cover of episode SpaceX reportedly has a secret backdoor for Chinese investment

SpaceX reportedly has a secret backdoor for Chinese investment

2025/3/28
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@ProPublica报道 :我报道了SpaceX允许中国投资者购买公司股份,只要资金通过开曼群岛或其他离岸中心转账。这种做法引发了国家安全担忧,因为它可能让外国对手接触到敏感的军事技术、情报或供应链。SpaceX高管在特拉华州一起公司纠纷中作证,承认允许中国投资者通过离岸工具购买公司股份,这可能是该公司积极采取措施隐瞒外国所有权利益的迹象。SpaceX没有公开接受过美国外国投资委员会(CFIUS)的正式审查。 @特朗普政府立场 :虽然外国投资者被动、非控股的股份是受欢迎的,但像中国这样的对手利用隐蔽的投资策略来获取技术、知识产权和战略产业中的影响力。 @Financial Times报道 :我发现中国投资者正在利用特殊用途工具将数百万美元悄悄地输送给马斯克控制的公司,包括SpaceX、XAI和Neuralink。

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This is TechCrunch. This episode is brought to you by Tools and Weapons. Hear from technology leaders who say we could be at the most exciting point yet in today's digital revolution on Tools and Weapons. It's a podcast hosted by Microsoft's Vice Chair and President,

Brad Smith. Across three exclusive conversations celebrating the company's 50th anniversary, Microsoft CEOs, including Bill Gates, will share stories they've never told before. And they'll dive into why there's so much buzz around what's happening right now in technology. If you love tech, I think you'll love this podcast because Brad Smith knows some of these experts so as listeners, we get to learn from them on a more personal level.

Find the CEO series and other impactful conversations with government, business, and cultural leaders by searching for Tools and Weapons wherever you listen to podcasts. Elon Musk's rocket company SpaceX has allowed Chinese investors to buy stakes as long as the funds are routed through the Cayman Islands or other offshore hubs, according to reporting from ProPublica. SpaceX is a defense contractor for the Pentagon, one that handles sensitive work like building a classified spy satellite network.

Investment from China raises national security concerns, as it could grant a foreign adversary access to sensitive military technology, intelligence, or supply chains. The insight into SpaceX's investment approach surfaces new questions around Musk's own ties with China, particularly amid reports that the Pentagon briefed Musk on a potential war with China.

The billionaire executive, who is leading the charge to gut federal spending, has regularly met with Communist Party officials in China to discuss his business interests. Tesla's Shanghai Gigafactory builds about half of Tesla's cars, and the country makes up a significant, if shrinking, chunk of its sales.

The details of how SpaceX allows Chinese investors to buy into the company came to light through the testimony of its CFO, Brett Johnson, and major investor Iqbal Jeet Kulon during a recent corporate dispute in Delaware. The dispute centered around an aborted 2021 deal with a Chinese firm that had planned to buy $50 million of the company's stock. When the news became public, SpaceX executives pulled out to avoid potential problems with national security regulators.

Colon testified in December that SpaceX finds it acceptable for Chinese investors to buy into the company through offshore vehicles, which are often used to keep investors anonymous. Experts who spoke to ProPublica said this practice is troubling because it's a potential sign that the company is taking active steps to conceal foreign ownership interests. It's unclear exactly why SpaceX does this. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

While passive, non-controlling stakes from foreign investors are welcome, it is the Trump administration's position that adversaries like China use concealed investment strategies to obtain technologies, IP, and leverage in strategic industries.

As a result, typically such investments would be vetted by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States . There's no public record of SpaceX undergoing a formal CFIUS review. TechCrunch has reached out to CFIUS and SpaceX to learn more. ProPublica's reporting follows an investigation from the Financial Times.

that found that Chinese investors are using special purpose vehicles to quietly funnel millions into Musk-controlled companies, including SpaceX, XAI, and Neuralink. This episode is brought to you by Universal Pictures. Today's the day. From Universal Pictures in Blumhouse come a storm of terror from the director of The Shallows, the woman in the yard. Don't let in.

Where does she come from? What does she want? When will she leave? The Woman in the Yard in theaters.