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SMI - GERAL Q1 2026
+0.64 % 291.76
=
INCOME RETURN
+2.21 % +
APPRECIATION RETURN
-1.57 %
USD / MXN
0.00 % 17.48
GDP (Quarterly, Millions)
-1.24 % 29,325,765.23 PTS
CPI
0.00 % 4.45 PTS
Reference Rate
0.00 % 6.50 PTS
Closing IPC
0.00 % 66,141.38 PTS
UDIs
0.00 % 8.83 PTS

Trump vs. Reality: Threats Hit, but U.S. Industry in Mexico Stands Firm

  • U.S. companies in Mexico are not leaving but are no longer expanding at the same pace. Despite Trump’s threats and trade uncertainty, they remain key players in the Mexican industrial sector—though with a different strategy. Nearshoring is no longer just about expansion; it’s about optimization. Some firms are downsizing, others are reorganizing, and many focus on strategic markets. The question is not whether they will stay but how they adapt to a new era of global trade.

Roberto Martínez Segovia leads Kohler in Mexico, one of the U.S. companies that absorbed the most industrial space in 2024. Photo: SiiLA
Roberto Martínez Segovia leads Kohler in Mexico, one of the U.S. companies that absorbed the most industrial space in 2024. Photo: SiiLA
By: SiiLA News
01/29/2025

Donald Trump built his political career on the promise of bringing jobs back to the United States. Now, in his second term, he continues to threaten tariffs, tighten rules of origin, and punish companies that manufacture outside the U.S. However, instead of retreating, U.S. companies in Mexico have maintained their operations and, in many cases, expanded. The numbers confirm it: their presence in the country remains crucial, and while they have adjusted strategies, they have not backed down.

Currently, one in three companies in Mexico’s industrial real estate market is American. According to SiiLA, between 2023 and 2024, only 2% of these firms were entirely new to Mexico. The rest had already been operating there: 65% expanded, while 33% optimized their space for efficiency.

In other words, we are witnessing not an exodus nor a wave of new investment but a shift in how U.S. companies operate in Mexico. This adjustment is partly a response to uncertainty surrounding U.S. trade policies but also reflects broader market dynamics.

However, this is not a new phenomenon. Mexico has played a key role in U.S. supply chains for years, and companies have adjusted their presence over time. This is reflected in how they have occupied industrial space, following cycles of expansion and consolidation that respond to both economic conditions and long-term trends.

One of these moments occurred between Q4 2019 and 2020, during the final year of Trump’s first term. During this period, U.S. companies in Mexico absorbed 39% more industrial space. At first glance, this seemed like solid growth, but with an important caveat: their share of total absorption fell by 24%. In other words, while they continued expanding, other foreign firms were growing even faster.

This trend did not emerge out of nowhere. Throughout Trump’s first term, U.S. investment in Mexico remained cautious. According to Mexico’s Economy Secretary, between 2017 and 2020, the share of new U.S. investment relative to total new investment in Mexico dropped by 16%, reflecting a more selective approach to capital allocation. And recent data confirms this was not an isolated occurrence. Between 2023 and 2024, industrial space absorption by U.S. firms declined by 20%, and their share of total absorption dropped another 13%.

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Nearshoring

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Founded in 2015, SiiLA is the industry leading REsource for comprehensive commercial real estate market insights, news and events across Latin America. The SiiLA suite of innovative products drive greater accuracy, efficiency, and strategic advantages for top players in the commercial real estate industry.

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Transactions


Wu Kouyue leads Xusheng Leoch Battery, one of the companies that absorbed the most industrial space in Q1 2026. Photo: SiiLA.
Absorption Falls, Not Demand in Mexico’s Industrial Market
Héctor Ibarzabal leads FIBRA Prologis, which recently acquired an Amazon-occupied logistics facility in Lerma, State of Mexico. Photo: SiiLA.
$94M in Lerma: A Deal That Explains FIBRA Prologis’ Growth

Nearshoring

Hichem Elloumi leads COFICAB, an automotive wiring company, and one of the auto parts firms that absorbed the most industrial space in Q12026. Photo: SiiLA.
Between Importing and Exporting: Mexico Does Not Substitute Auto Parts, It Needs Them to Export
James Li leads Honor, which absorbed space in Hofusan in 2026. Photo: SiiLA.
Hofusan and the Limits of Asia’s Industrial Model in Mexico

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