ARTICLE
28 January 2021

Sanctions Round Up: Fourth Quarter 2020

AO
A&O Shearman

Contributor

A&O Shearman was formed in 2024 via the merger of two historic firms, Allen & Overy and Shearman & Sterling. With nearly 4,000 lawyers globally, we are equally fluent in English law, U.S. law and the laws of the world’s most dynamic markets. This combination creates a new kind of law firm, one built to achieve unparalleled outcomes for our clients on their most complex, multijurisdictional matters – everywhere in the world. A firm that advises at the forefront of the forces changing the current of global business and that is unrivalled in its global strength. Our clients benefit from the collective experience of teams who work with many of the world’s most influential companies and institutions, and have a history of precedent-setting innovations. Together our lawyers advise more than a third of NYSE-listed businesses, a fifth of the NASDAQ and a notable proportion of the London Stock Exchange, the Euronext, Euronext Paris and the Tokyo and Hong Kong Stock Exchanges.
Last quarter, as the Trump Administration wound down, it continued to impose expanded sanctions against China and Iran.
United States Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration

Last quarter, as the Trump Administration wound down, it continued to impose expanded sanctions against China and Iran.  New executive orders targeted Chinese app developers and banned U.S. investors from holding public securities in dozens of Chinese companies with perceived military ties.  In a last-minute effort to entrench its "maximum pressure" policy, the outgoing Administration sanctioned a host of actors in Iran's financial and steel sectors and re-designated many Iranian targets under counterterrorism authorities, potentially making their removal politically more difficult.  Numerous other developments from last quarter included new legislative sanctions on the Nordstream 2 and Turkstream pipelines, the re-listing of Cuba as a State Sponsor of Terrorism, and continued US efforts to curb Venezuela's oil exports.  Notably, in its first week, the Biden Administration has already signaled a new international approach, as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen announced a general review of U.S. sanctions policy and President Biden ordered agency heads to evaluate whether U.S. sanctions are "unduly hindering responses to the COVID-19 pandemic."

View full memo, Sanctions Round Up: Fourth Quarter 2020.

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