Overview
A newly published proposed rule would make two important modifications to the mandatory filing requirements of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), the US government interagency committee responsible for reviewing inbound foreign direct investments for national security risks. The proposed rule would change the scope of the mandatory filing requirement for covered transactions involving US critical technology companies, and would clarify how “substantial interest” is calculated for certain transactions involving foreign government investors.
Changes to scope of covered “critical technology” transactions
CFIUS currently requires filings for certain investments involving US critical technology companies, and for investments where a foreign government holds a "substantial interest" in a foreign investor who obtains a "substantial interest" in a US critical technology, critical infrastructure, or sensitive personal data business (known as a “TID US business”).
The current CFIUS regulations, contained at 31 C.F.R. Part 800, mandate the filing of a notice or declaration for “covered investments” in US companies that produce, design, test, manufacture, fabricate, or develop one or more “critical technologies” involving certain specifically enumerated industries based on North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes.
Critical technologies, defined at 31 C.F.R. § 800.215, include items included on the United States Munitions List, items included on the Commerce Control List pursuant to a multilateral regime or for reasons related to regional security or surreptitious listening, certain nuclear-related items, select agents and toxins, and emerging and foundational technologies controlled under Section 1758 of the Export Control Reform Act of 2018.\
The proposed rule would eliminate the use of NAICS codes in determining whether a filing is required. Instead, a filing would be mandated for covered transactions “involving a TID US business that produces, designs, tests, manufactures, fabricates, or develops one or more critical technologies for which a US regulatory authorization would be required for the export, re-export, transfer (in-country), or retransfer of such critical technology to a foreign person that is a party to the covered transaction,” when the foreign person:
- Could directly control such TID US business as a result of the covered transaction;
- Is directly acquiring an interest that is a covered investment in such TID US business;
- Has a direct investment in such TID US business, the rights of such foreign person with respect to such TID US business are changing, and such change in rights could result in a covered control transaction or a covered investment;
- Is a party to any transaction, transfer, agreement, or arrangement described in § 800.213(d) [transactions designed to evade or circumvent CFIUS rules] with respect to such TID US business; or
- Individually holds, or is part of a group of foreign persons that, in the aggregate, holds, a voting interest for purposes of critical technology mandatory declarations in a foreign person described [above].