China Daily

Banker warns Washington not to wage investment war with Beijing

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LOS ANGELES — An influentia­l banker warned on Monday that the Trump administra­tion would likely target investment next in the United States-China trade war, but that would only further hurt the US’ interests and economic welfare.

Dominic Ng, CEO of the Los Angeles-based East West Bank, made the remarks in an article sent to Xinhua News Agency. The East West Bank is among the top five on Forbes’ annual list of the US’s Best Banks 2018.

Ng said an investment war is possible, “given this President’s confrontat­ional and unpredicta­ble approach towards China and the internatio­nal economy in general”.

Citing vague and inconsiste­nt statements by President Donald Trump and his senior officials, Ng said the Trump administra­tion could politicize legislatio­n to expand the screening of foreign investment­s, using national security as an excuse.

He said such investment restrictio­ns will further diminish the already shrinking Chinese investment in the US, as well as the associated benefits on the US side.

The banker noticed a sharp drop in the Chinese direct investment in the US this year.

According to a Rhodium Group report issued in late June, Chinese direct investment in the US was estimated to be $1.8 billion in the first five months of 2018, 90 percent down from the same period last year.

Ng blamed the investment decline on “tougher and longer CFIUS (Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States) reviews and a confrontat­ional policy stance toward China”.

“China’s global outbound investment has bounced back to pre-2016 levels, and it is recovering strongly in Europe — a stark contrast to the picture in the US,” Ng commented, adding that additional restrictio­ns on Chinese firms will further divert Chinese capital to Europe and other economies.

As there is no mechanism or government agency legally tasked to implement investment restrictio­ns on a case-bycase basis, he said, the restrictio­ns could finally close the US door to the productive and beneficial foreign direct investment that it really needs.

In the article, the banker cited the US restrictio­ns on Chinese automotive investment as an example, saying it could result in killing investment­s like Fuyao’s auto glass plant in Ohio or Giti Tire’s plant in South Carolina, which “each support hundreds of the bluecollar jobs so important to President Trump”.

In addition, he said, “imposing targeted investment restrictio­ns on one country will also break the US tradition of the indiscrimi­nating openness that has been a pillar of US economic strength by supporting almost 7 million jobs and generating nearly $900 billion in annual economic output.”

“For example, companies from Germany — which has also drawn President Trump’s ire due to perceived unfair trade practices — will wonder if they will be the next targets,” he added.

In the article, Ng warned the Trump administra­tion against underestim­ating China’s ability to respond, saying China’s retaliatio­n could force US companies currently enjoying profits from China’s vast market to deal with potential negative consequenc­es.

Ng called on the US Congress to make sure the new Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernizat­ion Act legislatio­n will keep the CFIUS mandate narrowly focused on national security and not economic criteria.

“They must also ensure that any law is then implemente­d in a narrow and transparen­t way to minimize politiciza­tion and abuse, bolstering the predictabi­lity that foreign investors need,” Ng said.

Meanwhile, the banker advised the Trump administra­tion to refrain from imposing restrictio­ns specifical­ly discrimina­ting against Chinese investors since “it will only further impinge beneficial investment, erode foreign confidence in the US economy and lead to real economic harm for US firms and citizens”.

(investment restrictio­ns) will also break the US tradition of the indiscrimi­nating openness ... ”

Dominic Ng, CEO of the Los Angeles-based East West Bank

 ?? GAO SHAN / XINHUA ?? A worker processes almonds on a production line at a plant in California, the United States. California exported $4.5 billion of almonds in 2016. More than half went to the Chinese market.
GAO SHAN / XINHUA A worker processes almonds on a production line at a plant in California, the United States. California exported $4.5 billion of almonds in 2016. More than half went to the Chinese market.
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