CNOOC's bid for Unocal tests US' China ties (Los Angeles Times) Updated: 2005-07-12 06:44
But the strong U.S. political opposition to state-owned CNOOC Ltd.'s
$18.5-billion offer for El Segundo-based Unocal has highlighted the tense
commercial relations between the two nations. Members of Congress have railed
against the CNOOC proposal as a Beijing-orchestrated grab for valuable oil
resources and have threatened to block the deal on the grounds of national
security. The Chinese government has warned Washington not to interfere.
The head-office
building of China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) is seen in
Beijing. CNOOC showed showed keen interest in immediate talks with Unocal
over a proposed US$18.5 billion all-cash bid, after rival Chevron allowed
Unocal to join the discussions. [AFP] | The standoff has raised fundamental questions about trust and fairness, how
the U.S. will approach China's rising economic influence and how Beijing will
respond.
If CNOOC's bid is thwarted by Washington, analysts say, it will almost
certainly trigger a reaction that could prove costly for American businesses.
The Chinese could cut purchases of U.S. goods, as when Beijing protested an
American arms deal with Taiwan by ordering aircraft from Europe's Airbus instead
of Boeing Co. The Chinese also could delay approvals of American projects in
China, analysts say, or add a few more hoops to the complex procedures for
clearing acquisitions by foreigners.
Such moves, though, could also hurt China. If Beijing pulls back from two
decades of opening up its markets, it could hamper China's economic development
and political reforms. Chinese companies crave not only U.S. cash but the
management and technical know-how that investments and joint ventures bring.
"China has come a long way from pure state ownership to gradual private
ownership and foreign ownership," said Rupert Li, a partner at Morrison &
Foerster's mergers and acquisitions law practice in Hong Kong.
Liu Baocheng, dean of Sino-U.S. studies at the University of International
Business and Economics in Beijing, doesn't think the outcome of a single deal
such as CNOOC-Unocal will impair long-term relations between the two countries.
Still, he sees the American response to CNOOC's bid as a litmus test of their
current standing and what may lie ahead as China asserts itself in the
international marketplace.
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