Nearshoring darling Mexico is still waiting for a flood of foreign investment to bolster its economy. Some of that can be attributed to the lagged effects of industrial development on GDP, as well as companies awaiting the outcome of a US presidential election with huge implications for trade policy. But it also reflects long-running challenges that have held back the Latin American nation from becoming a bigger force, from electricity shortages and political turbulence to judicial reform, as Bloomberg’s Carolina Millan reports here from Mexico City. Mexico’s economic growth is expected to slow to an estimated 1.5% in 2024, according to a Citigroup survey of more than two dozen analysts, down from 3.2% in 2023. Watch: How the US Election Could Impact Its Relationship With Mexico Since 2022, foreign direct investment flows have mostly come from reinvestments by companies already operating in Mexico, rather than fresh bets, said Felipe Hernandez, who covers Latin America for Bloomberg Economics. Mexico has received some major investments, but some high-profile plans remain contingent on the political climate north of the border: - Taiwan’s Foxconn recently announced that it’s building the world’s largest assembly plant for servers housing Nvidia chips
- Tesla is holding off on building a planned factory in the Monterrey area because he wants to see how the US election shakes out
- BYD, the Chinese electric-vehicle maker, has been scouting locations for a Mexico plant but is delaying an announcement to see the outcome of the American election
“I’m very concerned on the rhetoric from Trump about putting a lot of tariffs on vehicles manufactured in Mexico,” said Alberto Chretin, the former chairman and chief executive officer of industrial real estate investment company Terrafina. —Brendan Murray in London Click here for more of Bloomberg.com’s most-read stories about trade, supply chains and shipping. |