
China eyes greater influence over Panama canal as BlackRock deal collapses
CK Hutchison
has announced it will seek to include a major Chinese investor in any future sale of its global port assets—including two critical container terminals bookending the
Panama
Canal—after exclusive negotiations on a $23 billion deal with a US-led consortium expired this weekend.
The original agreement, valued at nearly $23 billion including $5 billion in debt, would have transferred control of 43 ports across 23 countries—including Panama Canal's Balboa and Cristobal terminals—to a consortium led by U.S. financial giant
BlackRock
and Italy's
Mediterranean Shipping Company
. The proposal was hailed by President
Donald Trump
as a means to reduce Chinese sway over the famed waterway, with Trump even floating the idea of the U.S. 'taking back' the canal.
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CK Hutchison, controlled by the family of Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing, has managed the Balboa and Cristobal ports since 1997. These facilities are viewed as strategic chokepoints, handling a substantial portion of the 5% of all global
maritime trade
that transits the canal annually.
Beijing pushes back, Chinese participation demanded
The transaction ignited tensions in Beijing. Chinese authorities made clear that state-owned shipping behemoth Cosco should be offered a direct stake—not merely an indirect one via Hong Kong-based Hutchison. Beijing's anti-monopoly regulators subsequently signaled they might block the deal as originally structured, ramping up the pressure on CK Hutchison. Chinese state-backed media derided the initial U.S.-centric proposal as a 'betrayal' of Chinese interests.
Facing both regulatory threats and strategic pressure, CK Hutchison's exclusive
negotiation
window with the BlackRock-led group expired this weekend. In a subsequent statement, CK Hutchison confirmed it would 'remain open to discussions with a view to inviting a major strategic investor from the [People's Republic of China] to join as a significant member of the consortium,' underscoring that deal structure changes were now essential for regulatory approval in 'all relevant jurisdictions'.
US and Panama react
Washington's unease about
China
's expanding footprint in Latin American infrastructure is bipartisan. The failed deal is seen as a blow to efforts to curtail Chinese influence at critical maritime gateways.
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Panama, meanwhile, emphasizes it retains full sovereignty over the canal itself. Officials argue that operational control of adjacent port facilities does not equate to direct authority over canal operations. Still, legal and political challenges remain, with Panama's attorney general previously backing lawsuits that question the constitutionality of Hutchison's port concessions.
Negotiations are now expected to focus on restructuring the consortium—potentially with direct Chinese state participation—raising the prospect of even greater Chinese influence over a waterway central to global commerce. The situation remains fluid, and U.S. policymakers are likely to scrutinize any restructuring that puts Chinese state entities closer to the Panama Canal.
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