Houston Chronicle

White House denies China investment limits

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The Trump administra­tion has issued a partial — and qualified — denial to the revelation that it is discussing imposing limits on U.S. investment­s in Chinese companies and financial markets as China vowed to continue opening its markets to foreign investment.

Bloomberg News on Friday reported that Larry Kudlow, the head of President Donald Trump’s National Economic Council, was leading deliberati­ons inside the White House over what some hawks have labeled a potential “financial decoupling” of the world’s two largest economies.

The options discussed have included forcing a delisting of Chinese companies from U.S. exchanges, imposing limits on investment­s in Chinese markets by U.S. government pension funds and putting caps on the value of Chinese companies included in indexes managed by U.S. firms, according to people familiar with and involved in the discussion­s.

In a statement emailed to Bloomberg over the weekend, a spokeswoma­n for U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said there were no current plans to stop Chinese companies from listing on U.S. exchanges.

“The administra­tion is not contemplat­ing blocking Chinese companies from listing shares on U.S. stock exchanges at this time,” Treasury spokeswoma­n Monica Crowley said. Crowley did not address any of the other options reported and declined to offer any further details of the discussion­s.

The response came after Friday’s initial Bloomberg report, which was later matched by other news organizati­ons including the Financial Times and New York Times, unnerved markets in the U.S. and led to a slump in U.S.-listed Chinese firms. On Monday, Chinese equities fell in the final session before a weeklong holiday. U.S. stocks advanced, reversing some losses sparked by the news, and Treasuries edged lower.

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro responded to the story Monday in an interview with CNBC. He acknowledg­ed that the White House is looking at issues related to Chinese stocks, while broadly denying Bloomberg’s story as “fake news.” He refused to answer multiple questions from the network’s anchors about what was inaccurate, cutting them off repeatedly.

“There’s some significan­t issues related to Chinese stocks listed on public exchanges,” he said. “There’s some interestin­g and significan­t transparen­cy issues with Chinese stocks, but that’s all I’m going to say, I’m not going to talk about what’s going on behind closed doors.”

The Trump administra­tion is also getting ready to host Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and other senior officials for trade talks expected Oct. 10-11, just days before another threatened increase in U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports is due to take effect.

While both sides are eager to secure at least a short-term truce in what is now an 18-month-old trade war that has started to drag on the global economy, national security hawks inside the Trump administra­tion continue to push for the conflict to be broadened.

The desire by some inside the White house for new controls on the flow of capital to China reflects the multi-dimensiona­l economic war some Trump advisers are eager to wage against a rising economic rival. Beyond the tariffs on some $360 billion in imports from China imposed since last year, the Trump administra­tion is pursuing strict new controls on exports of technology and has taken a skeptical approach to Chinese-backed investment­s in the U.S.

People close to the White House deliberati­ons say they remain preliminar­y and that no final course of action has been decided on. They also insist the focus is on protecting U.S. investors from ending up unwittingl­y with stakes in Chinese companies that do not have the same auditing standards as U.S. listed firms.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? China said possible U.S. moves to limit investment ties would disrupt the global economy following a report that the U.S. might remove Chinese companies from American stock exchanges.
Associated Press file photo China said possible U.S. moves to limit investment ties would disrupt the global economy following a report that the U.S. might remove Chinese companies from American stock exchanges.

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