Mint Mumbai

US tech cos skip China AI gear

Taiwan-based contract manufactur­ers step up investment south of the US border for American clients

- Yang Jie feedback@livemint.com

Some of the biggest US companies in artificial intelligen­ce have asked their Taiwanese manufactur­ing partners to step up production of AI-related hardware in Mexico, seeking to diminish reliance on China.

Taiwan-based Foxconn, the world’s largest contract electronic­s manufactur­er, and other Taiwanese companies are heeding the call and investing more in Mexico, according to industry executives and analysts.

They are taking advantage of the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement , the free-trade deal that took effect in 2020. It has attracted billions of dollars from manufactur­ers aiming to move operations from China to Mexico, a process known as nearshorin­g.

The North American nations “hope to replace products imported from Asia as much as possible,” said James Huang, chairman of the Taiwan External Trade Developmen­t Council. “Based on this consensus, Mexico is poised to become the most important manufactur­ing base for the USMCA.”

In February, Foxconn said it spent about $27 million to acquire land in western Mexico’s Jalisco state, in what people familiar with the plan described as a major expansion of the company’s AI server production . Foxconn said it had invested about $690 million in Mexico over the past four years.

Foxconn’s Mexico facilities manufactur­e AI servers for U.S. giants such as Amazon .com, Google, Microsoft and Nvidia , said people familiar with the operations. The U.S. companies either declined to confirm whether they have servers made in Mexico by Foxconn or didn’t respond to requests for comment.

The rising presence of Taiwanese firms in Mexico is part of a process that will “dramatical­ly modify the industrial structure of Mexico in the next 10 years,” said Francisco Cervantes, head of Mexico’s largest privatesec­tor organizati­on, last year.

The hardware used in AI applicatio­ns consists of powerful computers called servers, storage systems, cooling units, connectors and other equipment. From the outside, the machines look similar to those that handle non-AI tasks. Under the hood, they are designed to tackle the complex calculatio­ns needed in AI programs and often incorporat­e cutting-edge processing units.

As production of such gear increases, US companies are looking to avoid repeating the history of the smartphone after it took off some 15 years ago. Much of the core manufactur­ing of smartphone­s and their parts ended up in China , in particular at the factories run by Foxconn and others to assemble iPhones.

Mexico presents its own risks as a production hub, including crime, insufficie­nt water and electricit­y supply, and intense wage competitio­n for workers skilled at assembling hightech goods.

Some Taiwanese managers said they rely on private security to keep local gangs from robbing plants of chips or other valuable equipment. They also said Mexican workers tend to be less willing than those in China to log long overtime hours. Mexican workers are unionized, and factories are required to comply with USMCA labor provisions.

Taiwan-based Inventec , which manufactur­es servers for AI and other functions for major US tech companies, is one company expanding its footprint in Mexico.

Arch Chen, Inventec’s regional manager in Mexico, told a conference in Taiwan in December that one of his clients, a top American brand involved in AI developmen­t, initially said it wanted its equipment produced in the US After inspecting facilities in Mexico, the client was impressed by the technology and opted to produce there instead, Chen said.

It is getting harder to make cuttingedg­e equipment in China because the US bans the export to China of advanced chips for AI applicatio­ns such as those designed by Nvidia.

Major US server manufactur­ers such as Dell and Hewlett Packard Enterprise have asked their suppliers to move some server and cloud computing production to Southeast Asia and Mexico, reducing reliance on China, people familiar with the matter said. HPE and Dell both said they wanted to strengthen and diversify supply chains, and HPE said its supply chain includes robust sourcing from China.

AI-related equipment is one of several advanced manufactur­ing fields in which Mexico is taking a growing role as US-China tensions rise. The country has 14 free-trade agreements with 50 countries, more than any other nation in the world. Those pacts have attracted car manufactur­ers from Asia, Europe and the US, and turned Mexico into the world’s No. 5 car exporter.

Some electric vehicle manufactur­ers, including Tesla , are looking to open plants in Mexico . Taiwanese firms have also invested in the central and southern parts of Mexico to supply the automotive industry.

Taiwan officials estimate there are about 300 Taiwanese firms in Mexico that employ 70,000 people. Twoway trade last year surpassed $15 billion, according to Mexican government data.

Taiwanese contract manufactur­ers have concentrat­ed in a few hubs near Texas , such as Ciudad Juárez neighborin­g El Paso, Texas, and Monterrey. These locations host facilities of companies known in Taiwan as the “six brothers of electronic­s”—Foxconn, Pegatron , Wistron , Quanta , Compal and Inventec.

Led by those six, Taiwanese manufactur­ers account for around 90% of global production of server motherboar­ds, the heart of a server containing the principal components, according to Mark Liu of market research firm TrendForce.

Foxconn alone accounts for more than 70% of the upstream work for graphics-processing units, which refers to manufactur­ing the building blocks of the circuits that power AI servers, Foxconn Chairman Young Liu said last August.

Chinese-made products accounted for 13.9% of US goods imports last year, down from 21.5% in 2015, according to Census Bureau data. Meanwhile, Mexico took over first place, with its share rising 2 percentage points to 15.4%.

During a visit by a Taiwanese delegation to Mexico last year, Mexican Economy Minister Raquel Buenrostro said the country was ready to work with more Taiwanese suppliers, especially in the manufactur­e of products such as semiconduc­tors.

“We cannot forget that Mexico is the country in the Americas that has invested the most in infrastruc­ture projects in the last five years: airports, trains, highways, and more,” she said.

Rising presence of Taiwan’s firms is expected to dramatical­ly modify industrial structure of Mexico in 10 years

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Foxconn and other Taiwanese companies are investing more in Mexico for AIrelated hardware production.
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