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China freezing out US tech

by on12 January 2021


A chilly time

US tech companies are starting to find that the assaults on Chinese companies by the Trump administration are starting to get some blow back.

On Friday, Cisco found its $2.6 billion deal to buy Acacia Communications in serious jeopardy after Acaia announced it was terminating the merger due to a lack of approval from Chinese regulators. Cisco's unusual response was that it did, in fact, receive the necessary approval, and it is now seeking a court mandate that would prevent the deal from being terminated. The deal was first struck in July 2019 and was Cisco's largest acquisition since its $3.7 billion pickup of AppDynamics more than two years prior.

Applied Materials took a different tack. The maker of semiconductor manufacturing gear earlier in the week announced in a regulatory filing that it has upped its price for Kokusai Electric to $3.5 billion from the $2.2 billion the two companies first agreed upon in June 2019. That deal is also only awaiting approval from Chinese regulators.

With its higher price, Applied was able to extend the deadline to close the merger to March 19 from its original date of 30 December. Both cases are just the latest sign of soured trade relations between the US and China.

The departing Trump administration has continued to pursue aggressive actions, such as export controls on Chinese chipmaking giant SMIC and an order requiring the de-listing of three Chinese telecommunications companies from the New York Stock Exchange.

Last modified on 12 January 2021
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