U.S. and Chinese companies alike are looking at
moving some of their manufacturing out of China to escape
tit-for-tat tariffs imposed on each other's products.
Economists say Vietnam and Malaysia are likely to be the biggest
beneficiaries, though countries such as India are also trying to
attract companies such as Apple <AAPL.O>, Foxconn <2354.TW> and
Wistron Corp <3231.TW>.
The Malaysian Investment Development Authority, which shared the
data on foreign private investments with Reuters on Wednesday,
declined to name any company but said global firms were
increasingly attracted to Malaysia for its stable business and
political climate.
In the first six months of the year, Malaysia approved U.S.
investment proposals worth 11.69 billion ringgit in the
manufacturing sector, compared with 307 million ringgit a year
earlier, replacing China at the top of the investment list.
Malaysia already hosts manufacturing plants of U.S. companies
such as Intel Corp <INTC.O>, Dell Technologies Inc <DELL.N> and
On Semiconductor Corp <ON.O>.
Proposed U.S. investment in the service sector soared to 11.52
billion ringgit from just 42.3 million in the year-ago period,
the data showed.
Total approved proposals from Chinese companies dipped to 5.1
billion ringgit this year from 5.69 billion a year earlier.
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