Trump pressures federal pension to halt planned Chinese
stock purchases
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[May 13, 2020] By
Alexandra Alper
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration is pressing an independent board charged with overseeing
billions in federal retirement dollars to freeze plans to invest in
Chinese companies that Washington suspects of abusing human rights or
threatening U.S. security.
At issue is whether administrators of the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP), a
retirement savings fund for federal employees and members of the
military, should allow its $40 billion international fund (I-Fund) to
track an index that includes some China-based stocks of companies under
scrutiny in Washington.
The TSP's administrators, known as the Federal Retirement Thrift
Investment Board, decided in 2017 to make the investment shift in the
second half of 2020 to boost returns. They have begun opening custodial
accounts abroad to channel the funds.
But China hard-liners in Washington have pushed back. They say U.S.
federal employee pension dollars should not fund firms such as aircraft
and avionics company Aviation Industry Corp of China [SASADY.UL], which
supplies China's military, as well as surveillance company Hangzhou
Hikvision Digital Technology Co Ltd, which was sanctioned by Washington
for human right abuses.
They also point to heightened risk for investors, since Chinese
companies do not have to comply with strict U.S. financial disclosure
rules.
Using the excuse of national security to restrict access to China's
markets goes against economic rules and damages U.S. investors' own
interests, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian, said at a
daily briefing in Beijing on Wednesday.
Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia, whose department oversees FRTIB, on
Monday sent a letter to the board's chairman Michael Kennedy, telling
him to "halt all steps" associated with the investment change, a copy of
the letter seen by Reuters showed.
The investment shift "would place millions of federal employees,
retirees, and service-members in the untenable position of choosing
between forgoing any investment in international equities or placing
billions of dollars in retirement savings in risky companies that pose a
threat to U.S. national security," Scalia wrote.
FRTIB spokeswoman Kim Weaver declined to comment on the letter. However,
U.S. law gives the board the authority to "develop investment policies"
and discharge its duties solely in the interest of the plan's
participants, casting Scalia's remarks as recommendations.
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U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak response briefing in the Rose Garden at the
White House in Washington, U.S., May 11, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
"TSP participants want investment options that pass the fiduciary responsibility
test, not any political test," said Jacqueline Simon, policy director of
American Federation of Government Employees, a federal employee union. "If you
don't want the I Fund, you don't have to put any of your money in it."
The Scalia letter was sent after National Security Adviser Robert O'Brien and
National Economic Adviser Larry Kudlow wrote to Scalia expressing opposition to
the investment move, according to a copy of that letter seen by Reuters.
It cited "significant and unnecessary economic risk" of investing in Chinese
companies," noting "the possibility of future sanctions will result from the
culpable actions of the Chinese government" with respect to the spread of the
deadly coronavirus.
Trump has accused Beijing of failing to alert the world to the severity and
scope of the virus, which has killed more than 80,0000 Americans and originated
in the city of Wuhan, China late last year. China has denied the allegations.
The letters, first revealed by Fox Business Network and Bloomberg News, coincide
with mounting pressure on the White House to stop the investments. Reuters
reported last month that lawmakers and former officials were making a last-ditch
push to halt the plan, after legislation to prevent the change languished in
Congress.
Earlier this month, the White House named three nominees to sit on the FRTIB,
which could pave the way for a reversal of the investment decision. But it is
unclear when their confirmation processes will move forward.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper; Additional reporting by Rodrigo Campos; Editing
by Dan Grebler, Alistair Bell and Barbara Lewis)
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