The Treasury Department subsequently kicked off a rule-making process to implement the order, and financial firms have been rushing to meet a Sept. 28 to provide input.
"It could apply to companies that are outside of China but are subsidiaries of Chinese companies or controlled by a Chinese person."
While the U.S. already has restrictions on some Chinese investments in the U.S. and U.S. investments in China, the order creates a new program.
The program proposes exempting publicly traded securities and index and mutual funds, but financial firms want those securities to be more tightly defined.
Financial firms say they support the administration's national security goals but worry about increased liability and the economic costs of restricting capital flows.
Persons:
Florence Lo, Joe Biden, Timothy Keeler, Mayer Brown, Jen Fernandez, Sidley Austin, Jay Clayton, Sullivan, Cromwell, Keeler, Peter Matheson, Fernandez, Pete Schroeder, Carol Mandl, Michelle Price, Deepa Babington
Organizations:
REUTERS, WASHINGTON, Treasury Department, Foreign Investment, Treasury, Former Securities and Exchange, DE, Financial, U.S, Securities Industry, Financial Markets Association, Thomson
Locations:
China, U.S, United States