Wealth Strategies
How Investors Play "Nearshoring" Trend As Globalisation Shifts – PGIM
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In an investment commentary, the US-headquartered firm talks about the decisions that asset allocators should consider as patterns of global trade change, and not just because of the impact of rising tariffs.
Investors should increase exposure to countries that are likely
to benefit from the “nearshoring” of manufacturing and other
activities in a world partly moving away from globalisation
and open trade, according to PGIM, part of US-listed
Prudential Financial Inc.
In the Americas, Chile and Peru are important suppliers of
sought-after minerals such as lithium and copper, and Brazil is
expanding its mining for minerals. In Asia-Pacific, Australia has
important ranges of metals and minerals, and Vietnam has a
low-cost manufacturing capability in clothing and electronics.
Turning to Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Poland and the
Czech Republic are becoming “nearshoring hubs,” PGIM said,
for European Union manufacturers competing with Western Europe’s
higher production costs. In Morocco, it is attracting pharma and
auto supply chain operations located closer to Europe.
While globalisation is unwinding in some ways, it is going ahead
rapidly elsewhere, hence a targeted approach is needed
to understand what the investment impact is, the firm,
which oversees $1.38 trillion in AuM, said in a note.
For investors, this “dual-track” world offers new opportunities
and risks across countries and industries such as AI, high-end
semiconductors, 5G telecommunication networks, critical minerals,
fossil fuels, electric vehicles and military technology,
highlighting the need for stress-testing portfolios and managing
strategic investments within a dynamic and fragmenting global
economy, PGIM said.
The A New Era of Globalization report said that
despite recent tariff activity and the prospect of a prolonged
trade war, around 75 per cent of the global economy remains on
the “fast track” of globalisation – reliant on efficient
global supply chains and not reined in by national security
concerns.
“Rising geopolitical tensions and expanding trade restrictions
may appear to signal the globalisation pendulum has swung hard in
the opposite direction, pitting national interests against a
shared global good. Yet the reality is far more nuanced,”
Shehriyar Antia, head of Thematic Research at PGIM, said. “Even
if America’s ‘small yard’ of protected industries grows larger,
roughly 80 per cent of global trade happens beyond US borders,
and companies in most industries will still seek out the benefits
of free trade and competitive advantage.”
PGIM said investors shouldn’t ignore industries on the
decelerating track of globalisation simply because of the
presence of tariffs and industrial policy. Instead, they should
consider the structural advantages that specific companies and
parts of the value chain may have over others.