The Department of the Treasury has issued a Final Rule to implement Executive Order 14105 of August 9, 2023, “Addressing United States Investments in Certain National Security Technologies and Products in Countries of Concern.” This Final Rule provides the operative regulations and a detailed explanatory discussion regarding the intent and application of these new U.S. outbound investment regulations. This Final Rule is effective on January 2, 2025. Currently, only the People’s Republic of China, along with the Special Administrative Regions of Hong Kong and Macau, are identified as a country of concern. The Outbound Investment Security Program will be administered by the newly created Office of Global Transactions, within Treasury’s Office of Investment Security.

The Final Rule builds on Treasury’s August 2023 Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and its July 2024 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. Treasury invited comment on these earlier rulemaking efforts to develop the regulations. For additional details, see Thompson Hine Updates of June 25, 2024, and August 11, 2023. The Final Rule seeks to address earlier public comments on the scope and objective of the regulations by maintaining the goals of both open investment and protection of national security by focusing on U.S. investments that present a likelihood of conveying both capital and intangible benefits that can be exploited to accelerate the development of sensitive technologies or products critical for military, intelligence, surveillance, or cyber-enabled capabilities of countries of concern in ways that threaten the national security of the United States. This includes, but is not limited to, further clarification and changes to: (i) the definitions of covered transaction and excepted transaction; (ii) the knowledge standard; (iii) the illustrative list of factors to be considered in assessing whether a U.S. person has undertaken a “reasonable and diligent inquiry” with respect to a particular transaction, and further guidance on the information to gather for assessing information; (iv) edits to the definition of “AI system” and notifiable transactions involving AI systems, end use and technical thresholds; and, (v) the intracompany transfer exception. The Final Rule also allows a U.S. person to seek an exemption from the application of the prohibition or notification requirement on the basis that a transaction is in the national interest of the United States.

Treasury has also indicated that it intends to provide additional information following
publication of the Final Rule, and will engage in stakeholder outreach and education on the requirements in the Final Rule. At this time, Treasury does not anticipate establishing an advisory opinion process to allow parties to request determinations of whether a particular transaction is covered, notifiable, or prohibited.

Photo of Scott E. Diamond** Scott E. Diamond**

Scott is a senior policy advisor with more than 25 years’ experience with the legislative and regulatory processes involved in international trade policy, remedies and enforcement. This includes working with clients on matters involving export controls, economic sanctions, human rights and forced labor…

Scott is a senior policy advisor with more than 25 years’ experience with the legislative and regulatory processes involved in international trade policy, remedies and enforcement. This includes working with clients on matters involving export controls, economic sanctions, human rights and forced labor compliance, corporate anti-boycott and antibribery compliance, national security investigations, and foreign direct investment in the United States.

**Not licensed to practice law.

Photo of Francesca M.S. Guerrero Francesca M.S. Guerrero

Francesca counsels clients on compliance with export controls, sanctions, import regulations, human rights and forced labor, and the FCPA and antibribery laws. She works closely with companies to develop tailored compliance programs that fit their specific needs, and routinely advises clients on some…

Francesca counsels clients on compliance with export controls, sanctions, import regulations, human rights and forced labor, and the FCPA and antibribery laws. She works closely with companies to develop tailored compliance programs that fit their specific needs, and routinely advises clients on some of their most challenging international transactions, involving dealings in high-risk jurisdictions or with high-risk counterparties. Francesca also counsels companies through all phases of internal investigations of potential trade and antibribery violations and represents companies across industries before related government agencies.

Photo of Samir D. Varma Samir D. Varma

Samir advises multinational corporations on export controls, economic sanctions and customs, and counsels individuals and corporations on the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and other anti-corruption laws. He represents clients in enforcement actions before U.S. regulatory agencies and conducts corporate internal investigations.

Photo of Aaron C. Mandelbaum Aaron C. Mandelbaum

Aaron focuses his practice on advising clients on compliance with international economic sanctions, export controls, and U.S. import laws and regulations. He is also involved in assisting clients with complex cross-border transactions, anti-dumping and countervailing duty litigation, utilization of international and preferential trade…

Aaron focuses his practice on advising clients on compliance with international economic sanctions, export controls, and U.S. import laws and regulations. He is also involved in assisting clients with complex cross-border transactions, anti-dumping and countervailing duty litigation, utilization of international and preferential trade agreements, and customs classifications. Most recently, Aaron has counseled clients navigating requirements under the Export Administration Regulations.