Germany to block sovereign wealth fund takeovers

AFP

Berlin on Wednesday to block takeovers of German firms by petrodollar-rich investment vehicles known as sovereign wealth funds if they are deemed to jeopardize national security.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cabinet approved a bill that would see acquisitions by foreign entitities not based in the European Union of more than a 25 percent stake in German firms scrutinised, the Economy Ministry said.

If such a purchase is deemed to pose a threat to public security or order, Berlin could prevent it from going through, according to the bill that must now be passed by parliament to become law, the ministry said in a statement. Sovereign wealth funds are investment vehicles typically controlled by hydrocarbon-rich countries like Russia or Gulf nations with trillions of dollars at their disposal ready to invest abroad.

Many large banks were forced to go cap-in-hand to sovereign wealth funds when the subprime mortgage crisis left them strapped for cash. Singapore’s Temasek for example became the largest shareholder in Merrill Lynch. But concerns that their motives may be political and not just economic have prompted a backlash, with many countries such as the United States bolstering their defences against the funds’ advances.

Critics slam the German legislation as protectionist and as likely to damage the German economy by frightening off much-needed foreign investment, and sovereign wealth funds themselves are making efforts to be more transparent.

Economy Minister Michael Glos said Wednesday though that the proposed new controls were “very restrained.”

“Germany is and remains open for foreign investments,” he said. “The majority of foreign investments will be unaffected.”

One deal that the new legislation might block is the possible multi-billion-euro takeover of container shipping giant Hapag Lloyd, owned by German firm TUI, by Temasek.

The bid from Temasek, which has already publicly expressed interest in the company via its Neptune Orient Lines unit, is one of half a dozen or so that TUI has received, the Financial Times Deutschland reported in late July.

http://www.thelocal.de/13811/20080820/

German law to target non-EU investments

Carl Mortished
Times Online

Angela Merkel’s cabinet is keen to prevent sovereign wealth funds from taking control of the country’s industrial assets

Germany has moved to protect its industrial assets from the financial power of sovereign wealth funds with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cabinet approving a bill that would enable the government to bar non-EU investments greater than 25 per cent in German companies.

Giant state-controlled funds in Russia and the Gulf are the target of the German government’s plans for increased scrutiny over foreign investors. The bill was given the go-ahead a day after workers at Hapag-Lloyd, the shipping line, staged a protest on Tuesday over a possible takeover by Neptune Orient Lines – the Singapore rival which is owned by Temasek, the sovereign fund controlled by the state of Singapore.

The future of Hapag-Lloyd has been embroiled in controversy since March, when its owner, Tui, the German travel company, announced it intended to sell the container shipping firm. Neptune Orient and a consortium of Hamburg investors have been short-listed as potential buyers in a deal which Tui hopes will raise more than $6 billion.

The German government, however, sought to downplay the potential threat to foreign investors posed by the bill, which must be passed by the German parliament before it becomes law.

The bil stipulates that a ban would be imposed only if the foreign investor posed a threat to German “public order or security”. The amendment to the Foreign Economic Act, which already gives the government power to review deals relating to the arms industry, enlarges the scope of review into deals involving non-EU and non-EFTA investors into any branch of German industry. The Economy Ministry would be able to investigate deals up to three months following their announcement. The review would take up to two months following which the ministry would make a decision whether or not to veto an investment.

Michael Glos, the economy minister, said that Germany remained open to foreign investment. “This is a purely precautionary measure and will be used only in extreme cases,” he said.

The financial muscle of sovereign wealth funds, fuelled by petrodollars, has caused mounting alarm in Europe, notably the purchase by VEB, a state-controlled Russian bank, of a 5 per cent shareholding in EADS, the aerospace group which owns Airbus Industrie.

German business lobbyists expressed their opposition to the new law, including the powerful BDI industry association which said that 2 million Germans were employed by foreign investors. “The government’s proposed controls on investment are sending the wrong signal about Germany as a business location,” said Werner Schnappauf, the BDI’s managing director.

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/markets/europe/article4575839.ece

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