brilliant long game that’s finally coming to a climax. His protection­ist rhetoric, in which he accused Google of “seemingly treasonous” collaborat­ions with the Chinese government, initially won plaudits from President Trump and could return benefits to his companies. A spokesman for Thiel declined to comment.

Three of Thiel’s most promising investment­s — Elon Musk’s SpaceX, data mining company Palantir Technologi­es Inc. and border security provider Anduril Industries Inc. — rely heavily on U.S. contracts. Those deals have grown in size, and the companies now supply crucial capabiliti­es to the nation’s defense and military complex.

Although federal contract approvals are supposed to be an objective process, emotional appeals and a sense of patriotism can have an effect, said Mike Hermus, a former technology chief for the Homeland Security Department. “The people who make decisions are still human,” he said. “People can only compartmen­talize so much.”

Thiel didn’t always look on China with scorn. He once viewed it as an economic wonder and characteri­zed its rise as “the most important political trend of the new millennium.” In a 2008 essay for Stanford University’s Hoover Institutio­n, a public policy think tank, Thiel wrote: “There is no good scenario for the world in which China fails.” By 2014, his curiosity took on a dismissive tone. In his book “Zero to One,” he wrote that Chinese technologi­sts simply copied ideas from the West.

A persistent view Thiel has held is that China doesn’t make it easy for foreigners to buy a stake in the country’s prosperity. “I suspect we are underestim­ating China, but it may be very hard to invest,” he told economist Tyler Cowen in 2015. In the meantime, several of his peers found ways in. Yuri Milner’s DST Global and Sequoia Capital have been backing Chinese start-ups for a decade or more, with bets on the likes of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., JD.com Inc. and Xiaomi Corp. that proved to be incredibly lucrative.

Thiel’s picks, meanwhile, haven’t become household names on the mainland. He invested $180,000 a decade ago in a Shanghai market intelligen­ce start-up called Business Connect China, said a spokeswoma­n for his venture firm Founders Fund. (She disputed that Business Connect China is a Chinese company because it’s incorporat­ed in the Cayman Islands.) According to PitchBook research, Thiel bought an undisclose­d amount of stock in Beijing’s Genome Precision in 2016. And this year’s investment was in Immunochin­a, which has raised less than $30 million from half a dozen backers including Thiel to develop cancer treatments.

As recently as last year, Thiel was still contemplat­ing how to break into China. He evaluated various options, including partnering with local venture firms, people familiar with the conversati­ons said at the time. Those talks never progressed, some of those people now say. It’s essentiall­y too late, said Helen Wong, a partner at Qiming Venture Partners. Today’s market is highly competitiv­e and leaves little room for an outsider, she said: “China is one of the two largest tech ecosystems in the world.”

The new contrarian strategy, it seems, is to turn a weak business record in China into an asset. By targeting Google with his unsubstant­iated claim last month, Thiel suggested associatio­ns with Beijing should be a disqualifi­er for a U.S. contractor. Trump at first entertaine­d the idea, promising in a tweet that the White House would look into Thiel’s claims of treason and calling him “a great and brilliant guy.” The sideshow appeared to temporaril­y take heat off Facebook Inc., where Thiel is a board member. But Google denied the claims, and Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin said last week that they found no security concerns.

Some in Thiel’s orbit said the venture capitalist’s concerns are authentic. “He’s a very patriotic guy,” said John Meyer, who received a grant from Thiel’s fellowship program to start a company in lieu of attending college. “If Google is building an AI office in Beijing and hiring a ton of AI engineers there, that means it’s working with the Chinese government in some way. He’s worried about that.”

Thiel’s stance could also win him fans in Washington. The three major U.S. contractor­s in which he holds stakes have at times echoed Thiel’s message of American loyalty. They have a lot of money riding on federal spending.

Just this year, SpaceX has won more than $350 million from the Air Force, Defense Department and NASA. Palantir, which counts Thiel as a founder and chairman, secured a contract worth more than $800 million from the Army in March and another in July from the Defense Department for $144 million.

In the second agreement, which hasn’t been previously reported, Palantir will supply software to intelligen­ce agencies and the Coast Guard over four years. This deal was particular­ly significan­t because it wasn’t open to competing bids and establishe­d Palantir as a “brand name” federal provider of defense technology, in the same league as Microsoft Corp. and Oracle Corp. The designatio­n can set a precedent, said Meagan Metzger, who runs the Washington-based Dcode accelerato­r, which consults with tech companies on federal contractin­g. “When you do a brand-name contract of that size, you have to get a bunch of approvals up the chain,” she said. “That’s a huge award.”

The newest addition to Thiel’s portfolio of government suppliers is digital surveillan­ce company Anduril. Palmer Luckey, founder of the Facebook-owned virtual-reality headset Oculus, runs the business, which, like Palantir, takes its name from the lore of the book series “The Lord of the Rings,” which Thiel loved. Anduril is staffed by more than a dozen Palantir veterans and funded largely by Thiel’s Founders Fund.

Anduril has gained significan­t traction inside the U.S. government in the two years since it started operating. The start-up quietly took over the military’s Project Maven this year, according to a news report in the Intercept, after Google faced employee protests and abandoned the effort. Anduril also secured a $13.5million contract with the U.S. Marine Corps to provide autonomous surveillan­ce towers on the border and at military bases, according to documents surfaced in July by worker advocacy group Mijente.

Thiel’s love of country is being embraced throughout his empire. One of the newest additions to the Founders Fund investing team, Delian Asparouhov, posted a photo on Twitter on July 17 showing the office decor set to commemorat­e a visit from Luckey to discuss Anduril. A U.S. flag was draped across a whiteboard in the conference room, as he held a red, white and blue napkin emblazoned with the words, “USA all day.”

 ?? Getty Images ?? PETER THIEL, co-founder of PayPal, recently diverged from the global business community by stoking antiChina sentiment and goading the Trump administra­tion to intensify the trade war with Beijing.
Getty Images PETER THIEL, co-founder of PayPal, recently diverged from the global business community by stoking antiChina sentiment and goading the Trump administra­tion to intensify the trade war with Beijing.

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