San Diego Union-Tribune

NYSE WITHDRAWS PLANS TO DELIST 3 CHINESE PHONE FIRMS

Trump administra­tion order had linked the companies to military

- BY JOE MCDONALD

The New York Stock Exchange has withdrawn plans to delist shares of three Chinese state-owned phone carriers. The shares were to be removed under an order from President Donald Trump, a move Beijing had warned might lead to retaliatio­n.

The exchange cited “further consultati­on” with regulators but its announceme­nt late Monday gave no other details.

China’s foreign ministry on Tuesday criticized Washing ton for “suppressin­g foreign companies” but made no direct comment on the NYSE announceme­nt.

The NYSE said Thursday it would remove China Telecom

Corp., China Mobile and China Unicom Hong Kong under Trump’s November order barring Americans from investing in securities issued by companies deemed to be linked to the Chinese military.

The order added to mounting U.S.-Chinese tension over technology, security and spying accusation­s.

The Trump administra­tion has imposed export controls and other sanctions on some Chinese companies, visa curbs on members of the ruling Communist Party and other restrictio­ns.

“The suppressio­n will have very limited impact on Chinese companies, but it will damage the national interest and image of the United States,” said a foreign ministry spokeswoma­n, Han Chunying. She expressed hope Washington will “do more to maintain the order of the global financial market” and protect investors.

Political analysts expect little change in policy under Presidente­lect Joseph Biden due to widespread frustratio­n with China’s trade and human rights records and accusation­s of spying and technology theft.

Trump’s November order bars Americans from investing in securities issued by companies deemed by the Defense Department to be part of efforts to modernize the Communist Party’s military wing, the People’s Liberation Army. The 2 million-member PLA is one of the biggest and most heavily-armed militaries. It is spending heavily to develop nuclear submarines, stealth fighters, ballistic missiles and other advanced weapons.

The Pentagon has added 35 companies to its blacklist. In addition to the phone carriers, they include telecom equipment giant Huawei, China’s biggest maker of processor chips, three stateowned oil producers and constructi­on, aerospace, rocketry, shipbuildi­ng and nuclear power equipment companies.

Hong Kong-traded shares in the three phone carriers surged Tuesday. China Telecom rose 3.4 percent, China Mobile jumped 5.7 percent and China Unicom surged 8.5 percent. Shares in all three have fallen recently.

The Chinese government has accused Washington of misusing national security as an excuse to hamper competitio­n and has warned that Trump’s order would hurt U.S. and other investors worldwide.

On Saturday, the foreign ministry said Beijing would take unspecifie­d “necessary countermea­sures” to protect its companies.

The government made the same announceme­nt following previous U.S. sanctions without taking action.

 ?? MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN AP ?? China Telecom, China Mobile and China Unicom Hong Kong were Chinese state-owned carriers under that were to be delisted.
MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN AP China Telecom, China Mobile and China Unicom Hong Kong were Chinese state-owned carriers under that were to be delisted.

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