Continue reading this on our app for a better experience

Open in App
Floating Button
Home News Semiconductor

Apple to source billions of US-made chips in supply chain shift

Mark Gurman and Vlad Savov / Bloomberg
Mark Gurman and Vlad Savov / Bloomberg • 3 min read
Apple to source billions of US-made chips in supply chain shift
CEO Tim Cook talked about leaning more heavily on TSMC, which is expanding its Arizona operations to half a dozen plants. Photo: Bloomberg
Font Resizer
Share to Whatsapp
Share to Facebook
Share to LinkedIn
Scroll to top
Follow us on Facebook and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

Apple plans to source more than 19 billion chips from the US this year, part of a global supply chain shift to gradually lessen its reliance on China and elevate India for iPhone production.

CEO Tim Cook talked about leaning more heavily on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which is expanding its Arizona operations to half a dozen plants.

He also affirmed expectations that Apple will in future make the vast majority of its US-bound iPhones in India - reducing output from China as the Donald Trump administration threatens to slap punitive tariffs on its Asian rival. India was mentioned almost as many times as China on Thursday's post-earnings conference call, reflecting its rising importance.

Cook however was mum on a series of questions about how potential tariffs on consumer electronics may affect Apple's business, saying "it's very difficult to predict beyond June."

CFO Kevan Parekh said Apple's commentary on the call assumes that current global tariff rates and policies remain in effect and that the global macroeconomic outlook doesn't worsen.

The Cupertino, California-based company's much-awaited quarterly earnings report failed to soothe investor concerns about its biggest challenges, including escalating tariff costs and a slowdown in China. The company's shares declined as much as 4.2% in late trading Thursday after Apple released second-quarter results that included worse-than-expected sales in China.

See also: TSMC starts building third Arizona chip plant to ramp up US expansion

Apple has accelerated its manufacturing expansion in India, which is both rising as a market - at a time when Apple's China sales keep declining - and is likely to be a more politically favoured US trade partner over the long run.

Apple already makes 20%, or one in five, of its iPhones in the South Asian country. It expects to import most of the iPhones for the US from India by the end of next year.

"We have a complex supply chain, there's always risk in the supply chain," Cook told analysts on the call. "What we learned some time ago was that having everything in one location had too much risk with it and so we have, over time, with certain parts of the supply chain, not the whole thing, but certain parts of it, opened up new sources of supply."

See also: Intel CEO Tan's bid to revive company overshadowed by bleak outlook

Beyond India, Trump wants Apple to begin building its devices in the US. But that's unlikely to happen at scale in the foreseeable future. For now, Cook pledged to ramp up local procurement of chips and other components.

The iPhone maker will obtain tens of millions of advanced processors from a new facility in Arizona operated by TSMC this year, Cook said. That's started making processors for low-end iPads and Apple Watches, Bloomberg News has reported.

Apple and TSMC have both announced US investments amounting to hundreds of billions of dollars in line with the White House's push to bring advanced manufacturing to the country.

Trump's administration has imposed tariffs on goods imported from China and threatened additional levies to other nations who don't negotiate new trade agreements over the coming weeks. Some electronics including iPhones are at present exempt.

The Apple CEO also discussed how the company sources glass for iPhone screens from the US, likely referring to Corning Inc. Earlier this year, Apple said it would invest US$500 billion ($654.31 billion) in the US over the next four years, including by manufacturing AI servers at a plant in Texas.

Chart: Bloomberg

×
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2025 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.