Dutch minister Willemijn Aerdts prohibited Kyndryl's EUR 100m acquisition of cloud provider Solvinity on Tuesday 26 May, citing risk to the public interest 1. Kyndryl is a US-listed IT infrastructure firm spun out of IBM; Solvinity is a Dutch provider that hosts DigiD, the national digital-identity system citizens use for tax, healthcare and pensions, along with the MijnOverheid government portal. The decision is the first US deal ever blocked under the Dutch Investment Screening Bureau, the body that reviews foreign investments for national-security and public-interest risk.
The ground was the US CLOUD Act, the 2018 statute (the Clarifying Lawful Overseas Use of Data Act) that lets American authorities compel US-linked companies to disclose data held anywhere in the world. That is the precise argument underpinning CAIDA's public-sector restrictions . The Dutch competition authority ACM (the Authority for Consumers and Markets) had cleared the deal on antitrust grounds in February; investment screening ran on a separate track and reached the opposite conclusion. A Kyndryl spokesperson said the firm was "extremely disappointed" 2.
The split outcome shows two regimes testing different questions. Competition law asks whether a deal harms the market; investment screening asks whether foreign control harms the state. The CLOUD Act argument only bites on the second. While CAIDA waited for a College vote , The Hague reached for screening law it already held and reached the result the flagship regulation is still trying to mandate. The precedent is now citable by every member state, including the Berlin government using College silence to blunt the Brussels version.
