To Bring FDI from China, U.S. Policymakers and Regulators Must Align

Will President Obama’s recent trip to China product any inbound FDI results for the U.S.? According to the U.S.-China joint statement, the November 16-18 trip produced significant agreements in five key areas of bilateral interest. There were tangential, but not explicit, mentions of FDI into the U.S. either by way of mergers and acquisitions or Greenfield investments.

Judging from the tenor and substance of the joint statement, the meetings further developed the mutual confidence and trust that are the predicates for a favorable investment climate. The five key areas of agreement were:

  • The importance and productivity of regular high-level exchanges to the growth of the overall U.S.-China relationship
  • The building of a bilateral strategic relationship that is positive, cooperative and comprehensive
  • Strengthened dialogue and cooperation on macro-economic policies leading to global recovery
  • Shared responsibility to cooperatively address regional and global security challenges
  • Vigorous responses to issues of climate change, energy and environment

The joint statement implicitly references the importance of FDI at several points. There was express recognition of the importance of the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue. “Both sides believed that the first round of the Dialogue held in Washington, D.C., in July this year was a fruitful one and agreed to honor in good faith the commitments made and hold the second round in Beijing in the summer of 2010.” The bottom line is that the U.S.-China FDI relationship appears well and growing and on track to produce results. Those results may not be evident until later next year. 

Further, while addressing the need to support the global recovery, the statement made clear that both sides are committed to open trade and to jointly fight protectionism and to resolve bilateral trade and investment disputes. The joint statement articulated the explicit promise of the U.S. and China “to expedite negotiation on a bilateral investment treaty.”

Prior to the release of the joint statement, reports had appeared in the Chinese press, notably the South China Morning Post, that a specific agreement would be reached to promote acquisitions of small and mid-size U.S. financial institutions by Chinese lenders. No such agreement or memorandum of understanding appears to have emerged from Obama’s visit.

A recent transaction involving a proposed takeover by China’s Minsheng Bank of failed California-based bank, UCBH Holdings, illustrates the formidable difficulties to be overcome if U.S. regulators intend to encourage Chinese lenders to invest in U.S. banks. Minsheng Bank had acquired a 9.9% interest in UCBH in 2007 and recently raised US$3.86 billion in its initial public offering in China. According to a report in The Wall Street Journal, Minsheng Bank also sought to acquire United Commercial Bank before U.S. authorities closed the San Francisco-based lender earlier this month. 

UCBH operated the United Commercial Bank, with several branches in California and also in other key Chinese American areas, such as New York, Boston, Seattle, Atlanta and Houston. United Commercial suffered commercial lending losses from loans to developers and home builders during the housing boom. A financial scandal led to a management shake-up. 

The Federal Reserve rejected China Minsheng's proposal to buy United Commercial Bank because of regulatory restrictions on foreign investment in U.S. banks and instead closed the bank. Soon after the closure, East West Bank, based in Pasadena, California, took over United Commercial Bank's roughly $7.5 billion in deposits, as well as $10.2 billion in assets. The Los Angeles Times reports that its takeover of UCBH will greatly expand its reach of East West, which has concentrated on Southern California and the San Francisco Bay Area. Interestingly, East West has a full-service branches in Hong Kong. 

The plain result of the regulatory actions is that a domestic bank with no interest in UCBH was permitted to acquire the business, while a foreign bank that always was a part owner of UCBH was not. The broader implication seems to be that any federal policy determined to promote inbound FDI will have to be based on a full and complete alignment of regulatory agencies at all levels. Otherwise, well-intentioned policies will be incapable of being executed.