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9/15/2022

Statement by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen on President Biden’s Executive Order on the Committee on For…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Statement by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen on
President Biden’s Executive Order on the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States
September 15, 2022

WASHINGTON – Today, President Biden issued an Executive Order reflecting the evolving
national security threat landscape and underscoring the critical role of the Committee on
Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS or the Committee) in responding to new and
emerging threats and vulnerabilities in the context of foreign investment. The Executive Order
elaborates and expands on the existing list of factors that CFIUS considers when reviewing
transactions for national security risks and describes potential national security implications
in key areas. Among other things, the Executive Order enumerates sectors in which supply
chain resiliency and U.S. technological leadership face an increasing national security risk —
including microelectronics, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, advanced clean energy, and
critical materials. The Executive Order also directs CFIUS to consider whether a transaction
that it is reviewing implicates specific national security risks related to aggregate industry
investment trends, cybersecurity, and U.S. personsʼ sensitive data.
“President Bidenʼs Executive Order highlights CFIUSʼs increasing attention to national security
risks in several key areas and sharpens the Committeeʼs focus on protecting Americaʼs
national security, while maintaining the U.S. open investment policy,” said Secretary Janet L.
Yellen, who serves as chair of CFIUS. “Strengthening our supply chains and protecting against
foreign threats enhances our national security, and this Executive Order highlights CFIUSʼs
important role in that work. It also rea irms CFIUSʼs mission to protect Americaʼs
technological leadership and the security of our citizensʼ sensitive data from emerging
threats.”
The Executive Order builds upon the illustrative list of national security factors in CFIUSʼs
authorizing statute (section 721 of the Defense Production Act of 1950, as amended) and
reflects the evolving nature of national security risks that CFIUS addresses under its current
authorities. While the Executive Order provides important context for how CFIUS considers

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9/15/2022

Statement by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen on President Biden’s Executive Order on the Committee on For…

these risks when evaluating the transactions under its jurisdiction, it does not change CFIUS
operations or process.
In particular, the Executive Order elaborates on two national security factors contained in the
authorizing statute relating to supply chain resiliency and security, and U.S. technological
leadership. The Executive Order highlights key sectors where these factors can present a
particular risk, including microelectronics, artificial intelligence, biotechnology and
biomanufacturing, quantum computing, advanced clean energy, climate adaptation
technologies, critical materials, and elements of the agriculture industrial base.
The Executive Order also describes three additional national security factors that CFIUS
considers in reviewing transactions under its jurisdiction. The first, aggregate industry
investment trends — which refers to the possibility that a foreign person may gradually gain
control in a sector or technology through a series of transactions over time — implicates
national security risks arising from an individual transaction that may not be apparent when
the transaction is viewed in isolation. The second, cybersecurity, involves national security
risks posed by malicious actors who are developing capabilities to conduct cyber intrusions or
other malicious cyber-enabled activity. The third, risks related to sensitive data, recognizes
that data is of increasing value as it can be used for surveillance, tracing, tracking, and
targeting of individuals or groups of individuals. Each of these three factors requires
particular attention from CFIUS to protect U.S. national security.

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