The news: Chinese smartphone exports to the US fell 72% YoY in April to just under $700 million—the lowest since 2011, based on US customs data cited by Bloomberg.
Overall Chinese exports to the US dropped 21%, demonstrating just how hard tariffs are hitting tech companies that depend on China.
Disproportionate challenges: The Trump administration’s latest tariffs reached 145% on select Chinese-made goods. iPhones, laptops, and lithium batteries were the top exports from China in 2024.
Smartphones and electronics were temporarily spared from April tariffs. However, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick warned that sector-specific tariffs—especially on the semiconductors that power all of these devices—are likely to come within months.
A core problem: Apple in particular may have a complicated future.
- The company, which makes 9 in 10 iPhones in China, per the BBC, is already planning price increases this year. It’s also looking at thinner iPhones and its first foldable model to push sales of its premium devices, a move competitors are likely to follow.
- India is now Apple’s top iPhone production base outside China, but the company’s expansion there could face complications from President Donald Trump’s desire for Apple to move production to the US.
Lingering concerns: Investors fear an escalating trade war that could shrink the $690 billion US-China trade flow, raise prices, and hit key industries. Export-dependent tech firms continue to face delayed launches and limited inventory.
The situation is fraught with tension after Beijing accused the Trump administration of sabotaging Huawei trade talks.
Our take: With tariffs threatening to disrupt supply chains further, consumers may soon face higher prices and fewer options, while tech giants like Apple scramble to diversify production.
As tensions escalate, the broader implications—from stifled innovation to a potential reshaping of global tech manufacturing—loom large, leaving businesses and investors bracing for an uncertain future.