BOSTON/WASHINGTON, Dec 4 (Reuters) - Index provider FTSE
Russell will delete shares of video security firm Hikvision and
seven other Chinese companies from certain products after a U.S.
order restricting purchase of their shares, it said on Friday.
The move shows how a recent bid by the White House to give
teeth to a blacklist of Chinese companies allegedly backed by
China's military could crimp U.S. investments in the country,
often held in passive products built on broad indexes.
Still, Todd Rosenbluth, head of ETF and mutual fund research
for CFRA, said so far the removals would seem to have a limited
impact on most U.S. investors, since few large Chinese companies
have been restricted. We would expect all index providers to
ultimately remove some Chinese securities in an effort to comply
with the U.S. restrictions, he said via e-mail.
In a statement sent by a spokesman for owner London Stock
Exchange Group,, FTSE Russell said it would drop shares
in companies such as Hangzhou Hikvision, China
Railway Construction Corp , and China
Spacesat.
FTSE Russell said it acted on feedback from index
subscribers and other stakeholders, and was following its policy
when sanctions are imposed that restrict investments.
In the statement issued after U.S. markets closed on Friday,
FTSE Russell said the deletions from its FTSE Global Equity
Index Series and several others would take effect on Dec. 21.
A spokesman said its treatment of the companies remains
under review in other indexes, including its FTSE China and
China A products, considered China domestic indexes.
Rival index provider MSCI Inc had previously said
its products would "reflect any necessary changes" depending on
U.S. law.
The executive order, published last month by the White House
and first reported by Reuters, barred U.S. investors from buying
securities of the blacklisted firms, starting in November 2021.
A spokeswoman for MSCI said it had sought feedback https://app2.msci.com/webapp/index_ann/DocGet?pub_key=oDxmqMxKkoo%3D&lang=en&format=html
from market participants on the order, including any practical
implications on the use of MSCI indexes and whether any changes
to existing indexes or the introduction of new indexes "may be
necessary or helpful to maintain the investability of relevant
MSCI indexes and assist investors to comply with the order."
"We welcomed feedback until December 4," the spokeswoman
said in the email. "We aim to communicate the results of the
consultation soon."
The Financial Times reported that Nasdaq is evaluating the
issue and could publish its conclusion next week, without citing
sources. Nasdaq did not respond to a request for comment.
FTSE Russell, which previously said it was reviewing
securities, said it could drop more companies based on the
findings of U.S. officials.
All eight companies to be dropped figure on a list of
"Communist Chinese Military Companies" compiled by the Pentagon.
They include China Communications Construction Co Ltd
, China Nuclear Engineering & Construction Corp Ltd
, CRRC Corp Ltd , Dawning
Information Industry Co Ltd and China National
Chemical Engineering Co Ltd.
A Hikvision spokesman said the order's decision to pursue it
was "groundless" as the company had never participated in
research and development work for military applications.
"Hikvision has tried to fully cooperate with the U.S.
government and transparently answer policymakers' questions,"
the spokesman said in a statement.
"We have tried to correct misunderstandings about the
company and our business. We will continue to try to do so."
China Railway Construction Corp said it was not able to
immediately respond to requests for comment. The other six
companies could not be reached outside business hours in China
on Saturday.
China's top chipmaker SMIC and oil giant CNOOC.
were among four more companies the Pentagon added to
its list of barred firms this week.
FTSE Russell spokesman Tim Benedict said the company was
aware of those additions, adding, "We will evaluate those in due
course."
(Reporting by Ross Kerber in Boston and by Alexandra Alper in
Washington; Additional reporting by Brenda Goh, Winni Zhou and
Andrew Galbraith in Shanghai and John McCrank in New York;
Editing by Megan Davies, Daniel Wallis and Clarence Fernandez)