Japanese Banks Pivot from China to India and Southeast Asia Amid Geopolitical Shifts

June 3, 2026
Japanese Banks Pivot from China to India and Southeast Asia Amid Geopolitical Shifts
  • Japanese banks are shifting their overseas focus from China toward India and Southeast Asia as part of a structural realignment (China+1) driven by China’s slowdown, rising costs, and geopolitical uncertainty, while still servicing select Chinese opportunities.

  • Megabanks MUFG, SMBC and Mizuho are making large, direct investments in India’s banking and financial services sector, signaling a deepening commitment beyond serving Japanese clients.

  • Recent deals illustrate this pivot: SMBC bought about a 20% stake in YES Bank for roughly $1.6 billion, MUFG acquired a 20% stake in Shriram Finance for about $4.45 billion, and Mizuho took a majority stake in Avendus via its securities arm in late 2025.

  • India is positioned as a prime beneficiary due to its investment-grade rating, large domestic market, improving infrastructure, and higher loan growth potential, with lending rates notably higher than in China.

  • The shift leverages India's large domestic market, rising incomes, expanding manufacturing and semiconductor/data center growth, and a young, growing workforce to support long-term opportunities for banks.

  • This transition is framed as a gradual realignment rather than an exit, balancing continued Chinese opportunities with increased growth capital toward India.

  • Singapore remains a regional treasury and wealth hub due to regulatory stability and favorable taxes, though its operating costs are among Asia’s highest.

  • Drivers include manufacturing shifts to Southeast Asia and India, slower growth in China, and tighter Chinese regulation, with narrowing loan margins reducing incentives to stay in China.

  • The pivot signals a quiet yet powerful reorientation of Japanese finance with potential long-term effects on India’s manufacturing and financial role, while China becomes a smaller ongoing consideration.

  • Analysts view the shift as a possible sectoral transformation for Japan Inc., potentially bolstering India’s manufacturing and services hub ambitions and reducing reliance on Hong Kong and Shanghai, albeit with geopolitics and India-specific regulatory risks.”

  • The transition brings opportunities and challenges for banks, including navigating unfamiliar legal frameworks, higher operating costs in Singapore, and aligning with clients’ supply chains and financing needs in new markets.

  • RBI data shows Japanese direct investment in India rising to about $4.6 billion in the latest fiscal year, while Japan’s banks are expanding Mumbai office space (Grade A) as demand grows, signaling concrete momentum.

Summary based on 7 sources


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