WORDS ON THE STREET 70th anniversary of Hanoi's Liberation Day Vietnam - Asia 2023 Smart City Summit Hanoi celebrates 15 years of administrative boundary adjustment 12th Vietnam-France decentrialized cooperation conference 31st Sea Games - Vietnam 2021 Covid-19 Pandemic
Home / Investment / Opportunities
Taiwanese tech giant ASUS ponders Vietnam for production relocation
Ngoc Thuy 15:54, 2018/11/19
US and China’s firms are looking at shifting production, assembly or sourcing of supplies to third countries, with Southeast Asia as the leading choice.
Vietnam is among a list of countries that Taiwanese tech-company ASUS is considering for the relocation of its Chinese production capacities, due to high tariffs imposed by the US on China-made goods, reported AnandTech website. 
 
Illustrative photo.
Illustrative photo.
In fact, the company already has production facilities in Taiwan, but the question is whether it has enough capacity to meet current demand for components, or will have to invest in expansion.

In addition to moving production facilities, hardware producers may need to switch to other suppliers of components. Right now, ASUS is considering the relocation of its own PC components manufacturing as an urgent matter. 

Moreover, if the company moves assembly of graphics cards and motherboards outside of China, it will also have to find new suppliers of small parts like capacitors, connectors, sockets, among others.

ASUS is a multinational company known for the world’s best motherboards, personal computers (PCs), monitors, graphics cards, routers and other high-quality technology solutions, it claims.

In 2017, the company was ranked 26th in Forbes’Global 2000 Top Regarded Companies, and named among the World’s Most Admired Companies by Fortune.

Economist Pham Chi Lan said Vietnam would benefit most if tech giants from North America, Europe and northeast Asia outsourced FDI from China to Vietnam, according to South China Morning Post. 

Previously, a survey of companies from both US and China, published by the Guangzhou-based American Chamber of Commerce (Amcham) in South China, showed that most survey participants are looking at shifting production, assembly or sourcing of supplies to third countries, with Southeast Asia as the leading choice.

Some companies are already putting such plans into motion. Panasonic, for example, is moving production of car electronics from China to Thailand, Malaysia and Mexico. China's GoerTek, which assembles wireless earphones for Apple, has notified suppliers that it intends to relocate some of its production to Vietnam. Chinese polyester producer Zhejiang Hailide New Material is investing US$155 million in a factory in Vietnam with an eye toward US exports.

Close to half of the companies in the AmCham survey reported feeling a trade impact beyond tariffs from the US-China confrontation. For example, 44% said that customs clearance for their shipments had slowed while 38% said that inspections had increased and that approval for licenses was taking longer.

The survey largely echoed the findings of a similar one conducted a few weeks earlier involving about 430 members of the American chambers of commerce in Beijing and Shanghai. The biggest difference was that nearly two-thirds of respondents to the earlier survey said they had no plans to shift manufacturing out of China despite the new tariffs.
Other news
17:29, 2024/07/23
State-owned corporations set to pilot offshore wind power projects
Private and foreign investors are currently not being considered for pilot projects due to unresolved legal and security issues.
06:12, 2024/07/17
AIIB ready to fund Hanoi’s urban railway projects
Hanoi expects the AIIB to assist with planning, implementation methods, and financing strategies to rapidly deploy metro projects.
15:33, 2024/07/02
S.Korea’s industrial conglomerates to expand investment activities in Vietnam
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh welcomed the proposals, which are consistent with Vietnam’s green growth strategy.
11:29, 2024/05/08
Intel boosts Vietnam’s semiconductor workforce for ambitious goals
Kim Huat Ooi, Vice President of Manufacturing, Supply Chain and Operations and General Manager of Intel Products Vietnam, spoke to The Hanoi Times about Vietnam's semiconductor ambitions and Intel's contribution to making the country a global manufacturing and R&D hub.
16:32, 2024/04/04
Vietnam among top investment destinations for SEA investors
The top three neighboring countries whose companies are eager to expand their operations in Vietnam are Thailand (66%), Malaysia (58%), and Indonesia (55%).
15:21, 2024/03/08
Vietnam looks to support FDI firms as global minimum tax looms
The move is aimed at attracting foreign capital from future investors and protecting existing businesses.