Business | Investment screaming

Every country wants its own investment-screening regime

Pity the world’s dealmakers

A warning sign hangs from a fence at a construction site in the Canary Wharf, London.
Photograph: Getty Images

SINGAPORE BECAME the latest country to erect barriers to investment in the name of national security on November 3rd. It plans to review, and potentially block, investments in entities “critical to Singapore’s national-security interests”. That should come as little surprise to dealmakers from the free-trading city-state who have watched the proliferation of similar policies abroad. Last year Singaporean firms filed more notices with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), America’s powerful inbound-investment watchdog, than investors from any other country. That includes China, whose globetrotting companies have been the primary target of efforts to beef up existing investment-screening regimes and adopt new ones. A report from the OECD, a club of mostly rich countries, calls this protectionist turn “historically unprecedented”.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Investment screaming”

From the November 25th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Business

Bottles of Corona Cero alcohol-free

Alcohol-free booze is becoming big business

But will it ever be as good?

An illustration depicting a bold yellow lightning bolt in the centre, repeated to the left and right in vibrant green and yellow. Geometric shapes like circles, diamonds, and starbursts are scattered around.

A new electricity supercycle is under way

Why spending on power infrastructure is surging around the world


Illustration of a construction barrier with a sign with a person in the middle on it, in front of a brick wall in the shape of the US

MAGA’s war on talent frightens CEOs—and angers Elon Musk

American businesses’ ability to tap the world’s human capital is under threat


Beware the dangers of data

Numbers have an authority that disguises their flaws

Meet Silicon Valley’s shrewdest talent spotters

An elite group of early-stage investors make supersized returns

Netflix has big ambitions for live sport

Christmas NFL games are just the start