Skip to main content

Briefing

Biden Administration Reworks US Sanctions Targeting Investment in Chinese Companies’ Securities: CMIC List Replaces CCMC List

On June 3, 2021, President Biden issued an Executive Order Addressing the Threat from Securities Investments that Finance Certain Companies of the People’s Republic of China  (the CMIC EO), including an Annex of Chinese companies whose securities will be targeted under the new Chinese Military-Industrial Complex Companies List (CMIC List) starting August 2, 2021. The CMIC EO and CMIC List replace all of the substantive provisions of Executive Order 13959 (the CCMC EO), which had targeted securities of entities designated as Communist Chinese Military Companies as discussed in our prior update, and the associated CCMC List. The CMIC EO also completely repeals Executive Order 13974 (EO 13974), which had amended the CCMC EO for clarity.

In sum, the CMIC EO – in conjunction with new and updated FAQs issued by the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), which administers these sanctions – (i) effectively terminates sanctions targeting securities of several Chinese companies, (ii) imposes new sanctions on 59 Chinese companies, some of which had previously been targeted; (iii) expands the criteria for targeting companies under these sanctions; and (iv) clarifies the scope of activities targeted by these sanctions.

Our key takeaways follow:

The CMIC EO changes the scope of Chinese companies that can be targeted

The CMIC EO authorizes sanctions against companies that the US government determines have operated in China’s defense, defense-related materiel, and surveillance technology sectors, as well as companies that directly or indirectly own or control, or are owned or controlled by, a company that has operated in those sectors. The CMIC EO expands on the prior CCMC EO to target activities that the CMIC EO describes as “the use of Chinese surveillance technology outside the PRC and the development or use of Chinese surveillance technology to facilitate repression or serious human rights abuse.”  It is notable that both the new and prior EOs point to China’s military-industrial complex and the Military-Civil Fusion strategy as the underlying basis for these sanctions.

For the first time in this sanctions program, the White House has also issued a Fact Sheet categorizing targeted companies based on the designation criteria, as follows (some companies are included in more than one category): (1) 49 companies under “Defense and Related Materiel Sector of the Economy of the PRC”; (2) two companies under “Surveillance Technology Sector of the Economy of the PRC”; and (3) ten companies under “Own or Control, or Owned or Controlled by, Directly or Indirectly, a Person Who Operates or Has Operated in at Least One of These Two Sectors of the PRC Economy, or a Person Who Is Listed in the Annex to the E.O.”

In at least one respect, however, the CMIC EO is narrower than its predecessor.  The CCMC EO, which Former President Trump issued on November 12, 2020, had automatically imposed sanctions on companies included on lists released in June, August, and December 2020, as well as in January 2021, by the US Department of Defense under the authority of Section 1237 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1999 (Section 1237).  The CCMC EO also incorporated by reference the Section 1237 designation criteria, which broadly required the Department of Defense to list any entity owned or controlled by, or affiliated with, the People’s Liberation Army or a Chinese government ministry, or otherwise owned or controlled by an entity affiliated with the Chinese defense industrial base. The CMIC EO terminates the CCMC EO provisions related to Section 1237, so the Section 1237 Lists and its designation criteria are no longer directly relevant to these US sanctions.

The CMIC List replaces the CCMC List; subsidiaries must be explicitly listed

The new CMIC List replaces the prior CCMC List and introduces a number of changes.  The CMIC EO Annex lists 59 entities whose securities are targeted by the CMIC sanctions. In addition to Xiaomi, which was officially removed from the CCMC list in May 2021, the CMIC List omits several additional companies that had been included on the CCMC List, meaning that the sanctions targeting those delisted companies are effectively terminated. Additionally, as OFAC’s FAQs explain, subsidiaries are not automatically targeted by the CMIC sanctions; securities of subsidiaries are targeted only where the subsidiary itself is included on the CMIC List, and the CMIC List expressly includes certain subsidiaries of companies on the list. See FAQs857, 899.

OFAC’s CMIC list also provides more detail than the CCMC list.  Among other information, the CMIC List includes company identification numbers, equity tickers, and ISINs where relevant.

“Close matches” are not targeted

OFAC’s CCMC guidance had stated that the CCMC sanctions would also apply to any subsidiary “with a name that exactly or closely matches” a CCMC-Listed company’s name, even if the subsidiary was not specifically listed. OFAC had issued a General License, however, to postpone the application of the CCMC sanctions to “close matches.” By contrast, the CMIC sanctions and associated guidance does not target “close matches”; the only entities targeted by the CMIC EO are those actually on the CMIC List.

CMIC sanctions will prohibit US purchases and sales of targeted securities

Like its predecessor, the CMIC sanctions will ultimately prohibit “the purchase or sale of any publicly traded securities, or any publicly traded securities that are derivative of such securities or are designed to provide investment exposure to such securities, of” targeted companies. The CMIC EO also authorizes purchases or sales of targeted securities for the purposes of divesting, for a period of one year after the targeted company is designated. Unlike the CCMC sanctions, however, the CMIC EO does not prohibit US persons from continuing to hold targeted securities after the one-year mark.

The CMIC EO resets the clock on effective dates

The sanctions on companies included in the CMIC EO Annex take effect on August 2, 2021.  For companies later added to the CMIC List, the sanctions will take effect 60 days after such designation. US persons will be allowed to divest the targeted securities for one year from the CMIC List designation, and US persons can continue to hold the targeted securities after that date. These new effective dates replace dates under the predecessor CCMC sanctions. See FAQ 899.

OFAC FAQs clarify permissible activities by US persons, including facilitation

OFAC’s new and updated FAQs describe permissible activities by US persons related to targeted securities, including the facilitation of purchases and sales of targeted securities by non-US persons, as follows:

  • US persons may engage in clearing, execution, settlement, custody, transfer agency, back-end services, and other support services. FAQ 863.
  • Market intermediaries, securities exchanges operated by US persons, and US market makers are permitted to engage in activities that are necessary to effect divestiture (by US persons) during the relevant wind-down periods under the EO. FAQs 865, 871.
  • Investment advisory, management, and similar services are permissible if such services are in connection with a non-US person’s purchase or sale of a targeted security and do not otherwise violate the EO. FAQ 902.
  • US persons employed by non-US entities may be involved in or facilitate purchases or sales related to targeted securities on behalf of their non-US employer in the ordinary course of their employment.

Additionally, OFAC states that market intermediaries, investment advisors, and managers are permitted to rely on the diligence information available to them “in the ordinary course of business” to assess whether an underlying purchase or sale is prohibited by the CMIC sanctions. FAQ 901.

Conclusion

US persons will be restricted from engaging in certain transactions in publicly traded securities of entities on the CMIC List in an almost-identical manner as provided by the CCMC EO.  The CMIC EO represents a reset of these US sanctions, however, and Companies should use the time before the new restrictions become effective on August 2, 2021, to review the CMIC List and ensure they have identified potentially prohibited activities and are prepared for these new sanctions