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Bush signs law bolstering
reviews of foreign deals
By Jeremy Pelofsky
WASHINGTON (Reuters)
- U.S. President George W. Bush on Thursday signed legislation
to bolster oversight of acquisitions of U.S. companies
by foreign firms, a move to address national security
concerns about several deals raised by Congress.
The new law requires regulators to spend
more time vetting deals, holds regulators more accountable
for their actions and keeps Congress better informed
about the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States, or CFIUS, which reviews deals.
The CFIUS panel is charged with determining
if acquisitions would harm U.S. national security. The
inter-agency group is led by the Treasury secretary
and includes the Departments of Commerce, Defense, Justice
and State.
"This legislation will strengthen
our national security by ensuring a thorough and high-level
review of acquisitions of U.S. companies by foreign
firms that may present security considerations,"
White House spokesman Tony Snow said in a statement.
Despite some concerns that additional
scrutiny could chill foreign investment into the United
States, the legislation eventually won the support of
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Organization for
International Investment, or OFII, which represents
foreign companies that have U.S. operations.
Legislation was introduced last year after
critics in Congress said CFIUS did not take enough time
to consider the security implications of the sale of
some key U.S. port operations to Dubai Ports World.
Dubai Ports, which is government controlled
sparking some of the concerns raised by lawmakers in
Congress, later relinquished the port operations it
had purchased to American International Group Inc.
"This bill restores certainty to
the national security reviews of foreign acquisitions
of U.S. companies that has been unstable since the DP
World controversy over 18 months ago," said Todd
Malan, president & chief executive of OFII.
In 2006, CFIUS examined 113 deals worth
more than $95 billion, a 73 percent rise over the previous
year, according to a study release earlier this year.
Seven of the 2006 deals faced extended investigations
and two required approval by Bush.
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