Huawei Technologies is selling its majority slice of its global submarine cable division, exiting the business of laying undersea piping for the Internet just weeks after the Donald Trump administration blocked it from buying American technology.
Huawei’s corporate parent is selling its 51% of Huawei Marine Networks to Hengtong Optic-Electric, a Jiangsu-based optical-cable manufacturer, according to a stock exchange filing. The deal isn’t formalised and subject to change, Hengtong said in the filing. The Chinese company, whose Shanghai-listed shares have been suspended from trade, didn’t disclose the size of the deal.
A Huawei spokesman declined to comment. Huawei Marine and Hengtong didn’t immediately reply to calls and e-mails.
President Trump’s administration has targeted Huawei for months, first encouraging allies to ban the Chinese company’s equipment from their networks and then putting Huawei on an export blacklist that prohibits it from buying American software and components. Founder Ren Zhengfei talked about the possibility of a strategic retreat — for instance, by shrinking in scale — after the US commerce department blacklisted Huawei and 67 of its affiliates across the world in May.
Huawei Marine, a joint venture between Huawei and British undersea cable firm Global Marine Systems, has drawn scrutiny because of its role in building fundamental Internet infrastructure. The US and Australia in particular are said to be concerned about information security, arguing Beijing can take advantage of projects built by Huawei to conduct espionage. Huawei has repeatedly denied such allegations.
Key role
Huawei Marine plays a key role in Ren’s ambitions. It’s involved in building about 90 undersea cable projects from the Pacific to the Atlantic, laying over 50 000km of undersea cables, according to an introduction on the company’s website. It also built multiple cable routes from England to the vicinity of Cape Town. Other high-profile projects include a cross-Atlantic route that would link Brazil and Cameroon.
Yet the submarine unit is a relatively small business for Huawei, which generates annual sales bigger than Alibaba Group and Tencent Holdings combined. Huawei Marine contributed a net profit of 115-million yuan (US$17-million) for its holding company in 2018, according to Huawei’s annual report. — (c) 2019 Bloomberg LP