Title: Global Mergers
1Global Mergers National Security. -- Global
Mergers New Realities Post-9/11 --
Presentation to the Virginia State Bar (June
16, 2006).
- Stuart S. Malawer, J.D. Ph.D.
- Distinguished Professor of Law
International Trade - George
Mason University.
2New Reality New Landscape.
- What is the new landscape for global mergers in
the post-9/11 world? - How is post-9/11 different from the
post-Cold-War era (1990s)? - --- Understanding the new contours of
the post-9/11world - is critical to assessing
global mergers today --- - --- Understanding the implication of
the global financial crisis is a - newer dimension, since 2008
2009. ---
3From the Wall Street Journal (6.2.06) .
The merger boom that characterized the 1990s is
back, with total worldwide deal volume reaching a
whopping 2.8 trillion, in 2005, compared with
1.9 trillion in 2004. Indeed, global mergers
and acquisition volume continues to break
records, hitting 1.3 trillion to May 2006, a 40
increase over the same period last year.
4From the Financial Times (12.21.06) . Greater
than in Tech Boom.
5Mergers Worldwide . 2006 Beats 2000 Best Year
Ever.
Wall Street Journal (1.2.07).
6(No Transcript)
7 Increasing role of private equity
8It continues in 2007 ..
9. The Setting .
Dubai Ports World National Security.
-- UAE - U.S. --
New York Times 3.18.06.
10 National Security DPW.
Financial Times 3.28.06
11 French U.S. Companies.
Washington Post 4.3.06.
12 China EU Companies.
Wall Street Journal 5.22.06.
13 India EU companies.
14Chinese Indian Foreign Mergers
Financial Times (10.31.06)
15Largest Chinese IPO Ever Largest in World Since
2000 until ICBC .
2006 -- 9.7b
Wall Street Journal 6.2.06.
16China -- Largest IPO Worldwide Ever (Oct. 2006).
Washington Post (10.20.06)
17Record Private Equity, Foreign Surplus, Corporate
Profits ..
Financial Times 9.27.06
18IPOs, Private Equity Mergers.
19Record China Trade Surplus (May 2006).
20 Global Debate
Wall Street Journal 5.30.06.
21... India Investment National Security.
22. Resource Nationalism Deals. Resource
Nationalism part of Economic Nationalism.
23. Resource Nationalism
Financial Times 5.2.06.
Wall Street Journal 6.14.06.
24. Resource Nationalism
25. Resource Nationalism
26. Resource Nationalism
27. Protectionism Persists
28. Emphasis on Horizontal and Commodity-Related
Mergers.
29 U.S. MERGERS (2000 May 10, 2006) Largest
YTD Since 2000.
650b.
476b.
Wall Street Journal 5.10.06.
30 Greatest Global Mergers Since Jan. 2001.
Wall Street Journal 1.13.06.
31NYT 1.13.06
32 Global Mergers 2001- 2006 1st Q -- Best Since
2001.
857 b
475 b
Wall Street Journal 4.3.06.
33Cross-Border Mergers (over 1b) 1987 2005.
WORLD INVESTMENT REPORT 2006 (UNCTAD)
34Cross-Border Mergers as Merger Values Worldwide
(1987 1999).
30
World Investment Report 2000 (UNCTAD)
35Global Mergers as of FDI (1997 1999).
U.S. 80
World Investment Report 2000 (UNCTAD).
36Value of Global Mergers World FDI (1987 1999).
FDI 880b.
Global Mergers 710.b
World Investment Report 2000 (UNCTAD).
37New FDI in the U.S. 1980 2005.
2001--340b
2004 2005--- 86b
U.S. BUREAU OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS (6.2.06).
38Global Stage The Deals.
- China Mobile Millicom Cellular (China- EU)
- Citic National Energy (China Canada)
- Mittal Arcelor (India EU).
- Arcelor Severstal (EU Russia).
- Toshiba Westinghouse (Japan U.K.)
- Gazprom Centrica (Russia U.K.)
- Gazprom Export Pipeline (EU- Russia).
39 --- U.S. Stage The Deals ---
- DP World P O (UAE U.K. U.S. assets).
- CNOOC UNOCAL. (China U.S.).
- Emaar Properties Laing Homes (UAE-U.S.).
- Alcatel Lucent. (France U.S.).
- Lenovo IBM (China U.S.) (PC Business).
- Note -- EU U.S. Open Skies. (Foreign
investment)
40 --- Four Developments ---
- Four Developments in Global Trade Impacting
Global Mergers - Takeovers foreign investment are coming from
developing countries (private firms, state-owned
firms governments (Sovereign Wealth Funds). - Rise of national security concerns.
- Increasing reaction against global integration
(economic protectionism / economic patriotism). - Growing resource nationalism in oil gas
sectors.
41 --- Focus on Foreign Firms from Developing
World ---
- Why the increase?
- Growth in world trade spurred by emergence of the
WTO. - Foreign companies have government ownership.
- Growth in foreign corporate profits.
- Growth in national surpluses (surplus nations).
- Increase in petrodollars.
- .
- Abundant global liquidity.
- Lower interest rates for corporate borrowers.
- Explosion in foreign capital markets (IPOs).
- Growth in private equity investments.
- Growth in national economic development.
42 U.S. Response. New Debate Change the Law --
- Five Responses
- --- Demands for increase congressional oversight
of foreign takeovers --- - --- Domestic public pressure to strengthen
existing legislation --- - Domestic political pressure to restrict
transnational deals impacting public sector
services and defense industries. -
- Some corporate skirting of CFIUS Exon-Florio.
- Greater role for multinationals in public
diplomacy public debate. - Role of CEOs in presenting the global
perspective. - Politicians representing the local or regional
interests.
43V. U.S. Law the Legislative Scene (2006-2007)
CFIUS / FINSA.
- While various pieces of legislation restrict
foreign ownership in U.S. industries (aviation,
defense, shipping, communications) the recent
political debate has been over CFIUS and
Exon-Florio Amendment. - Other regulatory approvals for mergers are
required (DOJ, FTC). - CFIUS established in 1975 by Executive Order to
monitor FDI into the U.S. - Was amended by Exon-Florio in 1988. Required
review of foreign takeovers on national security
grounds. - President could prohibit takeovers if credible
evidence of a threat to national security. - Procedure (90-Day Process)
- Submission is voluntary.
- 30-day initial review.
- If could have credible evidence then 45-day
investigation. - President has 15 days to allow, suspend or
prohibit.. -
- National Security not defined, factors to
consider. - Withdrawing and refiling notices restart the
clock.
44- Various amendments in 1992 requiring greater
reporting to congress. - Report to Congress if President makes any
decision. (Byrd Amend.) - Report every four years whether there is credible
evidence. - Actual Practice 2 takeovers prohibited (as of
2005). - GAO Study (2005) for 1997 - 2004
- 470 Notifications.
- 8 Investigations.
- 2 Presidential determinations (as to
telecommunications).
45 Implementation of Exon-Florio Could.
(GAO-06-135T, Oct. 6, 2005).
46- Legislative proposals in 2006 Greater
Notification Review. - Shelby-Sarbanes Senate Bill.
- Congressional notification when review is
initiated. - Ranking of countries based on compliance with
weapons-control deals. - 45-day investigation required if have a foreign
government-controlled entity. - Congressional veto rejected.
- Blunt House Bill.
- Congressional notification upon completion of
review. - Hunter critical infrastructure prohibition.
- Tracking mitigation agreements.
- Role for Homeland Security and Director of
National Intelligence. - House bill is less stringent than the Senate bill
and seems to recognize more that economic
security entails encouraging foreign investment. - Update -- New Legislation 2007 "The Foreign
Investment National Security Act." - The President signed new legislation in August
2007 that provides for revamping of CFIUS a
full 90-day investigations of takeovers by
government-owned companies. Became effective
October 24, 2007.
47 -- Summary Newer Global Landscape --
- Domestic Political Change
Global Mergers. - Since 9/11 the political aspects of global trade
have changed. - The issue of global mergers needs to be
understood in this newer landscape. - Specifically, weve had a change in the political
dynamics within the U.S. and within other
countries. - The role of national security and reaction
against globalization are growing pieces of this
new post-9/11 era.
48- International
Political Change. - The U.S. is no longer the superpower of the
1990s where unilateral actions were almost
always the first option in foreign affairs and
trade relations. - In trade relations the world is more multipolar
than previously with the rise of Brazil, Russia,
India China (BRICs), the reemergence of Japan
and economic growth in other countries such as
Korea. - New sources of foreign wealth from global trade
and petrodollars (Middle East, Russia, Venezuela
and elsewhere) influence global trade.
49- --- Global Trade Global
Mergers Post-9/11 --- - Greater protectionism and concern for national
security in the U.S. EU are having a
significant impact on trade relations review
of global mergers. - Russia is considering imposing controls on
foreign investors in strategic industries. - South Korea is reassessing its treatment of
foreign private equity in industry
reorganizations. - India concerned about Chinese investment
national security. - Greater role of foreign corporations with
government ownership is of growing concern in
assessing global mergers. - Resource nationalism in Latin America
(Venezuela, Bolivia Ecuador) and elsewhere has
an unclear impact on global mergers. - The greater global rivalry for oil and energy
among numerous countries is having a growing
impact on global mergers.
50- Final Thoughts --
- The transformational power of trade in post-9/11
(including promoting global mergers) to bring
political and cultural change is increasingly
challenged by growing concern for national
security. - Our policy challenge is to continue promoting the
political and economic benefits of global trade
and mergers within this new dynamic. - Final Question -- In the coming years will the
newer national security goals of the United
States outweigh other national goals that promote
economic development and democracy worldwide? - This is an open question. The future landscape
of the trading system depends on the answer. At
this point it is unclear .
51 E-Mail StuartMalawer_at_msn.com
www.InternationalTradeRelations.com
www.Global-Trade-Law.com
www.NationalSecurityLaw.net