U.S. to add more Chinese firms to investment, export blacklists - FT
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[December 15, 2021] (Reuters)
- Shares in Chinese healthcare and
technology firms tumbled on Wednesday after a report that the United
States would add more Chinese firms, including the largest commercial
drone maker and biotech firms, to investment and export blacklists this
week.
Citing two sources briefed on the plans, the Financial Times said the
United States would add eight Chinese firms, including the drone maker,
DJI Technology Co Ltd, to an investment blacklist on Thursday.
The U.S. commerce department is also set to place more than two dozen
Chinese firms, some of them involved in biotechnology, on an "entity
list" restricting exports to them by U.S. firms, the newspaper cited the
sources as saying.
The report hastened a sell-off in Chinese healthcare shares in afternoon
trade, knocking 3.2% off a mainland index tracking the sector against a
drop of 0.87% in the broader index.
The impact was sharper still in Hong Kong, where the Hang Seng
Healthcare Index was down 7.6% in late afternoon trade.
Healthcare firms were already under pressure on Wednesday after Chinese
biotech company BeiGene Ltd plunged on its Shanghai debut, amid worries
that some Chinese firms could be ordered to delist from the U.S. stock
market.
The Financial Times said the U.S. treasury department would put eight
companies including DJI on its "Chinese military-industrial complex
companies" blacklist because of their alleged involvement in
surveillance of the Uyghur Muslim minority.
U.S. investors are barred from taking stakes in companies on the list,
which now comprises about 60 firms.
A DJI spokesperson declined to comment on the report, but directed
Reuters to the company's statement when U.S. commerce department put it
it on the "Entity List" a year ago for the same reasons. That step
barred it from buying or using U.S. technology or components.
At the time, DJI said it had done nothing to justify the move and would
continue to sell products in the United States, where it has built up a
large market.
The U.S. Treasury did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for
comment.
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A man walks past a store of Chinese drone maker DJI in Beijing,
China December 15, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
In Beijing, responding to questions on the FT report, foreign ministry spokesman
Zhao Lijian told a news briefing China was opposed to U.S. "suppression" of its
companies and would pay close attention to how the situation developed.
The new additions come just days after artificial intelligence start-up
SenseTime Group was added to the Treasury list, forcing it to postpone its
$767-million Hong Kong initial public offering (IPO).
SenseTime said the accusations against it were unfounded.
U.N. experts and rights groups estimate more than a million people, mainly
Uyghurs and members of other Muslim minorities, have been detained in recent
years in a vast system of camps in China's far western region of Xinjiang.
Some foreign lawmakers and parliaments have labelled the treatment of Uyghurs as
genocide, citing evidence of forced sterilisations and deaths inside the camps.
China denies this, saying Uyghur population growth exceeds the national average.
Other companies to be added to the list, the FT said, are image-recognition
software firm Megvii, supercomputer maker Dawning Information Industry, facial
recognition specialist CloudWalk Technology, cyber security group Xiamen Meiya
Pico, artificial intelligence company Yitu Technology and cloud computing firms
Leon Technology and NetPosa Technologies.
(Reporting by Shivam Patel in Bengaluru, additional reporting by David Kirton in
Shenzhen, Andrew Galbraith in Shanghai and Yew Lun Tian in Beijing; Editing by
Michael Perry and Clarence Fernandez)
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