3 reasons Iâm bullish on it, too [Read this article on our website.]( [Smart Money Monday]  Sept 12, 2022 Editorâs Note: We had a small hiccup this morning. If you received the August 27 issue of Thoughts from the Frontline in place of Smart Money Monday, we hope you enjoyed it. Anything John Mauldin writes is worth revisiting. But the email was indeed an error on our end. Here is your copy of Smart Money Monday from Thompson Clark⦠America's Top CEO Calls This Emerging Market a "No-Brainer" When Jamie Dimon speaks, it pays to listen. Dimon is the billionaire CEO of JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), the largest US bank. Many credit him with more or less inventing the âmegabank.â And heâs made a fortune for himself and his clients in the process. Now heâs setting his sights on⦠Mexico. Hereâs Dimon on a recent client call: I think Mexico is going to be a great set up. I bought a Mexican ETF. Did you know their labor is cheaper in Mexico than in China? And it is a secured supply chain. If you are a manufacturer, it is a no-brainer. - For decades, the US has relied on China for cheap goods. Thereâs a good chance a Chinese manufacturer made the cell phone in your pocket, or the new bike you bought your kid, or the chair youâre sitting on. Millions of Americans can buy, buy, buy because cheap labor in China keeps the costs of many products down. Lately, though, thatâs been a bit of a problem. When the pandemic hit, Chinaâs zero-COVID policy made it impossible to move products out of the country in a timely, reliable fashion. Anyone who tried to buy a bike in 2020 could tell you that. All those supply chain issues have pushed US companies to look elsewhere⦠- Now Mexico is emerging as a manufacturing hotspot. Mexicoâs labor costs are the main driver here. As Dimon mentioned, labor is now cheaper there than China. A 2020 PricewaterhouseCoopers study showed that manufacturing in Mexico could lower a companyâs operating costs by up to 25%. Meanwhile, market research firm Statista pegs manufacturing labor costs in China at $6.50 per hour. In Mexico, itâs $4.82. Those are compelling discounts. And they become more compelling when you layer in the cheaper cost of moving goods to the US. Getting anything here from China involves variable shipping costs and potential delays. Then, when the goods arrive at the Port of Long Beach, you still need to transport a lot of it thousands of miles across the country. When you make something in Mexico, you just plunk it on a railcar and send it up the line. - Cheaper energy costs give Mexico another leg up. Oil and natural gas prices have been on a tear for two-plus years. Regular readers know [I expect energy prices to stay high](. This puts Chinese manufacturing in a tough spot. Oil and gas are just more expensive there. Most of Chinaâs oil production comes from legacy oil fields that are expensive to maintain, according to the Energy Information Administration. Plus, natural gas can cost 50% to 170% more in China than it does in Mexico, according to Mexican advisory firm NAPS. Thatâs because Mexico is close to the US, one of the largest natural gas producers in the world. In short, Mexico has a stable supply of lower-cost energy. That makes it an ideal place for cost-effective manufacturing. Find out whatâs really going on in the US and global economies, stock markets, and geopolitical landscape from the best and brightest in the business. [Click here to read how to do just that for only $9.95 per month.]( - Plus, Mexico isnât going to force manufacturers into lockdowns. In China, if one person gets COVID, an entire city could shut down. Thatâs basically what happened earlier this year. The government locked down Shanghai for two months (long after most countries had moved to more nuanced COVID policies). The lockdown impacted almost all of Shanghaiâs 25 million residents. And, since Shanghai boasts the worldâs biggest port, it triggered supply chain disruptions that reverberated worldwide. Mexico, on the other hand, has taken a different approach. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has resisted any sort of lockdown since 2020. Heâs also criticized strict policies in Europe, stating that politicians âhave to guarantee freedom.â And Obrador hasnât wavered. Mexico has stayed open for business. For manufacturers, thatâs huge. They can hire workers and produce goods without the uncertainty and added costs of lockdowns. - One way to play the rise of Mexican manufacturing is to buy a Mexican ETF. Iâm a stock picker, so I normally avoid ETFs. But in this case, with Dimon leading the way, itâs worth a look. The iShares MSCI Mexico ETF (EWW) seems like a strong bet. The fund owns nearly 50 Mexican companies, including Walmart de México y Centroamérica and Banorte, one of the largest banks in Mexico. Iâm adding EWW to my watchlist for now while I dig into other ways to play this theme. Mexico is likely in the early stages of a manufacturing heyday. As this story progresses, the opportunities for us to invest in Mexico should as well. Thanks for reading, [Thompson Clark] âThompson Clark
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