To: bigchad who wrote (3633 ) 4/23/2018 12:02:58 PM From: Bruno Cipolla Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4828 This is a repeat from the Korea Times. Posted : 2018-04-16 16:02 Updated : 2018-04-16 19:51 China refuses to approve SK hynix-Toshiba deal By Kim Yoo-chul In the latest standoff over attempts to purchase Toshiba's NAND flash memory chip business pursued by a Korea-Japan-U.S. consortium, China's regulators are seeking more protections for Chinese companies before approving the proposed purchase of the Toshiba unit. That may jeopardize the consortium's mega bid to close the deal, sources familiar with the issue told The Korea Times by telephone, Monday. "They were saying the consortium's proposed purchase of Toshiba's NAND chip business will be affected by U.S.-China trade friction. The reality is Chinese regulators want the consortium to provide more remedies to protect Chinese companies before approving the plan," one senior hedge fund manager at an investment bank said. Out of the eight countries that the consortium requested for approval of the deal, China is the only one that has been delaying the approval of the proposed takeover plan. The approval by Chinese regulators has been delayed to May 1 after the consortium's first attempt to close the deal failed. "China has typical patterns in dealing with proposed takeover deals by foreign companies. The rationale is that the country wants them to transfer key technologies and to cut payments by Chinese firms for patents as a condition for approval," said another source from a foreign investment bank operating in Seoul. China is the world's top market for semiconductors, including memory chips and non-memory chips. The country is spending significantly to build up its domestic industry. SK hynix, the world's No. 2 memory chipmaker and a latecomer in the booming NAND-type flash chip memory sector, is part of a group led by Bain Capital that is buying the Toshiba unit for $18 billion. SK hynix doesn't want to acquire the Toshiba unit given their long-term business partnership in the NAND business segment. What the SK Group's chip unit wants is to provide financing for the deal through convertible bonds that could give it as much as 15 percent of the voting rights in the business, which is subject to change according to market circumstances. The two sources declined to be named as the discussions were private. An SK hynix spokesman declined to comment on this issue. Chinese NAND flash memory chip-fabrication companies are said to spend billions of dollars each year in royalties to patent owners as they were very late to the market. Previously, China dropped its investigation over U.S.-based telecom chip giant Qualcomm in return for cutting royalty payments Chinese companies pay to U.S. firms to produce smartphones. "The biggest concerns by Chinese regulators with regard to an issue for proposed takeover deals by foreign companies are that if such plans get implemented, they could hurt Chinese industry. This is a dilemma for foreign companies as it's true China is the most attractive market by any means," the second source said. Similarly, Chinese regulators have yet to approve a separate takeover deal led by Qualcomm to purchase Dutch-based NXP. "If China blocks or nullifies the Toshiba deal, it would hurt the relevant Chinese industry and firms. All interested parties would find common ground, eventually. This is a game for negotiation not a power struggle," he said.