Business
Apple Flies in 1.5 Million iPhones from India Amid U.S. Tariff Pressure
In a strategic move to sidestep mounting U.S. tariffs, tech giant Apple reportedly chartered six cargo flights to transport 600 tonnes of iPhones from India to the United States at the end of March, according to a Reuters report citing unnamed sources.
The flights, each with a capacity of approximately 100 tonnes, are estimated to have carried around 1.5 million iPhones in total. The urgent shipments were intended to beat new tariffs introduced by U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, as trade tensions between the United States and China — and increasingly, India — escalate.
To expedite the operation, Apple reportedly negotiated a “green corridor” at Chennai airport, slashing the usual customs clearance process from 30 hours to just six. The fast-track clearance is a system Apple has previously utilized in China, where much of its iPhone production still takes place.
Apple is significantly ramping up iPhone shipments from India, positioning the South Asian nation as a key player in its global supply chain amid the ongoing trade standoff with China. According to the Wall Street Journal, the company exported over $17 billion worth of iPhones from India in 2024, and aims for Indian production to potentially supply up to half of the U.S. market.
The shift is partly a response to China’s retaliatory tariff hike, set to rise to as much as 125% on U.S. imports from April 12, in response to Trump’s 145% tariff on Chinese goods. Meanwhile, India had been facing a 26% U.S. tariff on exports, but is currently benefiting from a temporary 90-day pause on certain reciprocal tariffs. Imports from India are presently taxed at 10%.
With Apple’s supply chain long entrenched in China, analysts warn that the cost of relocating production could be both time-consuming and expensive. “The concept of making iPhones in the U.S. is a non-starter,” said Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush Securities. He estimated that a U.S.-made iPhone could cost upwards of $3,000 — triple the current retail price — and that domestic production likely wouldn’t be feasible before 2028.
As consumers brace for possible price hikes on iPhones and other tech products like laptops and headphones, Apple has yet to comment publicly on its long-term strategy. However, the issue may arise during the company’s quarterly earnings call on May 1, when CEO Tim Cook is expected to address investor concerns.
Since Trump’s latest tariff announcement on April 2, Apple’s stock has dropped by 15%, wiping out roughly $500 billion in market value. The tech firm has not yet responded to media inquiries regarding the India-to-U.S. cargo flights.
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