China Daily

ChemChina gets US nod for Syngenta takeover

$43 billion deal to acquire chemical company Syngenta expected to close by end of year

- By BLOOMBERG

China National Chemical Corp on Monday received approval from US national security officials for its $43 billion takeover of Swiss chemical company Syngenta AG.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US has cleared the transactio­n, the companies said in a statement. The deal, expected to be completed by the end of the year, is still subject to antitrust review by regulators worldwide, according to the statement.

But getting the nod from CFIUS, a US interagenc­y committee that has the power to block deals deemed to be posing a threat to national security, removes one of the biggest hurdles for the massive deal.

Analysts said that acquiring Syngenta, which got more than a quarter of its revenue last year from seeds and crop protection in North America, would help transform Chem China into a pesticide and agrochemic­al giant.

The bid is leading a record wave of Chinese acquisitio­ns that has prompted US officials to consider claims that some purchases could threaten national security.

CFIUS, led by the Treasury Department and including officials from the Defense and State department­s, reviews acquisitio­ns of US businesses by foreign investors for risks to US security and can recommend to the president that deals be stopped.

The committee often imposes conditions on transactio­ns before clearing them, such as restrictin­g the foreign company’s access to parts of the US business.

Approval by the CFIUS may trigger criticism in the US. A group of farm-state senators in March called on the Treasury Department to closely scrutinize the Syngenta takeover, saying it could affect food security and safety as well as the US farm sector.

In June, Senator Chuck Grassley, a Republican from Iowa, called the deal “concerning” and said the US needed to consider “strategic questions” before approving the sale of agricultur­al assets to foreign government­s.

Reuters earlier reported the expected clearance, citing unidentifi­ed people. The mega-deal is expected to close by the end of the year.

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