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Trump's Tariffs Push Electronics From China to Southeast Asia

Trade tensions with the U.S. make it less appealing to manufacture gadgets in China.

Trump's Tariffs Push Electronics From China to Southeast Asia
An Intel Corp. employee holds up a processing chip (Photographer: Doug Kanter/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Electronics makers are preparing to shift more production to Southeast Asia as trade tensions with the U.S. make it less appealing to manufacture gadgets in China.

A number of Taiwanese firms that form a crucial plank of the global supply chain have in recent days signaled their intention to diversify away from the world’s No. 2 economy. Delta Electronics Inc., which supplies power components to Apple Inc., said Tuesday it’s making a $2.14 billion offer to buy out a Thai affiliate -- a precursor to expanding production there. Merry Electronics Co., which makes headphones for the likes of Bose, said it may move some of its production to the same country from southern China, depending on how the trade conflict pans out.

Taiwan is home to some of the world’s largest contract manufacturers, including iPhone-assembler Foxconn. Cranking out goods under the labels of well-known brands, an increasing number in recent years had begun to move away from China to escape rising wages, a trend that a Washington-Beijing spat is now accelerating. New Kinpo Group, which makes everything from computer hardware to facial massagers in Thailand and the Philippines, told Bloomberg this month that Donald Trump’s offensive was spurring growing interest in its services.

“Taiwanese companies have invested in China in the past because of low labor costs. But as wages in China have been rising, some have begun an exodus to Southeast Asia,” Tsai Ming-fang, an economist at Taipei’s Tamkang University, said. “Trump’s tariffs are giving Taiwanese companies further incentives to move to Southeast Asia.”

The numbers are starting to bear that out. Taiwan approved Chinese investments totaling $4.2 billion in the first six months, down 4.5 percent, while investments in Vietnam, Malaysia and India surged over the same period.

Much depends on whether Trump makes good on threats to levy tariffs on an additional $200 billion of Chinese goods -- and eventually possibly all imports from the Asian country. But for many executives, the planning has already begun.

“There are a lot of uncertainties in geopolitics and the China-U.S. trade war has begun,” Delta Chairman Yancey Hai told reporters. The company also addressed the Thai deal. “Delta, with the acquisition, can add more manufacturing bases, reduce risks brought about by the global trade war, bolster its sales network and get closer to its customers,” company spokesman Jesse Chou added on Tuesday night.

That sentiment was echoed Monday by Merry Chief Executive Officer Allen Huang on an earnings conference.

“If Trump’s tariffs hit headphones, it will affect exports to the U.S. and our customers will hope that we can cut costs and manufacture in locations unaffected by the tariffs,” he told analysts. “While my competitors all run factories in China, we have an edge over them thanks to our facilities in Thailand. We are preparing to move our semi-finished products from China to Thailand first and finish final assembly there” if tariffs hit.

To contact the reporter on this story: Debby Wu in Taipei at dwu278@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Robert Fenner at rfenner@bloomberg.net, Edwin Chan

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.