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To lessen the impact from the tariffs that U.S. President Donald Trump is putting in place this month, Apple will import more iPhones to the U.S. from India, reports The Wall Street Journal.

apple-india.jpg

The 26 percent tariff on goods imported from India will be less of a hit to Apple's bottom line than the 54 percent tariff on goods from China, the 46 percent tariff in Vietnam, or the 36 percent tariff in Thailand.

Apple does not plan to make major changes to its supply chain because the tariff situation is "too uncertain." Sourcing more U.S. iPhones from India will offset the cost of the tariffs in China, and Apple is viewing that as a short term solution while it attempts to persuade Trump into giving its devices an exemption. Apple CEO Tim Cook was successful getting Apple devices exempted from tariffs during Trump's first term, but he has had less luck so far this time around.

Apple has been working to ramp up manufacturing in India for the last several years, and it will make 25 million iPhones in India this year. By redirecting iPhones made in India to the U.S. market, Apple can meet approximately 50 percent of U.S. iPhone demand in 2025.

While Trump has set tariffs on Chinese goods at 54 percent, he said today that he would increase them if China does not remove the 34 percent reciprocal tariff that it announced on Friday.

Over the weekend, a report from The Wall Street Journal suggested that the current tariff on goods from China could increase Apple's component cost for the iPhone significantly. An iPhone 16 Pro that costs Apple $580 now, for example, could cost $850 with tariffs.

Trump is pushing for companies like Apple to make their devices in the United States, but that is not feasible because it is more affordable for Apple to pay the tariffs than to attempt to move manufacturing to a country that does not have the number of skilled workers available for the kind of advanced fabrication that Apple requires.

Apple earlier this year announced plans to spend $500 billion on U.S. manufacturing, with the company aiming to create Apple Intelligence servers and other similar products that have lower demand.

Apple could employ other strategies to deal with the tariffs, including pressuring suppliers for lower prices and absorbing some of the cost, but it is quite possible that Apple will raise its prices in the near future.

Trump's tariff plans have caused stocks to drop significantly over the course of the last three days, with Apple stock down nearly 20 percent since last Wednesday.

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

Article Link: Apple to Lessen Tariff Impact by Shipping More iPhones From India
 
With Trump's volatility, he might just say that any company moving from one country to another (as opposed to back to the US) to lessen the effects of tariffs, will be subject to both (54+26). Who knows? Certainly not the markets, or even his own people.
 
Well, I'm glad they have some kind of rough plan of what they will do to adjust to the disruptive torrent of tariffs streaming out of the executive in Washington.

It's truly annoying and disheartening and the sad reality is that targeted tariffs can sometimes be effective, especially when paired with other policies that incentivize American businesses but the approach this administration is taking presently at least isn't smart or strategic economically.
 
No exemptions. Build your products in the US. An estimated 35% of all iPhone are sold in the US, so 35% of them should be manufactured in the US.
Manufacture what exactly? The final assembly? (currently China, India, Brazil) The processor? (currently Taiwan) The camera modules? (currently Japan and China) The memory and storage (could be sourced from any one of a number of countries varying across a production run) The Corning glass surface? (currently USA) The metallic frame? (currently China)

Do you suggest Apple fully manufacture each iPhone for each country in which it is sold, efficiencies be damned?

A fully integrated device made to exacting tolerances at a reasonable price or medieval protectionism. Pick one.
 
So... like... they are going to make them in China, and then ship them to a warehouse in India for a few hours and then ship them to the USA?

Pretty much yes. Most kits are sent to Vietnam right now for assembly.
 
No exemptions. Build your products in the US. An estimated 35% of all iPhone are sold in the US, so 35% of them should be manufactured in the US.
Well look forward to a price hike then. If USA manufacturing was practical then Apple and others would be already doing it.

Basically trump is going to have to tarriff so that it becomes cheaper to build a brand new assembly line in the USA then continue to import from overseas.

At which point you will be paying current price + whatever tarriff rate it takes to make cheaper to not import in the USA.

You aren’t going to get the current price if move production to USA.
 
I suggested this 2 days ago because it was the obvious thing to do.

Apparently Apple have been flying in as many iPhones as they can to stockpile them before the tariffs kick in. Tim Cook is probably hoping this will all go away before they have to ramp up production of the iPhone 17.
 
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Apple saying they can't bring iphone production to the US because there aren't enough skilled workers is such a cop out. The real reason apple won't start manufacturing in the US is all the government regulations and unions, which is why the US needs to deregulate and become right to work.
 
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