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President Donald Trump observes Veterans Day at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., on Nov. 11, 2020. (Patrick Semansky/AP Photo) |
The order came in response to rising concerns over pension
and retirement fund flows into foreign companies that support China’s
totalitarian regime. It targets China’s military companies, including those
designated by the Pentagon in June and August of 2020.
Beijing “is increasingly exploiting United States capital to
resource and to enable the development and modernization of its military,
intelligence, and other security apparatuses,” the order states.
The Chinese Communist Party, through its aggressive national
strategy called “Military-Civil Fusion,” uses Chinese companies to strengthen
the People’s Liberation Army (PLA).
“At the same time, those companies raise capital by selling
securities to United States investors that trade on public exchanges both here
and abroad,” the order reads.
The Department of Defense this year designated 31 Chinese firms as Chinese military companies
operating directly or indirectly in the United States, including those owned or
controlled by the PLA.
Many of these companies are publicly traded on stock
exchanges around the world, and millions of U.S. investors, through their
pension funds, are unwittingly transferring wealth from the United States to
these entities.
The Pentagon’s list includes companies such as Aviation
Industry Corp. of China, Huawei, and Hangzhou Hikvision.
Two of the companies on the list, China National Chemical
Corp. (ChemChina) and China Three Gorges Corp. (CTG), for example, had raised a
combined $3.4 billion in U.S. dollar-denominated bond offerings
in September, according to a report by RWR Advisory, a Washington-based
research and risk consultancy.
The report states that major U.S. banks Goldman Sachs and
Bank of America were involved in ChemChina’s bond offering. JPMorgan Chase and
Morgan Stanley were among the underwriters of CTG’s bond offering.
The executive order prohibits investment in the stocks or
bonds of these Chinese military companies “beginning 9:30 a.m. Eastern standard
time on January 11, 2021.”
“The President’s action serves to protect American investors
from unintentionally providing capital that goes to enhancing the capabilities
of the People’s Liberation Army and People’s Republic of China intelligence
services,” Robert O’Brien, White House national security adviser, said in a
statement.
As of Oct. 2, there were 217 Chinese companies listed on U.S. exchanges, with a
total market valuation of $2.2 trillion, according to the U.S.–China Economic
and Security Review Commission.
In recent years, Beijing has also lobbied global index
providers and funds to increase the weighting of Chinese stocks and
bonds in their benchmarks or portfolios. A dominant index provider, MSCI, for example, last year substantially
increased the weighting of Chinese shares in its indexes, leading billions
of dollars to flow into Chinese companies.
China hawk Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) welcomed the executive
order and urged Congress to follow suit.
“The Chinese Communist Party’s exploitation of U.S. capital
markets is a clear and ongoing risk to U.S. economic and national security,” he
said in a statement.
“We can never put the interests of the Chinese Communist
Party and Wall Street above American workers and mom and pop investors.”
It will be very difficult for subsequent administrations to
reverse Trump’s policy, according to Roger Robinson, president and CEO of RWR Advisory Group.
“In my forty years looking at the nexus between national
security and global finance, I don’t recall the use of capital markets
penalties of this kind. In short, it’s an historic first in my book,
particularly with regard to a huge market player like China,” he said in an
email.
Robinson is also a former chairman of the Congressional
U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission.
“It will no longer be possible to put the genie of capital
markets sanctions back in the bottle,” he said.
Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) also applauded the action. In June,
Banks introduced a bill, the Stop Funding the PLA Act, that is similar to the
executive order.
“This is one of the wisest and most significant foreign
policy decisions President Trump has made since he entered office,” he said in
a statement.
“It’s ridiculous that the U.S. ever allowed the funding of
our chief global adversaries’ rise, and it’s a mistake we can’t make again.”
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