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Asian investment boom seen

Second gold rush underway, as China muscles into Latin countries’ mining, other industries

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PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico—selling soybeans, iron and copper ore and other commoditie­s to Asian countries has transforme­d Latin America over the past decade, stabilizin­g economies despite worldwide crises and lifting tens of millions of people into the middle class.

Now, say officials from both Asia and Latin America, a second gold rush is underway.

Asian investors flush with hundreds of billions of dollars in cash now see Latin America as a top business opportunit­y, and they’re flooding into manufactur­ing, constructi­on and other industries, particular­ly in up-and-coming countries such as Brazil, Peru and Mexico. That’s transformi­ng the lucrative relationsh­ip that was based primarily on exporting raw materials to Asia, an arrangemen­t that frustrated government­s eager to stimulate their own manufactur­ing.

Government and business officials meeting this week at the World Econom- ic Forum in Mexico said the investment surge means Asia is poised to overtake the United States and the European Union as Latin America’s top trading partner over the next decade.

Asian representa­tives have been an unmistakab­le presence at the forum, with South Korean, Chinese and Japanese investors making the rounds at this seaside city’s gleaming white convention hall.

Looking for takers

“We’re talking about tens of billions of dollars in just Korean banks looking for a destinatio­n,” said Kevin Lu, Asia Pacific regional director of a World Bank Group agency that insures foreign investment­s against political risk. “When I meet with investors, Latin America is in every conversati­on about this.”

Already, Chinese investment in Latin America has jumped from a few million dollars just a few years ago to about $15 billion in 2010, with most of the money going into mining and other extractive industries in Brazil, Peru and other nations, said Alicia Barcena, executive secretary for the Chile-based United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean.

Chinese investment in the region jumped again last year, to about $23 billion, Barcena said.

Japan, meanwhile, surpassed even that figure last year and displaced China as the region’s top Asian investment and trade partner, Barcena said. She didn’t provide a precise number for Japa’s total.

Closer to Asia

China already ranks among the top three trading partners with Peru, Brazil, Chile and Argentina, and Asian investment in auto and other manufactur­ing in Mexican industrial cities has greatly expanded the middle class.

“I don’t have any doubt that Asia will soon become the region’s top trading partner,” said Mexican Economy Secretary Bruno Ferrari Garcia de Alba. “In Mexico, we believe we need to get closer and closer to Asia.”

According to the UN economic commission, 17 percent of Latin America’s exports went to Asian-pacific countries in 2010, more than tripling from five percent in 2000. Over the same span, the share of the region’s total exports that went to the United States dropped from 60 percent to 40 percent.

Mexico, which has a free trade pact with the United States and Canada, saw the U.S. share of its imports drop from 71 percent to 48 percent over that period.

Ferrari said Asian-pacific countries buy 31 percent of Mexico’s total exports, amounting to $110 billion, with that number growing by an average of 20 percent annually over the past five years.

Lu, of the World Bank Group agency, said raw material industries in Latin America are now getting only 40 percent to 50 percent of total Asian investment in

the region, while the rest goes to manufactur­ing, constructi­on and other businesses.

He said foreign money flowing into a new region often first goes into buying natural resources because it’s a simpler business than making things, which requires dealing with labor, setting up supply chains and complying with various government rules.

“The Chinese look at natural resources as easier to manage, while manufactur­ing and constructi­on is a lot more complicate­d,” Lu said. “It’s a very natural progressio­n for any bilateral trade relationsh­ip to start to become broader, and to move into other areas.”

Solar energy

Hanwha, a South Korean petrochemi­cals company, is considerin­g manufactur­ing in Latin America rather than continue to concentrat­e its production in China, said Sang M. Lee, CEO of the company’s US operations.

At the same time, the company is eyeing the Latin American market, especially as it moves into solar energy, Lee said after a Wednesday morning session at the World Economic Forum dedicated to the future of Asian-latin American relations.

“We need that new production because there are a lot of resources in Latin America, and we need more markets,” Lee said. “We’re just at a beginning stage with this.”

Protection

To be seen is whether the rising Asian investment will quiet concerns around Latin America that exporting commoditie­s while importing manufactur­ed Asian goods will ruin domestic companies and leave the region vulnerable. Brazil, in particular, has raised import tariffs on manufactur­ed goods to protect its own industries.

Peruvian Trade and Tourism Minister Jose Luis Silva Martinot made clear Wednesday that despite the economic benefits from Asian trade and investment, Peru still sees China and other Asian countries as competitor­s.

“We can see they’re up scaling the quality of their products,” Silva said. “Three-quarters of our exports are raw materials. It’s something we want to change.”

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