Tencent's $1.3B Sumo Deal Under Probe By U.S. Security Panel
- By The Financial District

- Oct 31, 2021
- 1 min read
A US national security panel is investigating Tencent Holdings' $1.27 billion takeover of Sumo Group, the British videogame maker said, in a possible setback to the Chinese internet giant, Reuters reported.

Photo Insert: The Tencent headquarters in the Nanshan District of Shenzhen, China
Sumo, which has studios in the US and four other countries, said Tencent had agreed to offer undertakings to gain approval from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), which assesses deals to ensure they do not hurt national security.
The secretive task force, which is also looking into the US sale of video-sharing app TikTok, had tightened its scrutiny of Chinese deals under former President Donald Trump.
Tencent had made a deal with Sumo in July, just days after China's market regulator blocked its plans to merge videogame streaming sites, Huya and DouYu, on antitrust grounds.
Sumo and Tencent are engaging with the CFIUS to get clearance for the acquisition before the end of the year, the British firm said on Friday.
Sheffield-based Sumo's clients and partners include Microsoft Inc.'s XBOX game studios, Apple Inc., and Alphabet Inc.'s Google, among others. The deal would bring together Sumo's racing and snooker games with Tencent's more high-profile range of games that includes the mobile version of "Call of Duty."
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