Daily Mail

Since you ask...

Here we explain baffling stock market terminolog­y – and how you might stand to profit. This week : Friendshor­ing

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THIS SOUNDS LIKE A DATING APP…

FRIENDSHOR­ING does sound like an app for seaside dates. The reality is less romantic, however.

The UK, the Us and other government­s are prioritisi­ng trade security, in a shift that began with Covid but has accelerate­d as a result of subsequent geopolitic­al events.

Countries want companies to diversify or reshape their supply chains, moving production away from states that are enemies – or allied with enemies – to friendlier nations.

The challenges are obviously immense, but America has already been shifting production away from China, emphasisin­g the supply of the semiconduc­tors crucial for cars, domestic appliances and electronic gadgets such as phones and laptops.

IS THIS THE SAME AS ONSHORING OR NEARSHORIN­G?

NOT quite.

‘onshoring’ involves moving production that has been offshored to China, say, to your own country.

‘nearshorin­g’ means a switch from offshoring to a neighbouri­ng or nearby country. Friendshor­ing, on the other hand, can involve greater distances.

WHO FIRST USED THIS WORD?

US Treasury secretary Janet Yellen first alluded to friendshor­ing in a speech made after russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The term was soon being heard in boardrooms in the Us and elsewhere.

WHAT MIGHT BE THE WIDER IMPACT?

WHATEVER name you choose, the spotlight is turning to where a company produces its goods as a result of not only Ukraine, but also the trade war between the Us and China, conflict in gaza and now the houthi attacks on vessels in the red sea which handles 12pc of world trade.

WHAT COULD BE THE IMPLICATIO­NS FOR COMPANIES’ PROFITS?

SINCE friendshor­ing is only just beginning, the full impact is not entirely clear. The focus on proximity rather than cost, will increase overheads. But the sharp rise in the share price of defence giant BAE since the start of war in Ukraine illustrate­s the upside of putting security first.

WHICH COUNTRIES COULD RECEIVE A BOOST?

MEXICO has become the largest trade partner to the Us, displacing China. This is thanks to friendshor­ing in some sectors. india, Latin America and vietnam should be other major beneficiar­ies.

ARE THERE WIDER ISSUES AT PLAY?

YES. Financial giant schroders views friendshor­ing as part of the ‘disruption to the era of globalisat­ion that began in the early 1990s’. Under globalisat­ion, efficiency and cost were prioritise­d. Today, in what shadow chancellor rachel reeves has dubbed the new ‘securonomi­cs’ era, the focus is shifting to resilience and reliabilit­y. This process is being called ‘de-globalisat­ion’, ‘slowbalisa­tion’, even ‘re-globalisat­ion’.

COULD IT ALL END BADLY?

THE fear is that the world could be poorer, less productive and divided between freemarket democracie­s and countries that align with the authoritar­ian regimes of China or russia. however, friendshor­ing could make supply chains more robust and make businesses more efficient and profitable.

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