- Facing domestic overcapacity, cutthroat competition, and weak home demand, Chinese manufacturers are systematically building factories worldwide — BYD in Brazil and Hungary, CATL in Hungary/Indonesia/Spain, Midea in Brazil/South Carolina/Mexico — in a strategic shift from exporting goods to exporting production capacity itself.
- Trump and Xi agreed this month to establish a bilateral “board of investment” that could open the door to more Chinese factory investment in the US — even as dozens of Democratic lawmakers urge Trump to bar Chinese automakers from building on American soil.
- The model is already reshaping competition: Electrolux has lost appliance market share to Midea and is now forming a joint venture with it to survive in North America; Stellantis is partnering with two Chinese EV companies to produce vehicles in Spain and France; Ford and Geely are in talks about a similar arrangement.
- Labor and governance controversies are following Chinese manufacturers abroad — Brazilian authorities found conditions they described as slavery-like at a BYD factory construction site; EU officials are drafting regulations requiring Chinese-invested companies to hire locals for at least half their European staff and transfer technology.
What Happened?
China’s manufacturers, squeezed by domestic overcapacity and Western tariffs, are executing a strategic pivot: instead of shipping goods across borders, they are moving the factories themselves. Chinese outward direct investment rose 7.1% last year while domestic investment fell 3.8% — the first annual decline on record. BYD is building EV plants in Brazil and Hungary. CATL is expanding in Hungary, Indonesia, and Spain, while licensing technology to Ford for a $3 billion Michigan battery plant. Midea opened a $100 million Brazil factory and is partnering with Electrolux on North American operations. Chery Automobile rescued a shuttered Nissan plant in Barcelona, relaunching it under the historic Ebro brand with 1,600 local employees. The Trump-Xi “board of investment” agreement, struck during this month’s Beijing summit, could accelerate Chinese factory investment in the US, though details remain sparse and CFIUS oversight continues.
Why It Matters?
The strategic logic of chuhai — “going overseas” — is straightforward: tariff walls built to protect local industries become irrelevant if Chinese manufacturers simply build inside those walls. When BYD builds in Hungary, its cars qualify as EU-manufactured for procurement purposes. When CATL licenses to Ford, its technology enters the US market through an American brand. This is a fundamentally different challenge than import tariffs can address, and it explains why European policymakers are racing to draft local content and technology transfer requirements before Chinese factory footprints become entrenched. The parallel with Japanese auto investment in the US in the 1980s is instructive but imperfect: Japanese carmakers competed on quality; Chinese manufacturers compete on cost, and the intensity of competition they bring — what analysts describe as a “brutal rat-race” — has already hollowed out margins for Western incumbents in every sector they have entered.
What’s Next?
Watch the EU’s Industrial Accelerator Act, which would require Chinese-invested firms in EVs, batteries, and solar to hire at least 50% local staff and transfer technology — if enacted, it would fundamentally change the economics of chuhai in Europe. In the US, the bilateral investment board’s first concrete decisions will reveal whether the Trump administration treats Chinese factory investment as an economic opportunity (jobs, production) or a security threat (technology transfer, supply chain dependency). The Gotion Michigan plant — stalled for years over community opposition — is the test case. For investors, the key question is whether Western incumbents accelerate partnerships with Chinese manufacturers (as Electrolux and Stellantis are doing) or fight for protection (as Democratic lawmakers are urging) — because the factory migration is happening regardless of which political response wins.
Source: The Wall Street Journal










