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Colombia's FDI Slowdown: When Global Capital Quietly Changes Its Mind
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Colombia's foreign investment is shrinking while Brazil, Mexico and Chile attract rising, often record, inflows in 2025.
Capital is moving from oil and mining to services, but not in enough volume to sustain growth, jobs and tax revenues.
Investors seem to reward clearer, rules-based and market-friendly agendas elsewhere, leaving Colombia looking more risky than it needs to be.
If you are an expat or foreign investor, you probably see Latin America as one big map of opportunity and risk. In 2025, that map is being redrawn, and Colombia is not ending up in the best colours.
The country is still getting money, but less of it, and at a time when its neighbours are doing the opposite. Between January and September, foreign direct investment into Colombia reached $9.16 billion.
That is down from $9.62 billion in the same period of 2024 and far from the $13.34 billion in 2023. In the third quarter alone, inflows dropped to $2.90 billion, a fall of 10.6% from the previous quarter and 12.1% from a year earlier.
The money that does arrive is changing shape. Financial and business services now take the largest share, with about $2.36 billion in the first nine months.
Oil and gas follow with $1.99 billion, then manufacturing with $1.50 billion, and smaller slices for retail, tourism and utilities. FDI stands near 3.3% of GDP, less than half the share at the height of the 2000s boom.
Why confidence is sending investment to Colombia's neighbours
Now look around the region. Brazil drew about $63.2 billion in the first nine months of 2025 and had already passed its 2024 total by October. Mexico secured $40.9 billion in the same period, a record helped by nearshoring from the United States.
Chile, a much smaller economy, still managed $9.5 billion between January and July, almost 9% more than a year before. Even Argentina, after a collapse early in the year, has pulled in nearly $3.9 billion in the first half under a more orthodox policy line.
The story behind the numbers is about confidence. Investors prefer clear rules, stable contracts and governments that do not treat private capital as a convenient villain. Colombia's softer FDI in 2025 signals doubts exactly on those points.
If that perception hardens while neighbours double down on predictable, pro-growth frameworks, the next wave of factories, data centres and high-value jobs will keep landing across the border – and Colombia will learn how quietly, and how quickly, long-term capital can move on.
Colombia's foreign investment is shrinking while Brazil, Mexico and Chile attract rising, often record, inflows in 2025.
Capital is moving from oil and mining to services, but not in enough volume to sustain growth, jobs and tax revenues.
Investors seem to reward clearer, rules-based and market-friendly agendas elsewhere, leaving Colombia looking more risky than it needs to be.
If you are an expat or foreign investor, you probably see Latin America as one big map of opportunity and risk. In 2025, that map is being redrawn, and Colombia is not ending up in the best colours.
The country is still getting money, but less of it, and at a time when its neighbours are doing the opposite. Between January and September, foreign direct investment into Colombia reached $9.16 billion.
That is down from $9.62 billion in the same period of 2024 and far from the $13.34 billion in 2023. In the third quarter alone, inflows dropped to $2.90 billion, a fall of 10.6% from the previous quarter and 12.1% from a year earlier.
The money that does arrive is changing shape. Financial and business services now take the largest share, with about $2.36 billion in the first nine months.
Oil and gas follow with $1.99 billion, then manufacturing with $1.50 billion, and smaller slices for retail, tourism and utilities. FDI stands near 3.3% of GDP, less than half the share at the height of the 2000s boom.
Why confidence is sending investment to Colombia's neighbours
Now look around the region. Brazil drew about $63.2 billion in the first nine months of 2025 and had already passed its 2024 total by October. Mexico secured $40.9 billion in the same period, a record helped by nearshoring from the United States.
Chile, a much smaller economy, still managed $9.5 billion between January and July, almost 9% more than a year before. Even Argentina, after a collapse early in the year, has pulled in nearly $3.9 billion in the first half under a more orthodox policy line.
The story behind the numbers is about confidence. Investors prefer clear rules, stable contracts and governments that do not treat private capital as a convenient villain. Colombia's softer FDI in 2025 signals doubts exactly on those points.
If that perception hardens while neighbours double down on predictable, pro-growth frameworks, the next wave of factories, data centres and high-value jobs will keep landing across the border – and Colombia will learn how quietly, and how quickly, long-term capital can move on.
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