U.S. clears Chinese acquisition in rare move

Reuters 

By Greg Roumeliotis

(Reuters) - Beijing-based Co Ltd has completed a deal to buy U. S. manufacturing company Akrion Systems LLC, in a rare instance of the approving such an acquisition, attorneys for said on Wednesday.

The deal, worth just $15 million, is small by dealmaking standards, yet it comes as the in the (CFIUS), which reviews deals for potential national security risks, has made it more difficult for Chinese companies to buy U. S. assets.

CFIUS' stance has toughened as U. S. seeks to put pressure on to help tackle North Korea's nuclear ambitions and be more accommodative on trade and foreign exchange issues. Unfilled political vacancies at several government departments and agencies have also made it more difficult for CFIUS to approve deals.

"As far as we are aware, this is the first Chinese acquisition of a U. S. company to be approved by CFIUS under the Trump administration," said partner Fang Xue, one of the deal lawyers representing

CFIUS has been traditionally wary of deals with Chinese entities, because it is concerned about the transfer of potentially sensitive

Canyon Bridge Capital Partners LLC, a U.

S.-based private equity firm funded by the Chinese government, saw its $1.3 billion acquisition of U. S. chip maker Lattice Corp collapse last year after it was blocked by CFIUS, a rejection subsequently upheld by the

But Akrion, based in Allentown, Pennsylvania, is a supplier of to manufacturers of and companies. It provides that prepares the chips for use.

CFIUS' approval of the Akrion deal bodes well for Xcerra Corp, a U. S. testing company whose deal to be acquired for $580 million by Unic Capital Management, a subsidiary of China's and the Hubei Xinyan Equity Investment Partnership, is also under CFIUS review. Like Akrion, Xcerra does not manufacture any chips itself.

The most high-profile Chinese acquisition of a U. S. company to be shot down by CFIUS since Trump's inauguration a year ago was Ant Financial's acquisition of U. S. money transfer company MoneyGram International Inc, which was terminated earlier this month.

said the Akrion deal was approved by CFIUS during the standard 75-day review period, even as other deals have had to refile their applications to secure extensions.

Akrion faces financial difficulties because it lacked scale, and the deal with will boost its ability to compete, added.

Naura, a manufacturing company, is a subsidiary of Group Co, a Chinese state-backed company.

(Reporting by in Washington; Additional reporting by in New York; Editing by Peter Cooney)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, January 18 2018. 08:51 IST