It seems that the Chinese company chose to abandon the acquisition. I see three possible reasons.
This may have been part of a wider Chinese negotiation with the US on security technology. It might have destabilised some position or other, cost more in US hostility elsewhere, etc.
Also, the Dutch do tend to be very cooperative with US government demands, if they are tolerable; the Chinese company might simply have recognised that the Dutch would now block the acquisition at the request of the US.
Third, the US could easily block the company’s trade permissions, stopping its access to a key world market. That would have made the acquisition far less profitable, and the company would have no reason to continue.
You missed the real reason, that it’s not a Dutch company but owned by US investors Anchorage Capital Group, Nut Tree Capital Management, and Cerberus Capital Management
It seems that the Chinese company chose to abandon the acquisition. I see three possible reasons.
This may have been part of a wider Chinese negotiation with the US on security technology. It might have destabilised some position or other, cost more in US hostility elsewhere, etc.
Also, the Dutch do tend to be very cooperative with US government demands, if they are tolerable; the Chinese company might simply have recognised that the Dutch would now block the acquisition at the request of the US.
Third, the US could easily block the company’s trade permissions, stopping its access to a key world market. That would have made the acquisition far less profitable, and the company would have no reason to continue.
You missed the real reason, that it’s not a Dutch company but owned by US investors Anchorage Capital Group, Nut Tree Capital Management, and Cerberus Capital Management