Apple & China Tariffs: A Closer Look

gold iPhone 6

Image Source: Unsplash

Tariffs have been the talk of the town over recent weeks, regularly overshadowing other important developments and causing volatility spikes.  

Though proposed tariffs on Mexico and Canada have been delayed for 30 days, the 10% tariffs on Chinese goods are still scheduled to take effect this week on February 4th.

The initial tariffs are a preliminary measure, with President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping likely to soon have discussions that shape the future path of such moves.

Still, until we know more, investor-favorite Apple (AAPL - Free Report) has found itself in the crosshairs given the heavy iPhone manufacturing exposure. Let’s take a closer look at the development and the tech titan’s recent set of quarterly results.


Is Apple in Trouble?
 

Apple’s iPhone results came in a tad soft in its latest release, an interesting development given the implementation of Apple Intelligence. iPhone sales of $69.2 billion fell roughly 1% year-over-year, also marginally falling short of our consensus estimate.

Zacks Investment Research

Image Source: Zacks Investment Research

China sales have continued to decelerate amid stiffer competition, with sales of $18.5 billion in the region down notably from the $20.8 billion mark in the year-ago period. While China continues to negatively impact results, the risk and growth cooldown has been well-known here for multiple periods, not really anything ‘new’ for the market to digest.

Zacks Investment Research
Image Source: Zacks Investment Research

While the tariffs news is undoubtedly a tad spooky, the company has several ways to mitigate the impact, such as increasing U.S. prices. While a price increase would help absorb the impact, lower demand would certainly remain a concern.

Still, Apple has been diversifying its supply chain nicely in recent years, expanding production to countries like India and Vietnam to reduce dependence on China.


Bottom Line
 

While tariffs remain a concern for Apple given its heavy manufacturing exposure, the company remains flexible enough to mitigate the impact. The company could continue shifting its manufacturing to other locations, with a price increase on U.S. products also an option.

For now, the news appears to be a tad spotty, and investors should wait to see how the situation truly unfolds given the recent suspensions on tariffs from Mexico and Canada.


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Disclosure: Zacks.com contains statements and statistics that have been obtained from sources believed to be reliable but are not guaranteed as to accuracy or completeness. References to any ...

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