HomeNewsOpinionChina-West tensions boost India’s manufacturing goals: Andy Mukherjee

China-West tensions boost India’s manufacturing goals: Andy Mukherjee

India as a risk-mitigation tactic — a hedge against manufacturing all widgets in China — is a story that’s gathering investor interest, and helping to justify lofty valuations

October 28, 2022 / 09:46 IST
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(Representative image)
(Representative image)

Companies in India release their September quarter earnings around the Diwali festival, the high season for domestic consumption. No surprise then that this is when analysts run a reality check on the country’s billion-plus shoppers: How many of them took a home loan, ordered a fresh coat of paint, bought a phone? There’s a more pressing question this year: How did Dixon do?

Even last year, stocks like Dixon Technologies (India) Ltd., which makes  LED TVs for Samsung Electronics Co., or Amber Enterprises India Ltd., an air-conditioner parts supplier to LG Electronics Inc., were relatively unknown entities. But now there’s a growing excitement around home-grown firms that could one day become just as large and important as the contract manufacturing giant Flex Ltd., formerly Flextronics.

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The reason for that optimism is firmly entrenched in geopolitics. The short-lived rout in Chinese stocks that followed President Xi Jinping’s ascendancy to a precedent-breaking third term came as a wake-up call. As Beijing threatens to break away from the West’s economic and political orbit under its strongman leader, multinational firms need a backup location for making gadgets. When it comes to implementing a China+1 strategy, who has a deeper labour pool than India?

The stock market is taking notice of the order flow. After a six-fold jump in two-and-a-half years, Dixon’s market value is now more than $3 billion. Taiwan’s PC maker Acer Inc. announced a partnership with the Indian firm last year. Headquartered in Noida, a suburb of New Delhi, Dixon is already manufacturing monitors for Dell Inc. and will soon start churning out Android-based smart TVs under a sub-license from Alphabet Inc. Sales grew 38 percent and profit rose 23 percent from a year earlier in the September quarter.