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US, Euro Firms Switch Investment Focus From China to India

Outlays into China plunged to less than $20 billion last year, from $120 billion in 2018, while US and European greenfield investment into India soared 400%


Indian banks are expanding lending to local corporations at the fastest pace in more than eight years, lenders said on Tuesday.
Cranes are seen on top of office blocks in Mumbai, India's financial capital, in this file photo from 2020 by Reuters.

 

Western firms are shifting their investments out of China and into other developing markets, with India the No1 destination, a new report has revealed.

The vast majority of the redirected foreign capital is now heading to the world’s most populous nation, followed by Mexico, Vietnam and Malaysia, the report from the Rhodium Group showed.

The companies are turning their backs on the world’s second-largest economy even as its share of global growth continues to increase, highlighting how concerns over China’s business environment, economic recovery and politics weigh heavy on the minds of foreign investors.

The value of announced US and European greenfield investment into India shot up by some $65 billion, or 400%, between 2021 and 2022, Wednesday’s report said, while investment into China dropped to less than $20 billion last year, from a peak of $120 billion in 2018.

 

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“Diversification is well underway,” the research organisation said, but acknowledging: “It will take years for advanced economies to achieve the objectives behind their ‘de-risking’ policies,” as China is so central to global supply chains.

Low production costs and the prospect of a massive middle class drew the first foreign firms to China in the late 1980s, as the country abandoned its Maoist economic model. 

But with consumers now tightening their purse strings and production costs continuing to rise, the market is losing its sheen.

The shift comes as Chinese local authorities struggle to revive foreign investment after an economically bruising pandemic and property crisis depleted their coffers.

Western companies are stepping up greenfield investment in these markets to give them options when sourcing assembled goods and geopolitically sensitive commodities, such as semiconductors, as well as to reduce their dependence on China in their supply chains, the report said.

But the authors cautioned that diversification is unlikely to result in a rapid decline in exposure to China because the markets foreign firms are investing in are heavily reliant on trade and investment with the Asian giant themselves.

As a result: “it would not be surprising to see China’s overall share of global exports, manufacturing and supply chains continue to rise, even as diversification away from China accelerates.”

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean O’Meara

 

Read more:

Foreign Investors ‘Won’t Return Till China Starts Spending Again’

China’s Slow Response to its Economic Woes Puzzling Investors

China Offers Foreign Investors Safeguards to Lure in Funds

Foreign Investors Shunning China, Piling Pressure on Yuan

 

 

Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.

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