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Chinese Tech Investors Flee Silicon Valley as Trump Tightens Scrutiny (reuters.com) 105

New Trump administration policies aimed at curbing China's access to American innovation have all but halted Chinese investment in U.S. technology startups, as both investors and startup founders abandon deals amid scrutiny from Washington. From a report: Chinese venture funding in U.S. startups crested to a record $3 billion last year, according to New York economic research firm Rhodium Group, spurred by a rush of investors and tech companies scrambling to complete deals before a new regulatory regime was approved in August. Since then, Chinese venture funding in U.S. startups has slowed to a trickle, Reuters interviews with more than 35 industry players show. U.S. President Donald Trump signed new legislation expanding the government's ability to block foreign investment in U.S. companies, regardless of the investor's country of origin. But Trump has been particularly vocal about stopping China from getting its hands on strategic U.S. technologies.

The new rules are still being finalized, but tech industry veterans said the fallout has been swift. "Deals involving Chinese companies and Chinese buyers and Chinese investors have virtually stopped," said attorney Nell O'Donnell, who has represented U.S. tech companies in transactions with foreign buyers. Lawyers who spoke to Reuters say they are feverishly rewriting deal terms to help ensure investments get the stamp of approval from Washington. Chinese investors, including big family offices, have walked away from transactions and stopped taking meetings with U.S. startups. Some entrepreneurs, meanwhile, are eschewing Chinese money, fearful of lengthy government reviews that could sap their resources and momentum in an arena where speed to market is critical.
This comes at a time when Chinese investors have visibly become more active in emerging markets such as India.
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Chinese Tech Investors Flee Silicon Valley as Trump Tightens Scrutiny

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  • Anti-Business (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Monday January 07, 2019 @09:06AM (#57917008)

    Seems very anti-business and it will hurt us. Perhaps not immediately, or much a year from now, but we're eating the seeds of business that could be giant cash crops over the next 5 to ten years (and everyone will blame the stuttering economy at that time on whichever poor fool happens to be president then).

    • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Monday January 07, 2019 @09:18AM (#57917062)

      making stuff in red china with poor IP laws is bad as well.

      • by fortfive ( 1582005 ) on Monday January 07, 2019 @09:25AM (#57917098)

        Maybe. But shouldn't a business be able to make that decision for itself?

        • No -- there should be tariffs on Chinese goods and services to account for their poor environmental and human rights practices. After all, pollution doesn't respect borders.
          • Hypocrisy (Score:3, Insightful)

            by sjbe ( 173966 )

            No -- there should be tariffs on Chinese goods and services to account for their poor environmental and human rights practices.

            Ummm you are aware that the US is the biggest polluter per-capita in the world of any major industrialized country, right? The only reason China exceeds us on some measures in absolute numbers is because they have 4X the number of people. You are aware that our current administration is right this moment doing everything they can to permit companies to pollute their greedy little hearts out right?

            And the US human rights record is nothing stellar either. I point you at Guantanamo Bay, several recent wars

            • by Anonymous Coward

              Ummm you are aware that the US is the biggest polluter per-capita in the world of any major industrialized country, right?

              Didn't know Canada and Australia weren't major industrialized nations.

              First it was most polluting, but the facts eventually entered public perception.
              Now the goalposts have moved to per-capita, because the facts have not yet entered public perception. Even as the US is one of very few countries in to have ever decreased their greenhouse gas output while the strong talking Paris agreement signers steam on ahead with increasing theirs.

              Watch the goalposts shift again to total historical output, then total per-

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            You're off topic.

            Bring Hitler in next, OK?

            China is fed up with the US and is in a position to go out on its own and replace America as the world's leader.

            China doesn't give a rat's ass about IP any more than US businesses care about doing business in the US.

        • by sycodon ( 149926 )

          Depends on...

          1. Is that Business making products that will be used in the US government or US defense.
          2. Will that business seek redress from the US Government after the Chinese steal their intellectual property and then run that business..out of business?

          The Chinese government is a bad actor and they are NOT our friends. Their people may be, but not the government.

        • Right remind me again why Facebook, Google, and Twitter got hauled into Congress to explain Russia hacking or Cambridge Analytica's access to data?

          The U.S. government often over sees areas of technology when it feels national security or interests are at risk. The U.S. government restricted sales of Apple's computers to certain countries.

          This is par for the course.
        • But shouldn't a business be able to make that decision for itself?

          No. That's too much pressure to comply with China for the huge market. If everyone cannot comply unless they respect IP, then everyone outside China wins. Similar to the concept of a union preventing "voluntary unpaid overtime."

        • Maybe. But shouldn't a business be able to make that decision for itself?

          The answer depends on whose interests are important: short-term vs. long-term, corporate vs. societal/national interests . The actual decisions of a company in the absence of governmental interference are based on short-term stock price appreciation, even if such decisions eventually lead to the demise of the company. For example, if a US company partners with a Chinese company and is forced to share trade secrets, the executives and stockholders of that US company benefit based on increased revenue and

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Patent trolls and the East Texas court aren't good for business either. Neither are 70+ year copyright terms.

    • seems? Feels over reals? These are spies. They should be in gitmo.

    • Markets (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Monday January 07, 2019 @09:30AM (#57917130)

      The issue here is you are dealing with a country without an open market system. China's economy has market mechanisms for some things, but mostly, it's tightly controlled by the state. The state has direct influence and control over nearly every aspect of the economy. If they decide your business is too important for you to run it, the state will simply take it over and there is absolutely nothing you can do about it. China's government doesn't see their economy as thousands of self-regulating parts. They see it as one large machine that they control. The problem is, as with any large entity, that management becomes impossible, and any mistake you made at a high level is amplified a thousand times greater than if a single company made an error.

      You can see how fragile and fundamentally screwed up their economy is by the rescinding of the American ZTE ban. If left in place, the ban would have essentially crushed China's economy, because the expansion of ZTE was built into China's economic plans. Factories were built. Apartments were built for the workers. Capacity expanded at suppliers. Supply chains were set up ahead of time. Everything was prepared. If ZTE failed, a chunk of China's economy would freeze. In a normal market economy ZTE would go out of business and it's competitors would absorb the lost business. That's not what was planned for, though.

      This is whom the investors are representing. China is trying to spend and expand it's way out of it's problems instead of fixing them. It's what Japan tried to do in the 80's, and the result was a crashed economy with a decade of stagnation. We shouldn't be encouraging this type of behavior.

      • Re:Markets (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Archtech ( 159117 ) on Monday January 07, 2019 @10:23AM (#57917392)

        The issue here is you are dealing with a country without an open market system..

        The interest rate is the price of money, and it is the fundamental price in any free market. No nation whose government (or central bank) controls its interest rates has a free market. The very idea is utterly ridiculous.

        Moreover, the USA has very little in the way of free markets, precisely because it is controlled by capitalists. Capitalists loathe and detest free markets and competition, and always do their level best to eliminate them.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        So, similar to how some US companies like General Motors and certain financial institutions are too big to fail, and the government makes sure they don't fail.

      • Sounds like the US should be accepting China's money then, letting them crash.

      • So what you're saying is ZTE is Too Big to Fail [wikipedia.org]? Except last I remember that term was used to describe some American companies which nearly caused the entire economy of the greatest nation on earth to implode.

      • Very well stated, JBMcB --- expect some quite nasty comments/responses to intelligent and honest remarks such as yours . . .
      • by lkcl ( 517947 )

        The issue here is you are dealing with a country without an open market system. China's economy has market mechanisms for some things, but mostly, it's tightly controlled by the state. The state has direct influence and control over nearly every aspect of the economy.

        what many people do not realise about china is that the state is not in control: the "old families" are. these are the descendents of the warlords you may recall from chinese history. there are five families, and they're each responsible for unbelievably enormous areas of land and the associated population. they own the banks. they basically own and indirectly run *everything*.

        once you understand this, the way that china operates becomes a bit clearer.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Nice boost for China though, bring home some of that investment.

    • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]–Hawley_Tariff_Act

      • For some reason it didn't take my link correctly and I can't figure out how to change it. :P

        It's suppose to be the article for the Smoot–Hawley_Tariff_Act

  • Good (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sproketboy ( 608031 ) on Monday January 07, 2019 @09:20AM (#57917072)

    Kick out these fucking spies.

    • Spies are one thing, these are VC scum, which are actually worse. VC scum funding stuff like Uber is undercutting existing businesses with unprofitable businesses that destroy privacy. Also, hot money drives up prices of everything like housing, food, etc in areas where malinvestment is common.
    • It's frightening how quickly the tolerant left froths at the mouth and begins blaming those *dirty foreigners*. It's racist and sinophobic and apparently 100% socially acceptable.
      • LOL if I were tolerant left I would say all cultures are the same. REEEEEEEEEEEE.

        The reality is that Chinese that emigrate are reminded that they have family members still in China. They use that to coerce "hacking" (ie usb sticks) to get corporate information. No Chinese friends? Ply them with a few drinks and ask them.

  • Good. I'm no fan of Trump, but the sooner Chinese hot money is pulled out of the markets, the better. It just drives up prices and causes inflation.
  • + Find a problem.
    + Make the problem 10x worse than it actually is.
    + President takes action.
    + Investors disappear.
    + Companies panic.
    + New investors save the day.
    + Pay 50% (or less) what they should have.
    + Find out investors are friends of President.

    Funny how that worked out.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      Hey, it worked for President Obama when he illegally bailed out GM and his college buddy was running the 2nd biggest recipient of the benefits (an investment firm that somehow was the only one to bet that GM would fold and that bond-holders and those with secured loans would lose). Of course, the biggest recipient got most of what they wanted, but when you give $13MM+ to the President's re-election campaign, you get a LOT of favors back...
  • The less exposure American companies have to the Chinese business culture of speech controls and pro-China mercantilism the better. It'll hurt the bottom line a little now, but it won't be Pearl Harbor twenty years down the line. Now about those 25% tariffs on consumer goods...
  • heard NPR at last report on all the Chinese gov't spying going on (although they did not mention that there have been OVER 4 billion hacks into public and private sectors in North America since 2010 (I stopped counting awhile back when it reached over 4 billion). Sadly, when NPR FINALLY reports something, you know it's gotten too late . . .

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