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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 169
Thursday, 18 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 10:33 UTC
  • UTC10:33
  • EDT06:33
  • GMT11:33
  • CET12:33
  • JST19:33
  • HKT18:33
← The MonexusBusiness · Economy

Asian Firms Return to SelectUSA With Cautious Optimism After Tariff Turbulence

Asian companies have returned to the United States' premier foreign investment summit, but corporate executives are tempering enthusiasm with hard-won caution after the tariff disruptions of 2025 reshuffled the cost calculus for cross-Pacific capital allocation.

@Cointelegraph · Telegram

Corporate delegations from Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Southeast Asia descended on Washington this week for the SelectUSA Investment Summit, the flagship annual forum for foreign capital seeking a foothold in American markets. According to reporting from Nikkei Asia, Asian companies returned with "cautious optimism" — a phrase that has become the diplomatic register of the moment, signalling genuine interest in US opportunities while refusing to paper over the uncertainties that the tariff cycle of 2025 left in its wake.

The summit, which marked its tenth anniversary this year, has historically served as a barometer for the health of cross-border capital flows. Attendance figures from prior editions had climbed steadily through the mid-2020s before the tariff escalation of 2025 introduced a sharp correction. For Asian multinationals with exposure to both US and Chinese markets — the vast majority of major regional players — the decision of where to site new capacity, research centres, or supply-chain links became a far more complex equation than it had been five years earlier.

What the Numbers Say — and What They Conceal

Nikkei Asia's reporting captures a familiar dynamic in the corporate mood music: genuine appetite for US engagement coexisting with a defensive wariness about policy reversibility. Executives quoted in the coverage described maintaining detailed contingency plans — multiple site-selection scenarios, diversified supplier contracts, and clause-by-clause review of investment incentive packages before committing to any binding arrangement.

The underlying tension is structural. US industrial policy, particularly the incentives embedded in semiconductor and clean-energy legislation, remains genuinely attractive to Asian manufacturers. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company's ongoing Arizona expansion, and the parallel push by South Korean battery makers to lock in US gigafactory capacity, reflect a longer-term logic that has not fundamentally changed. What shifted in 2025 was the confidence interval around those plans — the degree to which executives could rely on stable regulatory ground beneath their capital commitments.

The Tariff Legacy and Its Aftermath

The specifics of the 2025 tariff regime — which disrupted supply chains spanning consumer electronics, automotive components, and industrial machinery — have been extensively covered in trade and business press. The Nikkei Asia reporting frames the aftermath not as a wholesale retreat from US markets, but as a recalibration: Asian firms are not leaving the United States, but they are arriving with more demanding questions about downside protection.

The geopolitical overlay is impossible to ignore. US-China trade friction has generated secondary consequences for how Asian corporations approach Washington. Companies headquartered in countries that have largely avoided direct bilateral confrontation with the United States — Japan, South Korea, Singapore — find themselves in a paradoxical position. Their structural alignment with US economic interests remains strong, yet the collateral uncertainty created by broader US trade enforcement has made the investment environment feel less predictable, regardless of their own country's stance.

Meanwhile, the question of how to manage simultaneous exposure to both the US and Chinese markets has become a permanent feature of strategic planning rather than a temporary dislocation. That reality shapes every SelectUSA conversation, even when it remains implicit.

Competing Interests and Competing Narratives

The United States is not the only destination competing for Asian capital. The Gulf Cooperation Council states have mounted an aggressive campaign to attract Asian manufacturing investment, offering energy-cost advantages and increasingly sophisticated industrial infrastructure. Vietnam, India, and Indonesia continue to court supply-chain diversification away from China — a trend that also reduces, in some cases, the urgency of US-facing investment as a hedge.

Within Asia, the investment-summit circuit has become crowded. Macao, Singapore, and Tokyo each host forums designed to match regional capital with development opportunities. The United States competes in that landscape not just on tax treatment or workforce quality — areas where it retains structural advantages — but on regulatory certainty, an area where the past two years have tested investor confidence.

This creates a specific pressure on the summit format itself. SelectUSA must now perform two functions simultaneously: demonstrating that the United States remains open for business, and reassuring delegates that the political volatility of recent years will not be repeated. The former is relatively straightforward; the latter requires credibility that is still being rebuilt.

Forward View: When Does Caution Become Paralysis?

The stakes are asymmetric. If Asian firms proceed with US investment at the cautious pace the current mood suggests, the United States forfeits a window of opportunity to anchor high-value industrial activity before competitors lock in long-term arrangements. If, conversely, Washington reads the caution as disengagement and responds with more aggressive policy levers — further restrictions on outbound investment, or conditionality attached to domestic subsidies — the cycle of uncertainty risks becoming self-reinforcing.

For Asian multinationals, the calculus is more immediate. Companies that delay US capacity expansion may find themselves locked out of incentive tranches that are structured with sunset provisions. Those that proceed without adequate safeguards expose balance sheets to regulatory risk that is difficult to price.

The SelectUSA summit, for all its symbolism, is unlikely to resolve those tensions in a single week. What it offers is a data point: how many delegations attended, at what seniority level, and with what specific胃口 — the Chinese term for appetite that captures the commercial rather than political dimension of the question. The mood, as reported by Nikkei Asia, is cautious but present. Whether that cautiousness is a temporary phase of adjustment or the new baseline will depend on policy signals that neither summit nor corporation controls alone.

This publication covered the SelectUSA Investment Summit using Asian Wire reporting as the primary lens, supplementing with public-domain institutional context. Western wire services largely framed the event through a US domestic policy lens; the regional coverage from Nikkei Asia provides a more granular view of how capital-origin countries are processing the investment environment.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/nikkeiasia/27456
  • https://t.me/nikkeiasia/27457
  • https://www.selectusa.gov/summit
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