Apple has not given Hon Hai instructions to move production out of China, but it is capable of moving lines elsewhere according to customers' needs.
Business
Standard : Apple has a backup plan if the US-China
trade war gets out of hand.
The
Cupertino-based company’s primary manufacturing partner has enough
capacity to make all iPhones bound for the U.S. outside of China if
necessary, according to a senior executive at Hon Hai Precision
Industry.
The
Taiwanese contract manufacturer now makes most of the smartphones in
the Chinese mainland.
China
is a crucial cog in Apple’s business, the origin of most of its
iPhones and iPads as well as its largest international market.
But
President Donald Trump has threatened Beijing with new tariffs on
about $300 billion worth of Chinese goods, an act that would escalate
tensions dramatically while levying a punitive tax on Apple’s most
profitable product.
Hon
Hai, known also as Foxconn, is the American giant’s most important
manufacturing partner. It will fully support Apple
if it needs to adjust its production as the US-Chinese trade spat
gets grimmer and more unpredictable, board nominee and semiconductor
division chief Young Liu told an investor briefing in Taipei on
Tuesday.
“Twenty-five
percent of our production capacity is outside of China and we can
help Apple respond to its needs in the US market,” Liu said.
Liu
also added that investments are now being made in India for Apple.
“We have enough capacity to meet Apple’s demand.”
Apple
has not given Hon Hai instructions to move production out of China,
but it is capable of moving lines elsewhere according to customers’
needs, Liu added.
It’s
unclear if India will ever become a major production base. Foxconn is
now running quality tests for the iPhone XR series there and plans to
begin mass production at a facility in the suburbs of Chennai. Older
models are already assembled at a Wistron plant in Bengaluru.
Foxconn
has also agreed to build a 13,000-worker facility in Wisconsin in
exchange for more than $4.5 billion in government incentives. But
that project has since come under criticism for low-paying jobs,
sudden dismissals and ever-changing goals. On Tuesday, executives
reaffirmed that employment goal, saying construction remained on
schedule and that it will hire as many as 2,000 Americans by the end
of 2020.
It
will also start making networking and server products for the U.S.
market by the end of next year, on top of LCDs starting next year,
Liu said.
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