US Senate votes to reimpose ban on China's ZTE, shares plunge

AFP  |  Washington 

The US defied today by voting to overrule his administration's deal with firm and reimpose a ban on hi-tech chip sales to the company.

The company has been on life support since said it had banned US companies from selling and to for seven years.

US officials imposed the ban because of what they said were false statements by the firm over actions it claimed to have taken regarding the illegal sale of goods to and ZTE pleaded guilty to those charges in March last year and was hit with USD1.2 billion in fines.

Earlier this month the administration gave ZTE a lifeline by easing the sanctions in exchange for a further USD 1.4 billion penalty.

But the measure nullifies that action, proposing an outright ban on the and services from ZTE and another Chinese telecoms firm,

"We're heartened that both parties made it clear that protecting American jobs and national security must come first when making deals with countries like China, which has a history of having little regard for either," a bipartisan group of senators said.

Hong Kong-listed shares in ZTE plunged 25.81 per cent to end at HKD 9.85 today. The company has lost nearly two-thirds of its value since it resumed trading last week after a two-month suspension that followed the initial ban.

The lawmakers who introduced the amendment include top Democrat and Republican

However, the bill -- which provides USD 716 billion in funding for national defense for fiscal year 2019 and gives policy guidance to the -- is not a done deal. The passed its own version of the measure, and the two chambers must now hash out a compromise.

"It is vital that our colleagues in the House keep this bipartisan provision in the bill as it heads towards a conference," Schumer and Rubio said.

Trump's intervention to help the firm was seen at the time as part of a move to smooth over trade tensions with as they embarked on talks to avert a trade war, with the tweeting on May 13 that too many Chinese jobs were at threat.

"This is the first time has really stood up to (Trump) on a trade issue, and it's clear they are angry," Bill Reinsch, a at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, told

"There will be a lot of congressional resistance to weakening the ZTE amendment, but I would not be surprised to see a compromise." ZTE, which employs 80,000 people, said soon after the ban was imposed that its major operations had "ceased", raising the possibility of its collapse.

Its depend on US components and its cheap sold en masse abroad are powered by and the

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

First Published: Tue, June 19 2018. 15:10 IST