China warns of business sanctions

Announcement comes after Trump bans WeChat, TikTok

TAIPEI, Taiwan -- American companies including Apple and Google could land in Beijing's crosshairs after the Chinese government responded to President Donald Trump's WeChat ban by pointedly announcing details about a restrictive new corporate blacklist.

China's Commerce Ministry said Saturday that companies that are added to its "Unreliable Entities List" would be prohibited from investing in China or trading with the Chinese market -- including imports or exports. The Chinese government has not yet named which companies would land on the list, but state media has long threatened that Apple and Google could be sanctioned if China's relations with the United States continued to fray.

The move appeared to signal China was ready to retaliate less than one day after the Trump administration said it would ban TikTok and WeChat from mobile app stores, citing national security concerns. The U.S. ban of popular Chinese software -- including WeChat, an app that is central to Chinese communications, business and everyday life -- represented an acceleration in the unraveling of trade relations with China and a step by the United States to mirror Beijing's long-standing policy of prohibiting foreign social media services on national security grounds.

The Chinese government first announced the existence of its unreliable entities list in May 2019 as the United States tightened restrictions over Huawei. In the year since, Beijing has not unveiled details about how it would wield the blacklist even as U.S. agencies have progressively choked off access to semiconductors for Huawei and began targeting other Chinese firms.

As part of the Friday announcement, U.S. officials said that WeChat, owned by the Shenzhen technology giant Tencent, and TikTok, which was under buyout talks with Oracle, would be removed from Apple's and Android's U.S. app stores at midnight when Sunday turns to Monday. Money transfers on WeChat, which is widely used for cross-border transactions with businesses in China, could also be cut off, but the ban is not expected to cover ordinary people using the app for communication.

There were 3.3 million active WeChat users in the United States in August, according to App Annie, an analytics company. Although they acknowledge that WeChat is an essential communication tool, U.S. officials, as well as independent researchers like University of Toronto's Citizen Lab, say WeChat has been a platform for Chinese-language disinformation and subject to Chinese government censorship.

On Saturday, the Chinese Commerce Ministry appeared to suggest that Apple and Google could be targeted if they complied with the U.S. government's takedown order.

China would investigate and take "corresponding actions" against any firm that "harmed China's sovereignty, security and development interests, violate market rules, or halt contractual obligations with Chinese companies or individuals, or take discriminatory measures that severely hurt Chinese companies' legitimate interests," the ministry said in its statement.

Individual executives could also be investigated and have their visas canceled, the ministry added. It said it would also establish a new internal division to investigate such cases.

Google has limited market exposure to China, which blocks many popular American internet services and news websites, but the escalating tensions could be disastrous for Apple. Its chief executive, Tim Cook, has long sought to maintain cordial relations with Chinese leaders and has been invited to visit Beijing's Zhongnanhai compound, the seat of the Communist Party leadership, on several occasions, but the company is seen as a vulnerable target for Beijing to hit corporate America. Consumers in Greater China accounted for $44 billion in sales last year, short of one-fifth of Apple's worldwide revenue.

Following the Trump administration's announcements on Friday, WeChat users in the United States scrambled to figure out how the prohibitions would work. Some users on Weibo suggested owning two phones, one with a Chinese Apple account and one registered in the United States. Others joked that they now had to recommend virtual private networking software -- which is often used inside China to access banned sites like Twitter -- to Americans.

The China Press, a Chinese-language website for diasporic Chinese, assured readers that they could still keep in touch with relatives back home and suggested that they could simply change their Apple account location to another country to continue using WeChat.

Upcoming Events