Re:
I had this phenomenon with several brands of folding tyre, even new ones, so it might be an installation error. As folding tyres do not have a firm bead to help locate the tyre uniformly around its circumference, you have to be a bit more patient to ensure this yourself. Try this:
1. Assemble the tyre and tube onto the rim with just enough air in the tube to avoid pinch flats during assembly - the usual process.
2. Inflate the tube a bit more, just enough to give the tyre and tube normal form, enough to fill the tube within the tyre such that the sidewalls are pushed out gently toward the rim seat. Then go around the circumference observing where the tyre sits high and/or low, usually there is a moulding line or design on the tyre which can be used as a reference. You will clearly see where the tyre is high/low. Use your two thumbs on the sidewall to ease high points back down into the rim seat and pull low points up. Do this on both sides. The gentle inflation pressure will hold the tyre in whatever new position you've adjusted.
3. Inflate some more to settle the beads more firmly into place, then check around the circumference again and do a bit more fine tuning of the position if needed. Drop pressure again to readjust sidewalls if needed (usually not needed). Spin the wheel on its axle and observe the tyre.
4. If tyre runout is OK or minor, inflate to full pressure.
Folding tyres definately need a bit more care to seat them nicely, you generally can't just assemble them in a hurry and expect zero runout. If you follow this process it should be fine. If still problematic then you may have defective tyres as described in previous post.