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Apple may be able to delay price increases, but not for long

The iPhone and other Apple products will be getting more expensive due to tariffs.

In the face of crippling tariffs, Apple will have to raise prices of popular items like the iPhone in the US and elsewhere — but is trying to delay increases until the next set of hardware upgrades.

A new report suggests that Apple is pursuing several different initiatives in an effort to mitigate the cost increases of tariffs imposed by the United States and other countries on its flagship products. That said, US consumers should expect to see the price go up in the near future on iPhones, Macs, and other hardware products.

While Apple has spent years diversifying its production facilities away from China, almost all of the countries it has set up shop in — such as Brazil, India, and Vietnam — also face withering import tariffs. According to Bloomberg, the company is said to be pursuing a diverse range of strategies to soften the blow as much as possible.

Prices will rise due to tariffs

It's now estimated that moving production fully to the US could double the prices of Apple products. If true, absorbing and mitigating the current tariffs is actually Apple's best option under the present circumstances.

Though Apple has some US-based manufacturing facilities, it accounts for a small fraction of the company's total output. Chipmaker TSMC has recently opened a US-based plant for future chip production, but is far from meeting demand from tech companies like Apple in the short term.

It's possible that the company could increase US manufacturing as President Trump believes will happen, but if that is even possible, it would take years and not change how Apple requires raw materials that will always have to be imported.

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Plus, by the time any new US manufacturing is able to make more than a fractional contribution to Apple's supply chain, the current tariffs are expected to have been withdrawn. Even if Congress does not revoke them, the way the tariffs were calculated suggests that they could be unpredictably revised upwards or downwards.

Consequently, rather than moving production to the US, Apple will attempt to reduce the impact of the tariffs that it cannot avoid. There are options that the company is doubtlessly pursuing, but there are non that will mean Apple can avoid raising prices.

For instance, Apple could absorb some of the increased costs by temporarily lowering its profit margins. Currently, the average markup on Apple products is around 45 percent.

In the short term, Apple may do this and lower its margins to keep current product prices the same for as long as possible. The company is also expected to put pressure on its manufacturing partners and component suppliers to lower their prices, though it's unclear how much room there can be for any reductions in supply costs.

Similarly, Apple is presumed to be researching ways to avoid tariffs where possible through other supply-chain changes. Strategies could include engaging in more direct shipping from production facilities directly to non-US markets, avoiding the tariff increases coming from and directed at US exports and imports.

New products will get higher prices

In an effort to delay price increases for as long as possible, Apple is said to have been stockpiling existing inventory. If true, this could mean that Apple would resist raising prices on its most popular items, such as the current iPhones and iPads, until the products are refreshed in the second half of 2025, depending on how large a stockpile it was able to build.

Unless there is a change in the tariffs, price increases on forthcoming Apple devices will be significant. Reports estimate that the cost of an iPhone 17 Pro model could rise to $2,000 or more due to the tariffs and resulting trade wars.

Apple is far from alone in having to deal with tariffs that are going to see its customers having to pay more. US consumers are going to be hit by price increases across practically every product category, from technology to groceries.

This is a major reason why Apple, along with other affected US companies, has seen its stock price take a hit from the tariffs. There are fears that the US economy could enter a recession, causing consumers to put off all big purchases — exacerbating the effect and continuing market chaos in the US.

29 Comments

Appleish 9 Years · 750 comments

I feel great again.

1 Like · 0 Dislikes
Xed 5 Years · 3101 comments

Appleish said:
I feel great again.

Is America great again yet?

2 Likes · 0 Dislikes
muthuk_vanalingam 9 Years · 1429 comments

Xed said:
Appleish said:
I feel great again.
Is America great again yet?

If you ask this question to any of the MAGA group members (like

@9secondkox2)
, the answer would be a resounding "Yes". Facts do NOT matter for the cult members, not just in USA, but all over the world.

4 Likes · 0 Dislikes
aslam 18 Years · 13 comments

The top of the article says that prices would rise in the US and elsewhere. I’m struggling with rationalizing the “and elsewhere” part of it. I see how prices would have to rise for American consumers because tariffs would apply on products produced in China, but why would prices rise for those outside of the US? If I’m not mistaken, most of Apple’s product like iPads, Macs and iPhones are assembled in China with parts manufactured entirely outside the US. So that product, when sold to a Canadian or European, should cost the same as before, should it not? Canada hasn’t levied new tariffs on Chinese-made products or on parts from India, Taiwan, etc., so shouldn’t the price remain the same for Apple to produce the product in China and then sell it in Canada or Europe? Maybe I’m missing something or some element of the supply chain. Can someone elaborate on this for me?

4 Likes · 0 Dislikes
Xed 5 Years · 3101 comments

aslam said:
The top of the article says that prices would rise in the US and elsewhere. I’m struggling with rationalizing the “and elsewhere” part of it. I see how prices would have to rise for American consumers because tariffs would apply on products produced in China, but why would prices rise for those outside of the US? If I’m not mistaken, most of Apple’s product like iPads, Macs and iPhones are assembled in China with parts manufactured entirely outside the US. So that product, when sold to a Canadian or European, should cost the same as before, should it not? Canada hasn’t levied new tariffs on Chinese-made products or on parts from India, Taiwan, etc., so shouldn’t the price remain the same for Apple to produce the product in China and then sell it in Canada or Europe? Maybe I’m missing something or some element of the supply chain. Can someone elaborate on this for me?

One reason I can think of is to help balance the revenue and profit by raising the MSRP across the board so that it doesn't make sense to, say, drive to Mexico or Canada to get a new iPhone thereby allowing the unit sales to still be inline for a given country as well as balance the financial hit Apple would otherwise endure.

Additionally, Apple is a US company so a tariff may be added to goods entering, say, Canada, despite the product having its finally assembly and shipping in China.

3 Likes · 1 Dislike