Tariffs. If you've been following the news [[link]] over the last few months, that word has likely popped up more than any other. Well, not including 'and' and 'Trump', of course. The tech industry, being dependent on labour from all around the world, is in a unique place with tariffs ever looming, and Apple's solution to this problem is just to get as many iPhones in the United States before it all takes place.
As reported by , Apple has allegedly shipped 600 tons of iPhones (estimated to be around 1.5 million units) from India to the [[link]] US since March. Production in India was reportedly ramped up ahead of the original date tariffs were set to hit in order to stockpile devices. Reuters reports a source claims Apple "wanted to beat the tariff."
Here's a quick rundown of the timeline thus far. US President Donald Trump announced Tariffs as part of his campaign plan long before his current term in the White House, and he put in place some tariffs back in 2016.
The intent of said tariffs is to encourage production in America, rather than abroad. After months of conversation and delays at the start of this year, Trump finally put a blanket 10% on all countries, with the likes of Taiwan, Vietnam, and China seeing bigger tariffs.
In response to this initial wave, both Vietnam and Taiwan announced they would not apply retaliatory tariffs, in an effort to establish communication with the US. China, inversely, announced its own wave of retaliatory [[link]] tariffs.
With companies like , , and all reportedly making adjustments in response, the stock market saw a negative effect from these tariffs and Trump put a 90-day pause on them just this week. However, he has not taken back the , as of the time of writing.
With tariffs putting stock and shipping instabilities on products, Apple won't be the only company stockpiling. Just this week, it was reported that this quarter due to companies and users stockpiling chips ahead of the implementation of tariffs. With countries seeing a brief pause on tariffs, it seems like production will only continue to ramp until the next time Trump's tariffs hit the world.