Chinese tech companies long looked to the United States as a key market and source of investment. Firms like ByteDance, the company behind TikTok, courted major American investment firms like General Atlantic and Susquehanna Capital. Chinese startups in Shanghai and Shenzhen saw an initial public offering on the Nasdaq or New York Stock Exchange as the ultimate symbol of success.
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But as relations between Washington and Beijing have grown increasingly strained, that is changing.
Companies with ties to China now face so much regulatory and political scrutiny that some companies are reconsidering going public or doing business in the United States, investors and experts said. None want to end up like TikTok, which spent years trying to deflect Washington's concerns about its ties to China.
Popular startups that investors would have once considered promising candidates for US listings, like fast-fashion retailer Shein, are now looking elsewhere or waiting to list. Others are deciding not to take stakes in US companies.
«We're at a point now where almost no major Chinese tech acquisition of a US company is going to get by without serious scrutiny,» said Geoffrey Gertz, a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security. A lot of those deals are drying up preemptively, Gertz said.