Spotlight on Vietnam
Vietnam, in particular, has key advantages for labour-intensive manufacturing and supply chain diversification. With a growing disposable income, low labour costs, continued investment in infrastructure, a strategic location on major trade routes, and an attractive business environment – backed by supportive Government policy – the Asian nation is emerging as a major beneficiary of the China plus one strategy.
Recently the country has entered into 15 free trade agreements with partners across all continents. Samsung now produces nearly 50% of its smartphones and tablets in Vietnam and local manufacturing by footwear giants Nike and Adidas has seen Vietnam become the third-largest shoe producer globally.Corporate income tax breaks for high-tech companies and specific fit-for-purpose industrial zones have also helped.
Over the past four years, average annual real GDP growth in Vietnam has outpaced both emerging and developed markets, coming in at 4.6% – higher than emerging markets overall at 3.6% and global developed markets at 2.5%. At AB, we see the strong economic growth in these Asian export winners bringing a range of investment opportunities, not just directly in the export sector, but also indirectly in a range of industries benefiting from this overall growth – including real estate and consumption - buoyed by the emergence of a new middle class.
But while the shifting of supply chains to other Asian markets – like Vietnam and India – may help solve the diversification issue, Asia still presents a tyranny of distance. This brings the trend of “nearshoring” in regions like Central & Eastern Europe and Latin America into focus – where companies can produce more of their goods closer to the ultimate end-markets.
To supply Europe, companies are establishing hubs in countries like Turkey and Poland. In the US, this has seen a move towards Mexico and Central America. At AB, we are particularly interested in the growth of nearshoring in Mexico.
It’s worth noting that the economic relationship between the US and Mexico is not new. The first North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into force in 1994, creating a free trade zone for Mexico, Canada and the US. Today, under its new name - the US Mexico Canada Agreement- it remains the most important feature in the US Mexico bilateral commercial relationship. But against this already beneficial backdrop, we have seen manufacturing within Mexico supercharge over the past four years.
A closer look at Mexico
According to the US Bureau of Economic Activity, Mexico last year accounted for over 14.8% of U.S. imports, while China’s share dropped to 13.8%. This is the first time in 20 years that the US has imported more total goods from Mexico than China. On an annualized basis, Mexico now exports more in value to the US than any other Asian manufacturing country: Mexican exports to the U.S. reached US$522 billion in the 12 months to end-September 2023, while Chinese exports to the U.S. declined to US$476 billion.
China isn’t about to disappear as a supplier to the US, but incremental investment in manufacturing is shifting elsewhere.