Khaleej Times

Nisshinbo drops Mexico plant plan

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Mexico was the strongest candidate but we have taken a step back Kiyohiro Kida, Company spokesman

TOKYO — A top Japanese company said on Thursday it had dropped Mexico as a possible location for a new auto parts factory after Donald Trump rapped Toyota over a plant in the country — and economists warned more firms could follow suit.

The decision by Nikkei 225-listed Nisshinbo Holdings marked the first time a Japanese company has publicly abandoned a Mexican facility in response to the new US president’s protection­ist outbursts, the Nikkei business daily said Thursday.

The announceme­nt comes as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe heads to Washington Thursday for meetings with Trump aimed at cementing ties and underscori­ng Japan’s commitment to investing in the US.

Mexico was among the locations being considered for Nisshinbo’s vehicle brake parts plant, reportedly worth up to 10 billion yen ($89 million).

The firm is a leading maker of friction-reducing brake parts with about a 15 percent share of the global market.

Nisshinbo, which also makes a range of other products including electronic­s and textiles, already has a US plant and is looking for a new facility to service the North American market.

Nisshinbo’s shares sank more than four percent to close at 1,040 yen ($9) Thursday.

Company spokesman Kiyohiro Kida said Mexico had been at the top of the list for possible sites.

“Mexico was the strongest candidate but we have taken a step back,” he told AFP, confirming the decision was a response to Trump’s trade policies. His comments came a day after Nisshinbo’s executive managing officer Takayoshi Okugawa told an earnings briefing that the country was off the list. “Regarding Mexico, we’ve dropped it,” he said. “We have to pick a site other than Mexico.”

The US is the most likely alternativ­e for the plant, the Nikkei said, as Trump moves to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico.

More Japanese companies could follow Nisshinbo’s example and avoid Mexico, said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchuki­n Research Institute in Tokyo.

“It’s likely that we could see similar moves” by other firms, he told AFP.

Trump’s policies “could affect both companies which already have plants (in Mexico) and those planning to invest there”, he added.

The tycoon has assailed Japan for allegedly devaluing the yen to boost exports, grouping it with other countries he says are taking “advantage” of the United States.

Trump has targeted Toyota with strong criticism of its ongoing project to build a new factory in Mexico, threatenin­g it with painful tariffs if its goes ahead.

The Japanese auto giant has stuck to its Mexico plans, but said last month it intends to invest $600 million and create 400 jobs at one of its US plants..

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