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Ranked: U.S. States Gaining the Most Jobs from Reshoring

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July 18, 2025

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The following content is sponsored by Tema ETFs

Learn more about RSHO.

Ranked: U.S. States Gaining the Most Jobs from Reshoring

As the reshoring trend accelerates, millions of manufacturing jobs are returning to American soil. But the benefits aren’t being shared equally across the country.

This graphic, created in partnership with Tema ETFs, highlights the top 20 states gaining the most jobs from reshoring.

The Reshoring Winners

Texas leads the pack, adding more than 40,200 reshored jobs as of 2025—nearly a quarter (23%) of the national total. Major contributors include massive investments from Samsung ($65B), Tesla ($5.5B), and public infrastructure projects ($4.9B).

Rank State Cumulative Jobs (thousands)
1 Texas 40.2
2 South Carolina 24.8
3 Mississippi 12.1
4 New Mexico 9.8
5 Michigan 8.7
6 Alabama 8.6
7 Washington 7.9
8 Louisiana 7.8
9 Ohio 6.4
10 North Carolina 5.2
11 Utah 4.6
12 Arkansas 4.4
13 Pennsylvania 3.2
14 Kentucky 2.9
15 Minnesota 2.7
16 California 2.7
17 Virginia 2.4
18 Wisconsin 2.3
19 Florida 2.3
20 New Jersey 2.2

Other top-performing states include:

  • South Carolina (24,800 jobs)
  • Mississippi (12,100)
  • New Mexico (9,800)
  • Michigan (8,700)

Together, these four states account for another 32% of reshored jobs.

Industry Trends

Reshoring activity is being led by a few powerhouse sectors. The computer and electronics industry contributed the largest share, with 68,700 jobs—roughly one-third of all reshoring announcements.

Transportation followed, accounting for 52,500 jobs or about one-quarter, while electrical equipment made up 17% with 34,800 jobs. Rounding out the top five were chemicals (11,000 jobs) and primary metals (9,000).

The Major Players

Several major companies have made substantial reshoring commitments. Walmart is by far the largest, announcing 300,000 jobs, followed by Apple with 20,000, CMA CGM with 10,000, and GE Aerospace with 5,000. Stellantis and GE Vernova are each contributing 1,500 jobs, while Siemens is adding over 900.

These corporate moves signal a broader return to domestic production and a reshaping of America’s industrial landscape.

Investing for the Future

Reshoring is expected to bring 2.3 million jobs back to U.S. soil by the end of 2025, signaling a shift in the economy. Investors that aren’t prepped risk missing out on this compelling and timely opportunity. 

Learn more about RSHO.

Disclosure

Carefully consider the Fund’s investment objectives, risk factors, charges and expenses before investing. This and additional information can be found in the Fund’s prospectus or summary prospectus, which may be obtained by visiting temaetfs.com. Read the prospectus carefully before investing.

Risk Information

Investing involves risk including possible loss of principal. There is no guarantee the adviser’s investment strategy will be successful.

Sector Focus Risk: The Fund may invest a significant portion of its assets in one or more sectors, including Industrials, Materials and Utilities, and thus will be more susceptible to the risks affecting those sectors than funds that have more diversified holdings across several sectors. The success of the Fund’s investment strategy depends in part on the ability of the companies in which it invests to reshore or onshore services to the United States.

Companies may face significant legal, financial and political headwinds in the reshoring or onshoring of jobs into the United States, and these factors may be detrimental to performance. Industrial and Utilities sector companies will likewise be subject to the risks of Government regulation, world events, exchange rates and economic conditions, technological developments and liabilities for environmental damage and general civil liabilities. In addition, many materials companies are significantly affected by the level and volatility of commodity prices, exchange rates, import controls, worldwide competition, environmental policies and consumer demand. Investing in foreign and emerging markets involves risks relating to political, economic, or regulatory conditions not associated with investments in U.S. securities and instruments in addition the fund Is exposed to currency risk.

Tema ETFs LLC serves as the investment adviser to Tema American Reshoring ETF (the “Fund”), and NEOS Investments, LLC serves as a sub adviser to the Fund. The Fund is distributed by Foreside Services LLC, which is not affiliated with Tema ETFs LLC nor NEOS Investments, LLC. Check the background of Foreside on FINRA’s BrokerCheck. Distributor: Foreside Fund Service LLC For inquiries: [email protected]

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