Analysis-Musk's new Twitter funding could draw TikTok-like U.S. scrutiny
Send a link to a friend
[May 06, 2022] By
Echo Wang
(Reuters) - Elon Musk's decision to accept
some foreign investors as part of his $44 billion buyout of Twitter Inc
runs the risk of inviting the kind of regulatory scrutiny over U.S.
national security that social media peer TikTok faced, legal experts
say.
Musk disclosed on Thursday that Saudi Arabia's Prince Alwaleed bin Talal,
Qatar's sovereign wealth fund and Binance, the world's biggest
cryptocurrency exchange founded by Chinese native Changpeng Zhao, were
part of a group of investors that will help him fund the acquisition of
Twitter.
This could give the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States
(CFIUS) an opening to scrutinize the deal for potential national
security risks, six regulatory lawyers not involved in the transaction
and interviewed by Reuters said. CFIUS is a panel of government agencies
and departments that reviews mergers and acquisitions for potential
threats to U.S. security.
"To the extent that Musk's proposed acquisition of Twitter includes
foreign investment, it very well could fall under CFIUS jurisdiction,"
said Chris Griner, chair of law firm Stroock & Stroock & Lavan LLP's
national security practice.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Treasury Department, which chairs CFIUS,
declined to comment on whether the national security panel planned to
scrutinize Musk's Twitter deal.
Spokespeople for Musk, bin Talal, Qatar and Binance did not immediately
respond to requests for comment.
Former President Donald Trump's administration turned to CFIUS in 2020
in a bid to force TikTok's Chinese parent ByteDance to divest the short
video app. His successor Joe Biden abandoned that effort after ByteDance
agreed to changes on how the data of U.S. users are stored and
protected.
The regulatory lawyers interviewed by Reuters said the risk of CFIUS
blocking Musk's deal is small because he will control Twitter under the
proposed takeover and the foreign investors are acquiring relatively
small stakes.
They added that their assessment would change were Musk to give the
foreign investors influence over the company, through a seat on its
board or other means.
The risk is not negligible, however, given that the business of handling
personal data by social media companies such as Twitter is typically
viewed as critical infrastructure by CFIUS, the lawyers said.
"One of the items that's considered sensitive personal data, is
non-public electronic communications. So that would be email, messaging
or chat communications between users. Twitter allows you to do that,"
law firm Vinson & Elkins LLP partner Richard Sofield said.
[to top of second column] |
Elon Musk's twitter account is seen on a smartphone in front of the
Twitter logo in this photo illustration taken, April 15, 2022.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
One area of potential scrutiny for CFIUS, the lawyers said, could be Musk's
business dealings with foreign governments hostile to free speech or keen to
overtake the United States technologically. Tesla Inc, the electric car maker he
leads, relies heavily on China, for example, to manufacture and sell its
vehicles.
China blocked Twitter in 2009 but many Chinese officials have been active on the
social media platform. Some of them have complained that the company's efforts
to restrict misinformation have targeted them unfairly.
"One of the considerations would be whether or not there will be an opportunity
for China to leverage its business activity in order to achieve a desired
outcome," Sofield added.
BROADCOM PRECEDENT
There is precedent for CFIUS shooting down a deal based on the risk that an
acquirer's business ties could compromise them, the lawyers said. Trump blocked
chip maker Broadcom Inc's $117 billion acquisition of U.S peer Qualcomm Inc 2018
after CFIUS raised concerns about the deal.
Broadcom was a publicly listed company with U.S. shareholders that was
headquartered in Singapore, but the White House fretted that Broadcom's
relationship with "third-party foreign entities" would set the U.S. back in its
technology race with China.
Nevena Simidjiyska, a regulatory lawyer at law firm Fox Rothschild LLP, said it
was possible CFIUS would look into whether Musk or other U.S. investors in the
Twitter deal can be influenced by foreign entities in a similar way.
"CFIUS may determine that even U.S. investors in Twitter fall under CFIUS review
if they are controlled by foreign parties," Simidjiyska said.
Musk's Twitter deal does not face the most common type of regulatory risk seen
in mergers and acquisitions — pushback from antitrust regulators. The world's
richest man has no media holdings, and regulatory experts have said they do not
expect the deal to face significant antitrust scrutiny.
(Reporting by Echo Wang in New York; Additional reporting by Alexandra Alper in
Washington, D.C.; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Lincoln Feast)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |