They are also hoping the Indian government will ease stringent rules on manufacturing investments, amid recent efforts to reset diplomatic ties between New Delhi and Beijing.

Currently, Press Note 3 mandates government approval for any foreign direct investment (FDI) from an entity in a country sharing its land border with India, such as China.
Chinese companies have found it tough to get their investment proposals approved since a sharp worsening of bilateral ties after a border skirmish in 2020.
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Rajesh Agarwal, director at Bhagwati Products—a contract manufacturer for Oppo and Vivo smartphones—said there is more pressure on manufacturing in Vietnam and China for US markets, as compared to India.
He said the company is in talks with its partners and vendors to ascertain the possibility of shifting a portion of US production to India. Trump slapped India with a 26% reciprocal tariff, though lower than other electronics manufacturing hubs in Asia.
Trump has levied tariffs such as China’s 54%, Vietnam’s 46%, Thailand’s 36% and Taiwan’s 32%. These will come into effect from April 9.
Chinese brands like Haier, Hisense, Lenovo, Motorola, Oppo, Vivo and TCL have operations in the US, with most sourcing products from their factories or contract manufacturers in China and Vietnam. Hisense is finalising plans to import moulds for its global products from China for production in India through contract manufacturers in the second half of the year, some of which could be exported to the US, an industry executive said.
The India chief executive of a leading Chinese electronics brand said if New Delhi relaxes FDI approvals for Chinese companies in the current scenario, it could be a gamechanger for Indian electronics manufacturing and exports.
India's electronics exports are projected to reach $37.5 billion in FY25, with $13.5 billion coming from the US. This is largely led by Apple. In FY24, India exported $10 billion worth of electronics to the US, with smartphones alone contributing $5.6 billion, accounting for 36% of India’s total smartphone exports.
India and the US are also negotiating a bilateral trade agreement which the industry believes should further reduce tariffs between the two nations.