United States-based personal computer giant HP said it remains committed to its operations in China after denying a report that it was shifting more production outside the world’s second-largest economy, which sparked fresh scrutiny of the mainland’s manufacturing supply chain.
HP – the world’s second-largest PC vendor behind Lenovo Group, according to research firm IDC – told Chinese tabloid The Global Times that Nikkei Asia’s report on Wednesday about the company’s “most aggressive shift of production away from China” was false.
“In China, HP’s PC manufacturing business remains pivotal,” HP said in a statement cited by Global Times, which is under the Chinese Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily. “To further enhance the resilience of the supply chain, we are actively optimising our strategy and increasing our flexibility to better serve our global customers and meet their diverse needs.”
HP did not immediately respond to an emailed inquiry on Thursday.
The company was formed in November 2015 as the legal successor to the original Hewlett-Packard, which spun off its enterprise product and business services units as Hewlett Packard Enterprise.
According to the Nikkei Asia report, HP plans to make up to 70 per cent of its PCs outside China within two to three years. The firm was looking at potential production sites in Thailand, while it sets up a backup design hub in Singapore, the report said.
Last year, Nikkei Asia reported that HP was shifting some production assembly operations from China to Thailand and Mexico. HP said that it remains “deeply committed” to its computer manufacturing operations in Chongqing, the report said.
Other American tech giants, including Apple, Dell and Microsoft, are already making moves to to diversify their supply chains outside the mainland.
Microsoft earlier this year offered China-based employees working in artificial intelligence the option to relocate overseas in countries such as the US, Australia and Ireland, according to a South China Morning Post report in May, which cited sources. Microsoft has reportedly shifted production of its Xbox game console from China to Vietnam before 2022.
According to a January 2023 report by Nikkei Asia, Dell plans to stop using China-made semiconductors this year and urged its suppliers to cut down on components sourced from the mainland amid concerns over escalating tensions between Beijing and Washington.