Now President Donald Trump says that China is willing to approve it. One problem: It might be too late. Both sides have already walked away from the deal. Qualcomm even paid a $2 billion penalty for doing so.
“If that deal came back to him, he would most likely approve it quickly,” Trump said. “Which is a big thing.”
Qualcomm and NXP had waited for regulatory approvals for nearly two years before Xi’s administration let the clock run out. The takeover had been approved in eight other jurisdictions, including the European Union and South Korea, since it was announced in October 2016.
It is not clear if the companies will pursue a merger again. Qualcomm moved ahead with a stock buyback of about $30 billion that it had promised shareholders should the NXP deal fall apart. In July, it paid NXP a $2 billion breakup fee.
Qualcomm did not respond to requests for comment from CNN Business, and NXP declined to comment.
The trade dispute was instigated by Trump, who is displeased with the United States’ trade deficit with China. The dispute escalated, with both countries slapping hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs on each other’s goods.
Trump and Xi met for two hours over dinner during the G20 summit in Argentina. The meeting came days after Trump pledged to hike tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods, even as he expressed optimism about a forthcoming deal with Xi.
Trump said the United States would be “holding back on tariffs, and “China will be getting rid of tariffs.”
Source : Nbcnewyork