šŸ“‰ The Great Pullback: Why Multinationals Are Leaving Pakistan

Published by: S&B Advisors and Consultants (Private) Limited

Author: Ms. Saima Morkas

Date:Ā October 03, 2025

In recent years, a notable trend has reshaped Pakistan’s corporate and investment landscape: major multinational companies have either exited, downsized, or divested significant stakes. From pharmaceuticals and energy to technology and consumer goods, these departures reflect deeper structural issues undermining Pakistan’s appeal for foreign direct investment (FDI).

This is not a series of isolated events—it is a systemic signal of challenges that require urgent policy and business environment reforms.

šŸ—“ Timeline of Major Exits & Divestments

CompanySectorExit / Divestment YearNotes
Eli LillyPharmaceuticalsDec 2022Ceased operations
AirliftMobility / Logistics2022Shutdown
SanofiPharmaceuticalsApr 2023Exit from Pakistan
ViatrisPharmaceuticalsApr 2023Divestment
BayerPharma / Crop SciencesJun 2023Reduced footprint
Lotte ChemicalChemicalsMay 2023Scale-down / exit
ShellEnergy / Oil & GasMid 2023Sold stake
TelenorTelecomDec 2023 (deal)100% stake sold to PTCL
CareemTech / MobilityApr 2024Scaled down
PfizerPharmaceuticalsMay 2024Phased withdrawal
TotalEnergiesEnergy / Oil & GasAug 2024Partial/complete exit
MicrosoftTechnology / SoftwareJul 2025Closed local office
BASFChemicalsDec 2025Exit plan announced
YamahaManufacturing / AutosMid 2026 (projected)Anticipated exit
P&GConsumer GoodsMay 2026 (announced)Switching to distributor model

šŸ” Core Drivers Behind the Exodus

  1. High Operating Costs – Unreliable energy, expensive inputs, and logistics overheads.
  2. Currency Instability – Rupee depreciation and restrictions on profit repatriation.
  3. Regulatory Uncertainty – Sudden tax changes, licensing delays, and bureaucratic hurdles.
  4. Shrinking Margins – High duties on imports and inflation-driven demand compression.
  5. High Financing Costs – Elevated interest rates make capital-intensive operations unfeasible.
  6. Global Restructuring – Parent companies adopting leaner, partner-led models.
  7. Scale & Competition Constraints – Lack of scale in telecom and manufacturing sectors.
  8. Risk Premiums – Political instability and security concerns raising perceived risks.

🧭 Spotlight Cases

Microsoft – After 25 years, closed its Pakistan office in July 2025. Operations shifted to regional hubs. The decision aligned with its global ā€œpartner-ledā€ model.

Telenor – Sold its Pakistan business to PTCL in a PKR 108 billion deal. Leadership cited limited scale and regulatory complexity as key reasons for exit. Regulatory approvals dragged until October 2025, further underlining Pakistan’s bureaucratic hurdles.

🧾 Implications for Pakistan

  1. Investor Confidence Erosion: High-profile exits reinforce perceptions of risk.
  2. Job Losses & Brain Drain: Skilled professionals may migrate abroad.
  3. Reduced Innovation: Loss of R&D, training, and technology transfer opportunities.
  4. Lower Revenues & FX: Decline in corporate tax contributions and foreign inflows.
  5. Market Consolidation: Fewer large players, potential dominance of select local firms.

šŸ“Œ Roadmap for Rebuilding Investor Trust

  1. Policy Certainty – Multi-year tax, energy, and trade frameworks.
  2. Energy & Infrastructure Reform – Reliable power supply and modern logistics.
  3. Ease of Doing Business – Streamlined approvals, one-window clearances.
  4. Currency Flexibility – Liberal profit repatriation and hedging mechanisms.
  5. Local Value Addition – Incentives for domestic raw material production.
  6. Public-Private Dialogue – Formal investor forums to identify and resolve bottlenecks.
  7. Sectoral Guarantees – Targeted support for telecom, pharma, and energy investors.
  8. Macro Stability & Rule of Law – Inflation control, deficit reduction, and predictable dispute resolution.

šŸ“ Conclusion

The wave of multinational exits from Pakistan is a wake-up call. It highlights structural issues that hinder investment and growth: unpredictable policy, macroeconomic volatility, regulatory inefficiencies, and rising costs.

The costs of inaction are significant—lost jobs, diminished innovation, and weakened investor confidence. Yet, with a focused reform agenda, Pakistan can reverse this tide and re-establish itself as a competitive destination for global capital.

✨ At S&B Advisors, we’re more than accountants — We’re partners in your success.

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