In the scenario you're discussing, it's a Canadian company purchasing or investing in another Canadian company, but the investing company that's Canadian is potentially influenced by a foreign SOE. In that case, the act, for a definition of SOE, would permit the minister to look at that Canadian company—and I have to use quotes for this—as to whether it actually is Canadian or not, or whether it is an SOE for the purposes of this act because it's being influenced, its business decisions, its management, etc., is being influenced, and therefore directed by the foreign SOE.
It's a difficulty in talking about a Canadian business investing in another Canadian business. If it truly is a Canadian business investing in another Canadian business, this act doesn't apply. We're looking at the scenario where the business folks have arranged their corporate group, or arranged their transactions in such a way as to provide control or direction through influence over a business by another entity, and it's allowing the minister to look back at who is actually pulling the levers on the investor.
This goes as well to the rest of the act. The rest of the act permits the minister to look at control, but that control is not based simply on the initial holder. It allows the minister to look back at who the beneficial holder is. That's why this direct versus indirect control is in the act. If, for example, a foreign state owns company A, and they purchase company B, and company B purchases company C, and company C purchases company D, the act permits the minister to look all the way back up the chain to see who's actually running company D, the final company. It's a similar scenario with influence, where the minister will be permitted to look to see who's actually making the decisions.