Hon Hai Expands Operations in India, Vietnam Amid Trade Tensions

Hon Hai Expands Operations in India, Vietnam Amid Trade Tensions
Depositphotos

Key iPhone assembler Hon Hai, also known as Foxconn, is increasing its presence in Vietnam and India amid the growing trade spat between the U.S. and China, according to Bloomberg.

In a series of filings, the company said it had injected up to $213.5 million into an Indian unit between September and January for “long-term investment,“ and is paying $16.5 million to Fuhua for the right to use 250,000 square meters of land in an industrial park in Vietnam’s northeastern Bac Giang Province for operations and sales. Hon Hai now owns 99.99% of the Indian unit, according to the filing.

While Hon Hai did not indicate the move was related to orders for Apple, in a separate filing the Taiwanese manufacturer said it was selling on the Vietnamese land rights to a unit of Hong Kong-listed FIT Hon Teng, an iPhone cable and connector maker Foxconn controls. Hon Hai doesn’t make any iPhones in India, though its Hong Kong-listed subsidiary FIH Mobile assembles Xiaomi’s handsets in the country.

Some Taiwanese hardware makers have been shifting production out of China back home and to other countries, thanks to new tariffs on networking equipment and server motherboards. None have indicated Apple has asked them to move manufacturing elsewhere, even though U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened to eventually slap tariffs on all Chinese imports. The manufacturers have repeatedly said they have existing operations in overseas locations where they can further transfer production if needed.