The U.S. Department of Defense on Monday broadened its roster of firms it says support the Chinese military, formally adding Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., BYD Co. and Baidu Inc. to its published list. The announcement appeared in the Federal Register as an update to the Defense Department's yearly compilation of companies believed by the U.S. to aid the People’s Liberation Army.
Following the Department of Defense notice, shares of the newly listed companies experienced modest declines in public trading. Alibaba fell about 0.5%, BYD slipped roughly 0.5%, and Baidu dropped near 2.3%. NIO, which had risen more than 2% earlier in the session, surrendered some of its earlier gains after the announcement.
The updated list contains a broad set of other Chinese firms previously identified by the Pentagon, including battery and automotive suppliers, telecommunications carriers, industrial manufacturers and security and surveillance vendors. Notable names on the roster include CATL, Tencent, Huawei, DJI, TP-Link, Unitree, Hikvision, COSCO Shipping, China Mobile, China Telecom, China Unicom, CNOOC, China State Shipbuilding, Norinco, China Three Gorges and WuXi AppTec, among others.
In describing the basis for inclusion, the Defense Department pointed to direct or indirect affiliations with Chinese state entities and security bodies. Those referenced included organizations such as the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), the State Administration for Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense (SASTIND), the PLA, the People’s Armed Police and other law-enforcement or security agencies.
The Pentagon also noted a set of indicators tied to military-civil fusion and state encouragement of industry, such as "Little Giant" or "Single Champion" designations, military-civil fusion enterprise zones, military production licenses, and support from Chinese government science and industrial programs that align with military planning.
By statute and practice, the Defense Department refreshes this roster annually to identify companies it believes assist the PLA. The designation itself carries limited immediate legal consequences for the companies listed. However, the Pentagon has increasingly relied on the list to restrict a company’s ability to win U.S. military contracts or to obtain U.S.-sourced research funding.
Officials and market observers regard a 1260H designation as a notification to U.S. investors and as a potential precursor to more restrictive trade or investment measures, though the notice alone does not impose broad new transactional prohibitions.
Market reaction snapshot - Shares of Alibaba, BYD and Baidu declined modestly on the news. NIO pared earlier gains after the announcement.