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Proposed Rule Would Broaden CFIUS Mandatory Notification Requirements

By Paul Marquardt, Chase D. Kaniecki & Nathanael Kurcab on May 27, 2020
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On May 21, 2020, the U.S. Department of the Treasury published a proposed rule (the “Proposed Rule”) that would significantly broaden the scope of mandatory filing requirements of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (“CFIUS”) for foreign investments involving U.S. critical technology businesses.

The Proposed Rule abandons the current restriction to specified industries and focuses on whether the target develops, tests, or manufactures critical technologies that would require a license for export—whether or not the critical technologies are exported or sold to third parties at all (e.g., proprietary manufacturing technologies)—to the jurisdiction of the foreign investor and its parent entities, effectively creating different mandatory notification requirements for different countries.

The Proposed Rule would:

  • Expand the CFIUS mandatory critical technology notification requirement to cover foreign investments in all industries, if the target U.S. business develops, tests, or manufactures technology that would require a license or other authorization under any of the four main U.S. export control regimes to export or transfer to any foreign party in the ownership chain of the investors in the transaction.
  • Complicate the mandatory CFIUS notification analysis by requiring parties to identify the export control status of all products, software, and technology produced, designed, tested, manufactured, fabricated, or developed by the U.S. business (whether or not sold to third parties), all jurisdictions relevant to the investors, and the corresponding licensing requirements, potentially introducing significant delays.
  • Provide a significant exemption from the mandatory notification requirement for a wide range of dual-use goods, software, and technology eligible for export to a list of countries thought to pose a low risk of diversion, based on an existing license exception in the export control rules.

The Proposed Rule also clarifies the ownership rules used to determine when an investor linked to a foreign government is required to file with CFIUS for an investment in a sensitive U.S. technology, infrastructure, or data business.

Please click here to read the full alert memorandum.

Photo of Chase D. Kaniecki Chase D. Kaniecki

Chase Kaniecki’s practice focuses on international trade and national security matters, including CFIUS and global foreign direct investment, economic sanctions, export controls, customs, and trade remedies.

Read more about Chase D. KanieckiEmail
  • Posted in:
    Government and Public Policy
  • Blog:
    Cleary Foreign Investment and International Trade Watch
  • Organization:
    Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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