In the Market: Funds fret over the fallout of Biden's China order
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[August 14, 2023] By
Paritosh Bansal
(Reuters) - Fund managers are worried the Biden administration's move to
restrict some outbound U.S. investment to China will further fuel
anti-Beijing sentiment in Washington and prompt more limitations.
The executive order regulates U.S. investments in China in sensitive
technologies. Investors, advisers and an administration official said it
is tailored around national security and reflects months of
consultations with industry and other stakeholders.
Even so, the order, while narrow in scope as expected, is unprecedented.
It sets a new framework for outbound capital controls, making it easier
to add areas to it in the future.
It is also spurring rhetoric in Washington. Some lawmakers are calling
for more restrictions, with a congressional panel opening a probe into
asset manager Blackrock and index provider MSCI over Chinese
investments.
For U.S. investors trying to navigate the geopolitics, the noise in
Washington is making it hard to determine what they should be doing in
China. The executive order along with anti-China moves by lawmakers and
agencies means the overall policy is unclear and riddled with landmines.
China is making it harder for businesses, too. The uncertainty is likely
to hit investment flows further and add to the urgency of contingency
planning.
"The executive order in and of itself is establishing a framework for
further action," said Anthony Rapa, co-chair of law firm Blank Rome's
international trade practice group. "It will be very important to
monitor how this executive order is being received in Congress."
An administration official said there were no immediate plans to add
additional sectors or countries to the order.
A top executive at a major asset manager said the thinking in Washington
is unresolved, torn between the urge to not do any business with China
and the belief that trade is good.
This person, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the
situation, described the environment from business perspective as "a
combination of confusion and fear," with policy debates expressed by
"punching companies in the nose."
DIFFERENT ASKS
Take the case last week of letters excoriating Blackrock and MSCI from
the Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party.
The House committee, which does not write legislation but has subpoena
power, takes issue with what are legal, passive investments in companies
flagged across several government blacklists with different policy
objectives. That's at odds with the Biden order, which contemplates
excluding passive investments and focused only on national security.
A former diplomat and an investor said the exclusion of passive
investments in the executive order was an industry ask.
The executive order affects venture funds and private equity firms that
invest in Chinese companies in semiconductors and microelectronics,
quantum information technologies and artificial intelligence.
That's narrow enough for many fund managers to keep operating in China
without any impact, top executives from two major firms with China
business said. But if restrictions were to broaden it would be a
different story.
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A central processing unit (CPU)
semiconductor chip is displayed among flags of China and U.S., in
this illustration picture taken February 17, 2023. REUTERS/Florence
Lo/Illustration//File Photo
In its letter to Blackrock, the House committee, for example,
mentioned 20 Chinese companies. Hundreds of millions of U.S. dollars
are invested in just those stocks via index funds managed by
Blackrock, Vanguard and other investment firms, data shows.
NAME AND SHAME
To some investors and advisers, China hawks in Congress are taking
the approach of naming and shaming companies rather than engaging in
substantive policy debate.
The House committee, for example, singled out Blackrock even though
multiple other funds have exposure to China. Morningstar data on
U.S. open-end funds' Chinese holdings shows Vanguard has the largest
exposure with $79.3 billion against Blackrock's $52.7 billion.
The former diplomat and the fund executive said they felt Blackrock
had been singled out because launching an investigation into the
world's largest asset manager would garner more publicity for the
committee's work.
A source close to the committee said they started with Blackrock
after witness testimony and reports showed the asset manager had
"deep ties" to China and advocated for investment there. The
investigation is at the beginning stages, they said.
Blackrock has denied any wrongdoing, while MSCI said last week it
was reviewing the committee's inquiry.
MORE RESTRICTIONS
Some of the investors said the administration's approach in framing
the executive order had been more consultative. It might have also
bought the industry more time and influence by releasing the order
now and inviting public comments.
A similar measure, which includes more investment areas but doesn't
call for prohibition, is moving through Congress. The former
diplomat and one fund executive who monitors legislation said that
might now stall.
But the push to broaden the restrictions is coming from multiple
fronts. At least two other bills to curb investments have been
introduced in Congress.
Policymakers have broader concerns that they might want to address.
In the early iterations of the order, some administration officials
wanted to include life sciences and biotechnology, the former
diplomat said. Other issues such as human rights are also high on
the agenda for lawmakers.
U.S. Representative Maxine Waters, Biden's fellow Democrat, said on
Friday the executive order and rulemaking on outbound investment
must be "broadened and strengthened."
"More needs to be done," she said.
(Reporting by Paritosh Bansal; Additional reporting by Andrea Shalal
in Washington and Laura Matthews in New York; Editing by Anna
Driver)
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