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Foreigners Buy Stakes in
the U.S. at a Record Pace
By Peter S. Goodman and Louise Story
Last May, a Saudi Arabian conglomerate bought a Massachusetts
plastics maker. In November, a French company established
a new factory in Adrian, Mich., adding 189 automotive
jobs to an area accustomed to layoffs. In December,
a British company bought a New Jersey maker of cough
syrup.
For much of the world, the United States
is now on sale at discount prices. With credit tight,
unemployment growing and worries mounting about a potential
recession, American business and government leaders
are courting foreign money to keep the economy growing.
Foreign investors are buying aggressively, taking advantage
of American duress and a weak dollar to snap up what
many see as bargains, while making inroads to the worlds
largest market.
Last year, foreign investors poured a
record $414 billion into securing stakes in American
companies, factories and other properties through private
deals and purchases of publicly traded stock, according
to Thomson Financial, a research firm. That was up 90
percent from the previous year and more than double
the average for the last decade. It amounted to more
than one-fourth of all announced deals for the year,
Thomson said.
During the first two weeks of this year,
foreign businesses agreed to invest another $22.6 billion
for stakes in American companies more than half
the value of all announced deals. If a recession now
unfolds and the dollar drops further, the pace could
accelerate, economists say.
The surge of foreign money has injected
fresh tension into a running debate about Americas
place in the global economy. It has supplied state governors
with a new development strategy attracting foreign
money. And it has reinvigorated sometimes jingoistic
worries about foreigners securing control of Americas
fortunes, a narrative last heard in the 1980s as Americans
bought up Hondas and Rockefeller Center landed in Japanese
hands.
With a growing share of investment coming
from so-called sovereign wealth funds vast pools
of money controlled by governments from China to the
Middle East lawmakers and regulators are calling
for greater scrutiny to ensure that foreign countries
do not gain influence over the financial system or military-related
technology. On the presidential campaign trail, the
Democratic candidates have begun to focus on these foreign
funds, calling for international rules that would make
them more transparent.
Debate is swirling in Washington about
the best way to stimulate a flagging economy. Despite
divided opinion about the merits, foreign investment
may be preventing deeper troubles by infusing hard-luck
companies with cash and keeping some in business.
The most conspicuous beneficiaries are
Wall Street banks like Merrill Lynch, Citigroup and
Morgan Stanley, which have sold stakes to government-controlled
funds in Asia and the Middle East to compensate for
calamitous losses on mortgage markets. Beneath the headlines,
a more profound shift is under way: Foreign entities
last year captured stakes in American companies in businesses
as diverse as real estate, steel-making, energy and
baby food.
The influx is the result of a confluence
of factors that have made the United States both reliant
on the largesse of foreigners and an alluring place
for opportunistic investors. With American banks reeling
from the housing downturn and loath to lend, businesses
are hungry for cash.
The weak dollar has made American companies
and properties cheaper in global terms, particularly
for European and Canadian buyers. Even as Americans
confront the prospect of a recession, economic growth
remains strong worldwide, endowing oil producers like
Saudi Arabia and Russia and export powers like China
and Germany with abundant cash.
As the German company ThyssenKrupp Stainless
broke ground in November on what is to be a $3.7 billion
stainless steel plant in Calvert, Ala., its executives
spoke effusively about the low cost of production in
the United States and the chance to reach many millions
of customers particularly because of the North
American Free Trade Agreement, which allows goods to
flow into Mexico and Canada free of duty.
The Nafta stainless steel market
has great potential, and were committed to significantly
expanding our business in this growth region,
said the companys chairman, Jürgen H. Fechter,
according to a statement.
Foreign giants like Toyota Motor and Sony
have been sinking capital into American plants. Investment
in the American subsidiaries of foreign companies grew
to $43.3 billion last year from $39.2 billion the previous
year, according to the research and consulting firm
OCO Monitor.
This is a vote of confidence in
the American economy, the American marketplace and the
American worker, the deputy Treasury secretary,
Robert M. Kimmitt, said. These investments keep
Americans employed and keep balance sheets strong.
Five million Americans now work for foreign
companies set up in the United States, Mr. Kimmitt said,
and those jobs pay 30 percent more than similar work
at domestic companies. Nearly a third of such jobs are
in manufacturing, which explains why Rust Belt states
have been wooing foreign investment.
Weve lost 400,000 manufacturing
jobs, said Michigans governor, Jennifer
M. Granholm, a Democrat, who has traveled three times
to Europe and twice to Japan in pursuit of investment
since taking office in 2003. Ive got to
get jobs for our people.
Some labor unions see the acceleration
of foreign takeovers as the latest indignity wrought
by globalization.
Its the culmination of a series
of fools errands, said Leo W. Gerard, international
president of the United Steelworkers. Weve
hollowed out our industrial base and run up this massive
trade deficit, and now the countries that have built
the deficits are coming back to buy up our assets. Its
like spitting in your face.
Other labor groups take a more pragmatic
view.
We need investment and we need to
create good jobs, said Thea Lee, policy director
for the A.F.L.-C.I.O. in Washington. Were
not in the position to be too choosy about where that
investment comes from. But it does bring home the consequences
of flawed trade policies over many, many years that
were in this position of being dependent.
At the center of concern is the growing
influence of sovereign wealth funds, which invested
$21.5 billion in American companies last year, according
to Thomson. Analysts say they could skew markets by
investing to improve the fortunes of their national
companies or to pursue political goals.
This is a phenomenon that could
be called the growth of state capitalism as opposed
to market capitalism, said Jeffrey E. Garten,
a trade expert at the Yale School of Management. The
United States has not ever been on the receiving end
of this before.
Perhaps emblematic of national ambivalence,
in an appearance on CNBC last week, the voluble market
analyst Jim Cramer spoke in menacing terms about the
growing role of state investment funds from the Middle
East and China.
Do we want the communists to own
the banks, or the terrorists? Mr. Cramer asked.
Ill take any of it, I guess, because were
so desperate.
Proponents of investment from overseas
note that finance from sovereign wealth funds is a mere
trickle of the overall flow from abroad. Indeed, the
bulk comes from Europe, Canada and Japan. Just as Americans
have scattered investments around the world in pursuit
of profit with holdings of foreign stock and
debt exceeding $6 trillion in 2006, according to the
Treasury Department foreigners are looking to
the United States, with their capital generating economic
activity, proponents say.
If fear of foreign money now inspires
Americans to erect new barriers, that would damage the
economy, said Todd M. Malan, president of the Organization
for International Investment, a Washington lobbying
group financed by foreign companies.
The policy choices on the negative
side would have enormous economic implications that
would make the current situation look like a bubble
bath, he said.
Tensions spawned by foreign investment
hark back to the 1980s, when Japan snapped up prominent
American businesses like Columbia Pictures, and some
intoned that the American way of life was under assault.
The new wave of foreign money is washing in at an even
more important time, analysts say.
The United States has lost more than three
million manufacturing jobs since 2001, with foreign
trade often taking the blame. Foreign-made goods now
account for roughly one-third of all wares consumed
in the United States, roughly tripling their share over
the last quarter-century. The soaring price of oil and
a widening trade deficit underscore how the American
economy is increasingly vulnerable to decisions made
far away.
In 2005, Congressional opposition scuttled
a bid by the state-owned Chinese energy company Cnooc
to buy the American oil company Unocal. The following
year, furor on Capitol Hill prevented DP World, a company
based in the United Arab Emirates, from buying several
major American ports.
No such outcry has greeted the purchase
of stakes in major Wall Street banks by state investment
funds in the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, China, Singapore
and South Korea. This is largely because the banks sold
passive slices and ceded no formal control, which would
have set off a federal review of the national security
implications. But the silence also reflects the imperative
that these enormous institutions swiftly secure cash.
It would be good if these companies
didnt need all this capital and better if the
capital was available in the United States, said
Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, who
was a vocal opponent of the DP World deal. But
given the situation that these institutions find themselves
in and the fact that theres a pretty strong credit
squeeze, theres only two choices: Have foreign
companies invest in these firms or have massive layoffs.
In years past, particularly when Japanese
money washed in, many foreign purchases proved not to
be so prudent in the end. This time, with the dollar
weak and troubled American companies in a poor bargaining
position, the prices really do seem cheap, some economists
say.
Theyre buying financial assets
at well under book value, said Gary C. Hufbauer,
a trade expert at the Peterson Institute for International
Economics.
Trade experts assume tensions will rise
as developing countries which tend to have more
state companies continue to expand their share
of investment in the United States.
Canada still spends the most money buying
stakes in American companies more than $65 billion
in 2007, according to Thomson. But other countries
purchases are growing rapidly. South Koreas investments
swelled to more than $10.4 billion last year from just
$5.4 million in 2000. Russia went to $572 million from
$60 million in that span; India to $3.3 billion from
$364 million.
But even if political tension increases,
so will the flow of foreign money, some analysts say,
for the simple reason that businesses need it.
The forces sucking in this capital
are much bigger than the political forces, said
Mr. Garten, the Yale trade expert. If there is
a big controversy, it will be between Washington on
the one hand and corporate America on the other. In
that contest, the financiers and the businessmen are
going to win, as they always do.
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