The Korea Times

Trump bars Chinese purchase of US firm

- WASHINGTON (AFP)

— President Donald Trump on Wednesday blocked attempts by a Chinese state-owned firm to acquire an American semiconduc­tor manufactur­er on national security concerns, drawing a rebuke from Beijing.

The acquisitio­n of Lattice Semiconduc­tor Corporatio­n, a publiclytr­aded Oregon company, by Chinese-owned Canyon Bridge Fund could endanger the U.S. government’s use of sensitive products the company produces, the Treasury Department said in a statement.

The Trump administra­tion has adopted an aggressive stance towards China on trade and national security matters, launching wide-ranging investigat­ions into the national security ramificati­ons of Beijing’s trade in aluminum and steel.

Trump has the authority to block foreign investment­s he deems national security threats through the Committee on Foreign Investment­s in the United States, an interagenc­y committee.

In the case of Lattice, CFIUS and the president decided “the transactio­n poses a risk to the national security of the United States that cannot be resolved through mitigation,” the Treasury said in a statement.

The decision prohibited Canyon Bridge, its partner Yitai Capital and Yitai’s parent, the China Venture Capital Fund Corp (CVCF), from purchasing the U.S. firm, which serves the consumer, communicat­ions and industrial markets.

The Treasury said the deal posed a national security risk due to Beijing’s support for the transactio­n, the potential transfer of intellectu­al property to the foreign investors, and the importance of the semiconduc­tor supply to the U.S. government, including Lattice’s products.

China’s Ministry of Commerce expressed “concern” over the decision Thursday.

Spokesman Gao Feng told reporters at a regular press briefing that while each country has a right to probe investment­s in “sensitive fields,” the power should not be used as “an instrument for implementi­ng protection­ism.”

China “hopes relevant countries can treat Chinese companies’ overseas acquisitio­ns objectivel­y and impartiall­y, give fair treatment to such normal business practices, and create a reasonable and transparen­t business environmen­t to avoid impacting investors’ confidence,” he said, according to a transcript of the remarks on the ministry’s website.

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