The Borneo Post

China says protection­ist sentiment rising in US as deals fall apart

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BEIJING: China said yesterday protection­ist sentiment is rising in the United States and criticised Washington for blocking a high-profile Chinese takeover of a US financial firm on security grounds.

Ant Financial’s planned US$1.2 billion purchase of transfer firm MoneyGram Internatio­nal Inc collapsed last week after a US government panel rejected the deal over national security concerns.

It was the most high- profile Chinese deal to be torpedoed since Donald Trump was elected US president a year ago on promises to put America first and protect US jobs from foreign competitor­s.

“We’ve noticed recently that protection­ist voices have been rising in the US,” Ministry of Commerce spokesman Gao Feng said in a briefing.

China was particular­ly worried about countries using national security concerns as a way to block foreign investment, he added.

Ant Financial is owned by Chinese internet conglomera­te Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.

In another blow to the global ambitions of Chinese firms, Huawei Technologi­es Co’s planned deal with US carrier AT&T Inc to sell its smartphone­s in the United States also fell apart because of security concerns, people with knowledge of the matter said on Wednesday.

The failed deals come as the US considers several new tariff moves in the coming weeks, including broad restrictio­ns on steel and aluminium imports and punitive actions against China arising from an investigat­ion into Beijing’s alleged theft of intellectu­al property.

“(Trade) remains foremost in my mind as a risk for China because it’s something they can’t control,” said Michael Spencer, chief Asia Pacific economist for Deutsche Bank.

“But my base case is that we will see more trade frictions this year than last, but that it’s not going to led to a significan­t decline in real exports from China.”

An editorial in the official China Daily on Thursday blamed the terminatio­n of the Huawei-AT&T deal on political pressure instead of business considerat­ions, and said this threatened the kind of win-win deals China sought.

“This is not the first time US politician­s have stooped to mudslingin­g to prevent the entry of Chinese high-tech companies into the US market on the pretext they pose national security threats,” it said.

Washington’s criticism of China’s tightly controlled economy and restrictio­ns on foreign investment rang hollow, it added.

“Its blocking of deals involving Chinese companies in sectors where it has traditiona­lly had an advantage shows its criticisms have more validity if directed at the US market,” the editorial said. — Reuters

We’ve noticed recently that protection­ist voices have been rising in the US. Gao Feng, Ministry of Commerce spokesman

 ??  ?? Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen stand in front of two hearts as they hold bilateral talks in Phnom Penh, Cambodia January 11. — Reuters photo
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen stand in front of two hearts as they hold bilateral talks in Phnom Penh, Cambodia January 11. — Reuters photo

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