Chinese  
New York Time: Thursday, 12/11/2025    
Home    US    World    China    Arts    Science    Entertainment    Sports    Beyond science
Apple Supplier Pegatron Steps Up Plans to Move Production From China Taiwan-based com
2018-11-11 21:15:02   (Visits: 811 Times)
photo1,The new Apple iPhone XR is displayed during an Apple special event at the Steve Jobs Theatre in Cupertino, California, on Sept.12, 2018. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
BY FRANK FANG, EPOCH TIMES
November 11, 2018 Updated: November 11, 2018
Another Apple supplier, the second in less than a month, has announced plans to relocate production out of China due to trade-war pains.
Pegatron, a Taiwan-based contract electronics manufacturer in charge of assembling two of the latest iPhones models, XR and XS Max, announced the relocation plans during a recent investor teleconference, according to a Nov. 9 article by Japanese media Nikkei.
“We are going to do it with or without tariffs imposed under Section 301 [of the U.S. Trade Act of 1974],” said Charles Lin, Pegatron’s chief financial officer, during the teleconference. He added that “the intensifying trade tension accelerates our decision to do it.”
The U.S. administration has slapped tariffs on a total of $250 billion worth of Chinese goods, after a Section 301 investigation of China’s trade practices by the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) found that Beijing engaged in systematic theft of U.S. intellectual property and other unfair tactics, harming U.S. interests. The long list of targeted Chinese imports includes electronic parts and components that make up many electronic devices, including Apple products.
China’s GoerTek, an acoustic component maker based in eastern China’s Shandong Province that assembles Apple’s AirPods wireless headphones, announced in mid-October that it would relocate its production to Vietnam to avoid U.S. tariffs.
Lin didn’t name a specific country that will host the company’s new manufacturing plants. He did, however, say that up to three countries in Southeast Asia will be home to the new sites—given that not a single country apart from China can handle the logistical concerns involved with managing multiple sites during peak manufacturing season.
There is also a plan to move some of the current production in China to existing manufacturing sites in the Czech Republic and Mexico, Pegatron CEO S.J. Liao said during the same teleconference, according to Taiwan’s English-language newspaper Taipei Times.
Liao explained that building new manufacturing sites in Southeast China would be costly, and it would take two to three years before these sites could be operational.
Another reason trying to the company to decide to move production away from China are the rising wages and labor shortages in China during peak season, Nikkei reported, citing Lin, who said these problems have become more serious in the last three or four years.
Nevertheless, moving production outside of China doesn’t really solve all the problems. According to Taipei Times, Lin explained that to avoid U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods, a product exported to the U.S. market must have at least 30 to 35 percent of its components deriving from the local country.
This country-of-origin rule makes it hard for electronic assemblers like Pegatron, explained Lin, for the company relies on China’s component supply chain.
Pegatron’s announcement to move manufacturing away from China coincided with Apple’s announcement on Nov. 6 informing its suppliers to halt plans for additional production lines for the iPhone XR, according to Reuters. This drew speculation that Pegatron’s decision was also due to weak demand for the iPhone XR.
Pegatron and another Taiwanese company, Hon Hai Precision Industry, also known as Foxconn, have been major assemblers for iPhones in recent years. According to Taiwanese media, Pegatron was awarded about 50 to 60 percent of all iPhone XR orders from Apple, while Foxconn got about 30 percent. For the previous model iPhone X, Pegatron got about 5 to 10 percent of orders while Foxconn got 90 to 95 percent.
In an interview with Nikkei, Nicole Tu, an analyst at Taiwan-based Yuanta Investment Consulting, said the firm has lowered its forecast sales of iPhone XR from 39 million units to 32 million due to weaker-than-expected demand for XR.
Tu agreed with the need for electronic assemblers to move production outside of China to avoid trade war risks. She added that eventually manufacturers of electronic components that make electronic devices—such as camera lens, phone screens, and plastic casings—will also follow suit and move their productions elsewhere in order to stay competitive amid the trade war.

NBA legend Kobe Bryant dies at 41 in a helicopter crash
Report: White House Counsel Is Cooperating Extensively In Russia Probe
21 Runners Dead As Extreme Weather Hits China Marathon
Spanish opera singer Plácido Domingo has coronavirus
New York Jews scared, defiant as mayor decries anti-Semitism 'crisis'
Kevin Spacey’s First Movie Since #MeToo Earned Just $126 On Opening Day
U.S. names 222 to 2022 Winter Olympics roster, tied for second-biggest U.S. contingen
Justices fire warning shots at Supreme Court hearing on gun rights
Trump Fumes Over Puerto Rico Toll As Death Count Rises For Hurricane Florence
12-year-old girl wins $20,000 for inventing device to help prevent hot car deaths
Victoria's Secret's first Filipino model hits back at critics who accuse her of 'pass
Twitter Is Rallying Behind Black Female Journalists After Trump's 'Loser' Comment
Biden offers warning to Iran to "be careful" following Hamas' attack on Israel
Sixth Sense May Help Us With Direction: Sensing Earth’s Magnetic Fields
The suspect in the shooting of 2 Minnesota lawmakers had a 'hit list' of 45 officials
Tourist walks into the Red Sea and gives birth
Trump’s tax-and-spending bill passes Congress in major win for president
feeling overburdened by her role as a mother, wife, caretaker of the home, and
Baroque Violinist Augusta McKay Lodge on the Ephemerality of Musical Experiences
Success! Final Orion Parachute Tests Completed
Contact       About Us       Legal Disclaimer