KEY POINTS
  • Intel, GlobalFoundries and Infineon are some of the chip makers that have set up or expanded operations in Malaysia over the last few years.
  • "Malaysia has well-established infrastructure with around five decades of experience in the 'back end' of the semiconductor manufacturing process, particularly in assembly, testing and packaging," said Kenddrick Chan of LSE's foreign policy think tank.
  • This comes as a U.S.-China chip war prompted companies to diversify operations.
KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - 2018/01/24: A foreigner is seen with a Malaysia flag as a background. Kuala Lumpur or commonly known as KL is the national capital for Malaysia and is the fastest growing metropolitan regions in South-East Asia. The urban city is also well known to the world for tourism and shopping. Kuala Lumpur has a great public transportation for people travel around the city. (Photo by Faris Hadziq/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Malaysia is emerging as a hotspot for semiconductor factories as U.S.-China tensions prompt companies to diversify operations.

"Malaysia has well-established infrastructure with around five decades of experience in the 'back end' of the semiconductor manufacturing process, particularly in assembly, testing and packaging," said Kenddrick Chan, head of the digital international relations project at LSE IDEAS, the foreign policy think-tank of the London School of Economics and Political Science.