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Department of Commerce bans U. S. firms from selling to ZTE for 7 years

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(Reuters) — The U. S. Department of Commerce has banned American companies from selling components to leading Chinese telecom equipment maker ZTE for seven years for violating the terms of a sanctions violation case, U. S. officials said on Monday.
( Reuters) — The U. S. Department of Commerce has banned American companies from selling components to leading Chinese telecom equipment maker ZTE for seven years for violating the terms of a sanctions violation case, U. S. officials said on Monday.
The U. S. action, first reported by Reuters, could be devastating to ZTE since American companies are estimated to provide 25 percent to 30 percent of the components used in ZTE’s equipment, which includes networking gear and smartphones .
The ban is the result of ZTE’s failure to comply with an agreement with the U. S. government after it pleaded guilty last year in federal court in Texas to conspiring to violate U. S. sanctions by illegally shipping U. S. goods and technology to Iran .
The Chinese company, which sells smartphones in the United States, paid $890 million in fines and penalties, with an additional penalty of $300 million that could be imposed.
“If the company is not able to resolve it, they may very well be put out of business by this. Many banks and companies even outside the U. S. are not going to want to deal with them,” said Eric Hirschhorn, a former U. S. Undersecretary of Commerce who was heavily involved in the case.
As part of the agreement, Shenzhen-based ZTE Corp promised to dismiss four senior employees and discipline 35 others by either reducing their bonuses or reprimanding them, senior Commerce Department officials told Reuters. But the Chinese company admitted in March that while it had fired the four senior employees, it had not disciplined or reduced bonuses to the 35 others.
Under terms of the ban, U. S. companies cannot export prohibited goods, such as chip sets, directly to ZTE or via another country, beginning immediately.
Shares of big U. S. ZTE suppliers fell sharply on the Commerce ban. Acacia Communications Inc, which got 30 percent of its total 2017 revenue from ZTE, tumbled 35 percent, hitting a near two-year low.
Shares of optical companies including Lumentum Holdings Inc fell 6.6 percent and Finisar Corp dropped 2.7 percent. Oclaro Inc, which got 18 percent of its fiscal 2017 revenue from ZTE, lost 13.1 percent.
ZTE “provided information back to us basically admitting that they had made these false statements,” said a senior department official. “That was in response to the U. S. asking for the information.”
“We can’t trust what they are telling us is truthful,” the official said. “And in international commerce, truth is pretty important.”
ZTE officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The ban on supplying ZTE comes two months after two Republican Senators introduced legislation to block the U. S. government from buying or leasing telecommunications equipment from ZTE or its Chinese rival Huawei Technologies Co Ltd[HWT. UL], citing concern the companies would use their access to spy on U. S. officials.
Meanwhile, Britain’s main cyber security agency said on Monday it has written to organizations in the UK’s telecommunications sector warning about using services or equipment from ZTE.
Douglas Jacobson, an exports control lawyer who represents suppliers to ZTE, called the ban highly unusual and said it would severely affect the company.
“This will be devastating to the company, given their reliance on U. S. products and software,” said Jacobson. “It’s certainly going to make it very difficult for them to produce and will have a potentially significant short and long-term negative impact on the company.”
ZTE has sold handset devices to U. S. mobile carriers AT&T Inc, T-Mobile US Inc and Sprint Corp. It has relied on U. S. companies including Qualcomm Inc, Microsoft Corp and Intel Corp for components.
The U. S. action against ZTE is likely to further exacerbate current tensions between Washington and Beijing over trade. After the U. S. placed export restrictions on ZTE in 2016 for Iran sanctions violations, the China’s Ministry of Commerce and Foreign Ministry criticized the decision.
A five-year federal investigation found last year that ZTE had conspired to evade U. S. embargoes by buying U. S. components, incorporating them into ZTE equipment and illegally shipping them to Iran.
ZTE, which devised elaborate schemes to hide the illegal activity, agreed to plead guilty after the Commerce Department took actions that threatened to cut off its global supply chain.
The U. S. government had allowed the company continued access to the U. S. market under the 2017 agreement.
The new restrictions stem from a Jan. 16 report by a U. S. monitor appointed by a federal judge in Texas who accepted the guilty plea in March 2017. Although Commerce Department officials would not discuss the report, they said the department followed up in February.
The U. S. government’s investigation into sanctions violations by ZTE followed reports by Reuters in 2012 that the company had signed contracts to ship millions of dollars’ worth of hardware and software from some of the best known U. S. technology companies to Iran’s largest telecoms carrier.

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