Investment, both direct investment by companies
and venture capital flows, between the two countries fell 16.2%
to $10.9 billion in January-June from the same period a year
earlier - also hurt by the coronavirus pandemic, according to
figures from consultancy Rhodium Group.
That's a far cry from half-yearly totals of nearly $40 billion
seen in 2016 and 2017.
Citing national security risks posed by Chinese technology
firms, U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has sharply
expanded actions to hobble Chinese companies.
This has included putting telecoms giant Huawei Technologies Co
Ltd on its trade blacklist, threatening similar action for
Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp <0981.HK> and
ordering TikTok owner ByteDance to divest the short-form video
app.
ByteDance is currently seeking approval for a deal with Oracle
Corp <ORCL.N> that is structured as a partnership rather than an
outright sale.
"At a time of rising discomfort with US-China technology
integration numerous other companies - both Chinese firms
operating in the U.S. and U.S. firms with a presence in China
may be forced to divest," the report said.
It added that the U.S. treatment of ByteDance and the broader
shift away from U.S.-China technology integration may lead to
policies which make it more difficult for U.S. tech firms to
operate in China.
Investment by U.S. firms in China in the first half tumbled 31%
to $4.1 billion, while investment by Chinese companies in the
United States rose 38% to $4.7 billion, the report said. That
was mostly due to one deal - a Tencent Music <TME.N> -led
consortium’s purchase of a minority stake in Universal Music
group for $3.4 billion.
(Reporting by Alun John; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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