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Justin Bieber, Rihanna, Taylor Swift: how US-China trade war, national security measures may affect stars

  • The sale of a stake in Universal Music Group to Chinese social media giant Tencent could be under threat amid the US-China trade war
  • The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States could block the sale in the interests of US national security

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Rihanna and a long list of other top artists are under the umbrella of Universal Music Group, part of Vivendi. Its sale of a stake in the group to Chinese social media giant Tencent risks being blocked.
Business Insider
Taylor Swift, Rihanna and a large number of other A-list musicians could find themselves caught in the middle of ever-rising tensions between the US and China.
Vivendi, the parent company of juggernaut record label Universal Music Group, is exploring a partial sale of the music giant to Chinese social media firm Tencent – and that could fall under review from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States.

The inter-agency committee reviews acquisitions of US companies by foreign firms for possible national security risks. In order to block Universal’s partial sale, the committee would have to argue that Tencent’s investment in Universal is a risk to national security.

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Since labels collect data on peoples’ listening habits – a practice further enabled by the rise of online streaming – many see the argument as legitimate. This is true even though Vivendi is a French company, and despite the fact that it’s looking to divest less than half of Universal. Ultimately, the committee’s scope covers any company with substantial US operations.

Taylor Swift is one in a very long list of Universal artists who could be affected by US-China trade conflict. Photo: AFP
Taylor Swift is one in a very long list of Universal artists who could be affected by US-China trade conflict. Photo: AFP
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The committee has only become this powerful in recent years, thanks to US President Donald Trump. Last year, Trump signed into law the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernisation Act of 2018 as part of the annual defence bill.
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