On the one hand, due to the adjustment of part of China's industrial structure, the most important thing should be that the United States is in a political position and has imposed investment restrictions on some key areas in China, resulting in a large number of foreign capital not making money and then a large outflow. Look at the current India, Japan, and even many Southeast Asian countries** have basically maintained a fast **. Most of the FDI inflows from these countries should have come from within the country. Southeast Asian and South Asian countries, such as Thailand, Vietnam, and India, are industrializing due to the massive inflow of industries, and the soaring of ** should be reasonable. But as far as Japan is concerned, a lot of capital has frantically flowed into Japan, Japan itself is more seriously aging, the real economy, especially the primary labor industry has flowed into other countries, and the economic prosperity seems to be separated from the real economy, coupled with the fact that the yen has been chattering, Japan has a false prosperity.
If the U.S. gets on track to cut interest rates, a lot of dollars will flow from the U.S. to all parts of the world. Japan** and Southeast Asia**, which are already relatively saturated, and the economies of some countries such as Japan and Southeast Asia cannot accommodate so much capital, and a lot of funds may flow to areas with relatively low-lying domestic capital. Looking at the current international situation, the Ukrainian-Russian war will not stop for a while and a half, and the European economy is not destined to recover so quickly. At that time, domestic industries such as real estate and other unrestricted investments may once again be favored by foreign capital.
The above is just a personal opinion, for reference only!