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France Expanding Veto Power Over Foreign Takeovers

France is to broaden the scope of legislation which can be used to veto foreign takeovers, extending it to the fields of artificial intelligence, microchips, space and data storage, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said late Friday.

The French government adopted a decree in 2014 under which any foreign takeover of French groups operating in sectors considered as strategic can be blocked, Reuters reported.

These currently include energy, water, transport, telecoms and health. 

“We must strengthen the tools to protect French interests, that’s what China and the United States have been doing for a long time,” Philippe said at an event in a plant belonging to cosmetics group L’Oreal in northern France.

New measures will be added to draft legislation to be presented on April 18, the prime minister said.

Stake acquisitions by foreign entities in strategic firms generally receive a green light from authorities in exchange for binding commitments, he said.

The government also plans to create a legal framework to pave the way for a so-called “golden share” rule that would preserve state control over companies in which it has a minority stake. Philippe confirmed state investment bank Bpifrance and the country’s State Shareholding Agency APE were working on a financial envelope to fend off foreign takeovers of French groups.

Bpifrance’s head said last week this envelope should amount to €3 billion ($3.72 billion).