this post was submitted on 15 Mar 2025
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You're really oversimplifying this situation, European multinationals do the exact same thing to US brands. Examples include Nestle, Unilever, and AB InBev, among many others.
Multinational corporations make a boycott of a specific country's products difficult, because oftentimes the factories that make the products may be within your country even if the top of the chain is located somewhere else.
No, you are attacking a straw man.
Of course it's not black and white, but the overall balance is much more towards American capital than European capital.
Even for a company like Unilever, American institutional investors hold a much larger share than European investors hold in Mondelez.
That's the point I was making.
I'm European and even I'm part of the American institutional investor class.
Retirement funds in stock based ETFs = everyone is part of these large insitutional funds. Until my requested change taked place, my fund mostly holds Blackrock (iShares) run ETFs and a few other American ones. Soon it'll be Xtrackers and a few other European ones with no US specific fund, but I'm not rich so this is a drop in the sea.
The GDP of the US is about $30 trillion USD while the GDP of the EU + UK is about $23 trillion USD. Europe has enough capital to effectively compete with the US, and it does. "American institutional investors" include a ton of foreign capital. This isn't a "David vs Goliath" situation