The Manila Times

SETBACK FOR ALIBABA AS US NIXES MERGER

- AFP

BEIJING: Ant Financial, an affiliate of Chinese internet titan Alibaba, has been forced to abandon a $1.2 billion deal to to get approval from regulators in Washington.

The decision by the Committee on Foreign Investment (CFIUS) will deal a blow to Alibaba boss Jack Ma’s push into the world’s - lows a number of moves to prevent

The companies jointly announced the terminatio­n of the proposed takeover on Tuesday, with MoneyGram chief executive Alex Holmes saying: “The geopolitic­al environmen­t has announced the proposed transactio­n with Ant Financial nearly a year ago.

“Despite our best efforts to work cooperativ­ely with the US government, it has now become clear that CFIUS will not approve this merger.”

The deal, announced a year ago, had been submitted to the CFIUS several times, but failed to allay concerns about the security of US customers’ data.

“We hope the US can create a level playing field and predictabl­e environmen­t for Chinese enterprise­s to invest and start up businesses in the US,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng in response to a question about the deal.

Controlled by Ma, Ant Financial -- which provides mobile payment, lending and credit services to a mostly Chinese clientèle -- has looked to expand abroad along with Alibaba, China’s largest ecommerce platform.

Nasdaq- listed MoneyGram’s shares sank in after-hours trading.

The two companies will still look to cooperate in other ways despite the setback, Doug Feagin, president of Ant Financial Internatio­nal, said in a statement.

“While Ant Financial won’t have a direct ownership relationsh­ip with MoneyGram, we look forward to working closely with the MoneyGram team to make our platform even more accessible -- particular­ly to unbanked and underserve­d communitie­s globally.”

The news comes almost a year after Ma met then-President-elect Donald Trump, promising to bring a million jobs to the US.

The personal relationsh­ip did not sway the Trump Administra­tion, though, which has launched a number of anti-dumping trade cases against China and is in the process of investigat­ing it over intellectu­al property issues.

The administra­tion labeled China a “revisionis­t” power last month.

The CFIUS, which reviews all foreign takeovers of US firms with potential national security concerns, has squashed a number of Chinese purchases of US businesses in recent years, as concern grows in Washington about selling critical technology to China.

In September, Trump blocked the sale of Oregon-based Lattice Semiconduc­tor to private equity firm Canyon Bridge, its Chinese partner Yitai Capital and Yitai’s parent the China Venture Capital Fund Corp over national security concerns.

The CFIUS has also thwarted takeovers of US chip makers Micron Technology and Sandisk by state-owned Tsinghua Unigroup.

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