Panic Arises As Chinese Company Plans To Acquire U.S. MoneyGram
By PYMNTS Posted on April 3, 2017
Foreign interference with U.S. organizations or the government is always a concern. Following the 2016 presidential election, this concern has likely only increased its level. As such, when
Ant Financial, which is owned in part by the Chinese government, announced its plans in January to acquire U.S.-based money-transfer company MoneyGram for $880 million, significant worries arose.
Specifically, the concerns are around the exposure of millions of Americans’ personal data, including government employees and military.
Several U.S. lawmakers and national security experts have voiced concerns that the Committee on Foreign Investment is ill-equipped to fully assess this acquisition process to fully determine all security weaknesses of the deal.
North Carolina Representative Robert Pittenger voiced his thoughts on the businesses deal: “If the transaction is approved, China would gain direct access to a significant amount of transactional data in MoneyGram’s network. The data would include names, bank account numbers, as well as the location of MoneyGram customers.”
With several MoneyGrams close to U.S. military bases and locations in approximately 200 countries, the U.S. fears this business deal would make the country more prone to foreign espionage and cyberattacks. Many U.S. officials are calling for a more rigorous review process of the deal.
While Ant Financial spokesman, Reze Wong, tried to calm these concerns, the U.S. is still approaching the situation with caution. “They (the Chinese government) are non-controlling stakes, don’t participate in management and don’t have access to things like consumer data,” Wong said.
MoneyGram also shared a statement with
POLITICO Magazine to help ensure any concerns were addressed: “We [will] continue to operate as a stand-alone company, and customer information will continue to be encrypted and stored on our IT systems in Minneapolis in accordance with all applicable data protection requirements.”
It’s likely this deal will take several more months of investigations and probing before it moves forward.
http://www.pymnts.com/news/partners...uire-u-s-moneygram-ant-financial-acquisition/
Chinese grab for U.S. money transfer giant sets off alarms
The purchase by Ant Financial, which is partially owned by the Chinese government, poses a test for the Treasury Department oversight body.
By Bryan Bender 04/01/17 07:11 AM EDT
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'If the transaction is approved, China would gain direct access to a significant amount of transactional data in MoneyGram’s network,' warns Rep. Robert Pittenger. | Getty
A Chinese company’s plans to acquire U.S. money transfer giant MoneyGram is raising fears that the communist government in Beijing could gain sensitive intelligence on Americans’ personal and financial information — including data on thousands of government employees and military personnel.
The purchase by Ant Financial, which is partially owned by the Chinese government, also poses a test for the 42-year-old Treasury Department oversight body that has been asked to review the deal to determine any security risks.
Lawmakers, national security experts and veterans of the review process say the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States is ill-designed to assess all the national security implications of international mergers in the age of information — including the often-blurry picture of who actually controls foreign firms or who has access to an international company’s sensitive data.
Moreover, they say, it is severely understaffed to handle the rising number of complicated cases and lacks the authority to address evolving threats in telecommunications, media, agriculture and other industries.
In the case of Ant Financial’s proposed acquisition of MoneyGram, critics say, the fallout could include exposing personal data on millions of Americans.
CFIUS is expected to complete its review during the next several months.
"If the transaction is approved, China would gain direct access to a significant amount of transactional data in MoneyGram’s network," warns Rep.
Robert Pittenger, a North Carolina Republican who serves on the Financial Services Committee and is vice chair of the Task Force on Terrorist Financing. "The data would include names, bank account numbers, as well as the location of MoneyGram customers."
Like other CFIUS critics, Pittenger wants a more rigorous review process to ensure such deals do not make the U.S. more vulnerable to foreign espionage, blackmail or cyberattacks.
Dozens of MoneyGram locations lie inside or within a few miles of some of the largest U.S. military installations, including Fort Bragg, N.C., where soldiers, their families and defense contractors commonly use the company’s money transfer services.
MoneyGram also has locations in about 200 countries. Pittenger told POLITICO he is concerned that the Chinese government could "leverage this personal information to harass dissidents, journalists and human rights activists who dare challenge the Chinese Communist Party.”
Personal data can also fuel a variety of cyberattacks, helping hackers trick these targets into giving up login credentials to sensitive accounts.
The $880 million deal, announced in January, was described by Ant as "a significant milestone." The combination of the two firms, it said, "will provide greater access, security and simplicity for people around the world to remit funds."
The company insists that while Chinese government-owned enterprises, including state-run pension funds, are among Ant Financial's shareholders — making more than 14 percent of the company’s ownership — it remains a privately run business.
"They are non-controlling stakes, don’t participate in management and don’t have access to things like consumer data," said Reze Wong, a company spokesman.
Others intimately familiar with the company's operations also reject the argument that China's leaders could gain access to data held by MoneyGram, which is headquartered in Dallas, Texas.
"You don't really understand China if you think that it has government involvement," said one source with direct knowledge who agreed to speak on the condition he not be identified by name. He said Ant "operates like any other private-sector company in the world," in which shareholders are involved in business operations "only at the macro level."
Moreover, advocates of the acquisition insist that any personal data now maintained on MoneyGram's computer servers in the U.S. will remain so under the deal and will be subject to U.S. regulations.
"We would continue to operate as a stand-alone company" and "customer information will continue to be encrypted and stored on our IT systems in Minneapolis in accordance with all applicable data protection requirements," MoneyGram said in a statement to POLITICO.
http://www.politico.com/story/2017/04/china-money-transfer-treasury-ant-financial-moneygram-236773