U.S. lawmakers have been unusually silent about federal regulators'
decision to allow a Chinese bank to take over 13 bank branches in New
York and California, suggesting that they think American banks have much
to gain.
Members of both parties usually relish the chance to
bash China on everything from government subsidies to the yuan's
exchange rate. Yet Wednesday's decision by the Federal Reserve to
certify a Chinese bank acquisition for the first time was met by
near-universal silence.
Scott Talbott, the head lobbyist for the Financial Services Roundtable,
said that's unsurprising. The U.S. wants China to open up its financial
services market – foreign ownership of Chinese banks is limited to 25
percent – and allowing a Chinese presence in the U.S. is seen as a
necessary trade-off.
“What this boils down to is that there are
a ton more potential customers in China for U.S. banks than there are
potential customers for the Chinese here,” Talbott said. “So in the long
run, the approval is going to benefit the U.S.”
Wednesday's decision allows Industrial & Commercial Bank
of China, which is 70 percent owned by the Chinese government, to take
an 80 percent stake in a Hong Kong-based bank with 13 branches in the
U.S. The Fed also allowed two other Chinese banks to open branches in
New York and Chicago.
The decision came days after Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner met with
top Chinese officials for annual talks in Beijing. China agreed during
those talks to allow foreigners a greater stake in Chinese brokerage
firms.
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