美国养老基金,不顾华盛顿警告,加大投资中国 (The majority of U.S. public pensions, universities and non-profit organizations) U.S. pension funds heavily invested in China complicate Washington's crackdown - U.S. proposals to clamp down on investments in China may be being undermined by continued funding from some of the country's biggest institutional investors, new analysis shows. - The majority of U.S. public pensions have committed funds to China and Hong Kong, including in sensitive technologies — some as recently as this year, according to a report by Future Union. - The findings come as U.S.-China relations have deteriorated over recent years. U.S. proposals to clamp down on investments in China may be being undermined by continued funding from some of America's biggest institutional investors, new analysis shows. The majority of U.S. public pensions, as well certain universities and non-profit organizations, have committed funds to China and Hong Kong, including in sensitive technologies — some as recently as this year, according to a report by Future Union, a non-partisan trade organization. The 74 largest contributors have allocated more than $70 billion to companies in China and Hong Kong via more than 1,100 investments in various funds, including those with exposure to tech majors such as TikTok-maker ByteDance, Tencent and Alibaba https://www.cnbc.com/2023/12/12/us-pension-funds-heavily-invested-in-china-despite-crackdown.html
U.S. pension funds heavily invested in China complicate Washington's crackdown
- U.S. proposals to clamp down on investments in China may be being undermined by continued funding from some of the country's biggest institutional investors, new analysis shows. - The majority of U.S. public pensions have committed funds to China and Hong Kong, including in sensitive technologies — some as recently as this year, according to a report by Future Union. - The findings come as U.S.-China relations have deteriorated over recent years.
U.S. proposals to clamp down on investments in China may be being undermined by continued funding from some of America's biggest institutional investors, new analysis shows.
The majority of U.S. public pensions, as well certain universities and non-profit organizations, have committed funds to China and Hong Kong, including in sensitive technologies — some as recently as this year, according to a report by Future Union, a non-partisan trade organization.
The 74 largest contributors have allocated more than $70 billion to companies in China and Hong Kong via more than 1,100 investments in various funds, including those with exposure to tech majors such as TikTok-maker ByteDance, Tencent and Alibaba
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/12/12/us-pension-funds-heavily-invested-in-china-despite-crackdown.html