I. Introduction
President Trump’s early August 2020 Executive Orders prohibiting transactions with ByteDance Ltd. (“ByteDance”), the Chinese owner of the popular social media app TikTok, and, separately, ordering the divestiture of ByteDance’s U.S. business operations, have thrust the activities of a once-obscure Executive Branch interagency body – the Committee for Foreign Investment in the United States (“CFIUS”) – into everyday conversation. CFIUS’s increasingly high-profile status reflects its expanded jurisdiction and authority under the 2018 Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act of 2018 (“FIRRMA”) and the Treasury Department’s implementing regulations, which were made final earlier this year.[1] The scope of transactions that now may come under CFIUS review is much broader, including the commercial real estate space. Lenders who operate in this market should familiarize themselves with CFIUS, its authorities, and its considerations, especially as foreign investment begins to pick back up along with the overall economy.
II. What Is CFIUS?
CFIUS is an interagency executive branch body composed of key departments and agencies that serves the President in overseeing the national security implications of foreign direct investment in the United States economy. If a proposed transaction falls within CFIUS’s scope of authority, the President has the discretion to suspend, block, or approve the transaction or to conditionally approve the transaction subject to negotiated mitigation measures. CFIUS also has the power to review transactions after the fact, and if it identifies issues for which it would have required mitigation, the President has the right to unwind the transaction post-closing.
III. What Do Commercial Real Estate Lenders Need to Know about CFIUS?
Although CFIUS always had the authority to review real estate transactions to the extent that they involved a foreign person obtaining control over a U.S. business, and such control could threaten U.S. national security,[2] FIRRMA expanded CFIUS’s jurisdiction to explicitly capture certain real estate transactions involving the purchase, lease, or concession of certain real estate by a foreign person – “covered real estate transactions.” Commercial real estate lenders should be aware, though, that there may be instances in which other “covered transactions” – known as “covered control transactions” and “covered investments” – could be implicated.
A. Covered Real Estate Transactions
FIRRMA expanded the scope of CFIUS’s authority to review “covered real estate transactions,” which are defined under FIRRMA as purchases, leases, or concessions to a foreign person of certain “covered real estate” that affords the foreign person at least three of the following rights, whether or not exercised:
Real estate lenders thus need to understand what constitutes “covered real estate” and who might be a “foreign person.”
Covered real estate is defined as real estate (a) related to certain identified ports or (b) located within a particular distance of certain military installations or identified U.S. government property. CFIUS regulations – and the CFIUS website – provide a list of the ports, installations, and government property. CFIUS also recently unveiled a map search tool that interested parties can use to determine whether a certain piece of real estate is located within proximity to one of the listed facilities.
A foreign person, for CFIUS purposes, means:
(1) Any foreign national, foreign government, or foreign entity;
(2) Any entity over which control is exercised or exercisable by a foreign national, foreign government, or foreign entity; or
(3) Any entity over which control is exercised or exercisable by a foreign person.
B. Covered Control Transactions
Commercial real estate lenders may find themselves involved in a “covered control transaction” to the extent that the transaction involves a “long-term lease or concession arrangement under which a lessee (or equivalent) makes substantially all business decisions concerning the operation of a leased entity (or equivalent), as if it were the owner” or if CFIUS’s national security concern stems from the real estate aspects of the purchase of a U.S. business.[3] In recent years, CFIUS has scrutinized covered control transactions due to the proximity of the U.S. business to sensitive government facilities or the nature of the real estate itself. Some notable examples include: (i) the 2012 review by CFIUS of the acquisition by Ralls Corp., a Chinese-owned entity, of a wind farm in Oregon located near a U.S. Navy base and the subsequent order by President Obama requiring Ralls to divest itself of ownership of the wind farm; (ii) the 2014 acquisition of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City by Anbang Insurance Group, a Chinese-insurance conglomerate, which was reviewed and ultimately approved by CFIUS; and (iii) the 2017 conditional approval by CFIUS of the acquisition by COSCO Shipping Holdings Co., Ltd., a Chinese shipping company, of the controlling interest in Hong Kong-based ocean container shipping company Orient Overseas International Ltd., which had a long-term concession for the operation of a container terminal in Long Beach, California.
C. Covered Investments in a TID U.S. Business
Under FIRRMA, CFIUS now has the authority to review certain non-controlling “covered investments” in U.S. businesses associated with Technology, Infrastructure and Data (a so-called “TID U.S. business”). A TID U.S. business is one which falls into one or more of the following categories:
(1) A U.S. business that produces, designs, tests, manufactures, fabricates, or develops one or more critical technologies.
(2) A U.S. business that performs specified types of work on covered investment critical infrastructure.
(3) A U.S. business that maintains or collects, directly or indirectly, sensitive personal data of U.S. citizens.
Commercial real estate loans are less likely to be affected by covered investments, as commercial real estate developers, owners and operators would not typically constitute a TID U.S. business.
D. Exceptions and Safe Harbors
With respect to real estate transactions, the implementing regulations include several exceptions and/or safe harbors, including the following:
E. Notification of Covered Transactions to CFIUS
Mandatory notice rules do not apply to covered real estate transactions. While the parties to a covered real estate transaction are not required to file a notice with CFIUS, CFIUS has the authority to review the transaction at any time, even after it has closed and the President has the power to unwind such transactions.
If the parties to a transaction believe that the transaction may constitute a covered transaction, then the parties may seek CFIUS approval by either (a) filing a voluntary long-form “notice” with CFIUS detailing the subject transaction or (b) filing a short-form “declaration” with CFIUS, which is a truncated version of the more lengthy voluntary notice. If CFIUS approves a notice or a declaration, then the transaction is exempt from any further scrutiny by CFIUS, except in certain limited circumstances.
F. Length of CFIUS Review
FIRRMA proscribes the following fixed time frames:
IV. Conclusion
Although historically very few real estate transactions have triggered any intervention by CFIUS, recent statutory and regulatory changes have greatly expanded the scope of CFIUS’s jurisdiction into this area. Commercial real estate lenders should be attuned to transactions in which foreign persons are acquiring control rights over real estate that is located close enough to certain ports, airports, military bases, or other sensitive sites such that their control over such property might pose a threat to U.S. national security interests. The risk to commercial real estate lenders is that they finance a transaction that later has to be unwound. Consequently, as part of its due diligence process on any loan where there is a foreign person who has direct or indirect control rights over the borrower or the property, commercial real estate lenders should make sure to confirm that either (a) the property is not covered real estate that would fall within CFIUS’s jurisdiction; (b) the transaction is not otherwise a covered transaction; or (c) CFIUS has already reviewed the transaction and provided a safe harbor letter to the parties evidencing its approval of the transaction.
[1] See, e.g., Keith Gerver’s February 13, 2020 Clients & Friends Memorandum, entitled “Final Regulations on Expanded Authority of CFIUS to Review Foreign Investor Transactions Go into Effect.”
[2] See 31 C.F.R. § 800.210 (definition of covered control transaction) and 31 C.F.R. § 800.208 (definition of control).
[3] See 31 C.F.R. § 800.249.