Representatives Mike Gallagher, Jim Banks and Doug LaMalfa plan
to introduce the bill, which would require Treasury Secretary
Steve Mnuchin to submit a report to Congress listing foreign
defense companies that have "substantial contracts with, ties
to, or support from" the Chinese military.
Six months after the report is issued, American companies and
citizens would be required to divest from those firms and would
be banned from making new investments in them.
"On one hand, Congress is asking taxpayers to help grow our
military so we can compete with China. On the other hand, large
U.S. investment funds are dumping U.S. dollars into China's
military industrial base," Banks said in a statement. "We need
to end our cognitive dissonance and stop funding the rise of our
chief global adversary."
The move comes as the U.S. government has begun extending its
trade and technology battle with Beijing to capital markets, as
ties between the rival nations have soured over the origins of
the deadly coronavirus.
While it was not immediately clear if Democrats or other
Republicans would support the bill, anti-China sentiment is
running high in the Capitol after China moved to curb Hong
Kong's independence. Both the Democratically-led House of
Representatives and the Republican-controlled Senate approved
legislation to punish top Chinese official for human rights
abuses against Uighur Muslims.
On Friday, President Donald Trump said his administration will
study ways to safeguard Americans from the risks of investing in
Chinese companies, ratcheting up pressure on the firms to comply
with U.S. accounting and disclosure rules.
Earlier this month, an independent board tasked with
administering federal worker and military pension funds halted
plans to allow one of its funds to track an index that includes
controversial Chinese companies, under pressure from the White
House.
Those moves came after China's Luckin Coffee, which trades on
the Nasdaq stock exchange, said in April that as much as 2.2
billion yuan ($310 million) in sales last year had been
fabricated.
The revelation strengthened the position of China hawks in the
Trump administration who argue that investors in Chinese
companies are vulnerable to unforeseen risks because they are
not subject to the same auditing and disclosure rules as U.S.
companies.
The Senate passed legislation earlier this month that could
prevent some Chinese companies from listing their shares on U.S.
exchanges unless they follow standards for U.S. audits and
regulations.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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