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China Apple

'Apple Becomes the Biggest US-China Pawn Yet' (wsj.com) 45

Apple might be the king of tech. But in the growing cold economic war between the world's two biggest economies, it is becoming just another game piece -- albeit a big one. WSJ: Still the world's largest public company by market value, Apple has seen that value take a notable hit this week on increasing signs that its business in China might be coming under threat. The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday that the Chinese government is banning the iPhone and other foreign-branded devices from use by workers at central government agencies. Bloomberg reported Thursday that such a ban might also be extended to state-owned enterprises and other government-backed entities. That could amount to a significant swath of people in a state-led economy with a population totaling more than 1.4 billion.

According to China's National Bureau of Statistics, about 56.3 million urban workers were employed by "state-owned units" in 2021. Those jobs commanded an average wage about 8% above the national urban average -- an attractive segment for a company specializing in premium devices. And because Apple now ships roughly 230 million iPhones globally every year, 56 million would be a notable chunk to take out of the pool of potential buyers -- especially in a mature global smartphone market with low growth prospects. [...] Apple's stock price has thus slumped nearly 7% over the past two days, costing the company about $194 billion in market value. That might seem excessive considering the many unknowns about the reported iPhone bans and how they could ultimately play out. Also, China has at least some interest in not overly harming a major local employer during a time of growing unemployment. One Chinese city alone reportedly has more than one million workers building Apple products or employed in related jobs.

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'Apple Becomes the Biggest US-China Pawn Yet'

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  • Because (Score:3, Insightful)

    by hackingbear ( 988354 ) on Friday September 08, 2023 @03:07PM (#63833348)

    the US made Huawei a pawn in its nationalistic, populistic tech war, like that the Brits used to do to the US [foreignpolicy.com].

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It hurts to remind us of our hypocripsy. Stop doing that!

    • Re: Because (Score:1, Interesting)

      Apple is the pawn? They got China to mass produce their products and got Asia to buy most of it. Products that sell because you are supposed to look more attractive while using them..... and don't do much else. My opinion.
      • Apple is the pawn? They got China to mass produce their products and got Asia to buy most of it. Products that sell because you are supposed to look more attractive while using them..... and don't do much else.
        My opinion.

        Imagine if Apple lost 20% of their market. That's would lead to mass layoffs and tank AAPL stock, which would roil US stock markets and nudge the US toward recession. Certainly Biden before an election year would do all he could to avoid this scenario. The Republican incumbents would also be worried about an election in a climate of a recession.

        Apple employees and stockholders care a lot about Apple's success. However, they could quickly become pawns in an geopolitical game that is controlled by entitie

    • Re:Because (Score:4, Funny)

      by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Friday September 08, 2023 @03:38PM (#63833422)

      The right and the left in the US agree on nothing. Except that Huawei needs to be banished from the world.

      We cannot even agree on beer brands or not to burn books, or any other single topic that should be otherwise uncontroversial or obvious. But we agree Huawei is a state sponsored spy agency and needs to go. You can blame government propaganda, or you can ask any engineer in the field: we all refuse to have anything to do with them. We have reasons.

      • by m00sh ( 2538182 )

        The right and left also agree on a few more things.

        H1B is another.

        Do I need to give you a few more examples before you start seeing the pattern?

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It will be very interesting to see what happens when Huawei produces 6G equipment. They already have 5.5G on the market.

        Will the West wait for Western manufacturers to catch up before deploying 6G, or will they be unable to resist? I can't see them deploying Huawei and then ripping it out again.

        Well, hopefully the trade war will be over by then anyway.

  • Unfortunately, not likely. But maybe more widespread bans will facilitate the exit. And perhaps Tesla will follow.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Why would they pull out of a significant market? I think you do not understand capitalism.

      • by shubus ( 1382007 )
        I don't think you understand the CCP
      • by matmos ( 8363419 )
        Xi doesn't like that the USA is cutting him off from IP theft thus he's putting his thumb on apple, it's quite likely that Tesla may follow. While there was a fairly open market before him, now he is starting to add back in complete state control of major industries not learning from previous mistakes of the CCP
    • Doesn't the government banning something usually make it more popular?

      Maybe Apple's privacy really does work, and this makes the Chinese government mad that it can't spy on gov. employees?
      • by shubus ( 1382007 )
        It's the CCP banning it for government employees. So far the general public has not been banned from buying and using iPhones. When they do Apple will likely speed up its withdrawal from China.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          What withdrawal? China remains a huge and expanding market for Apple.

          The US government banned Huawei, Hikvision, and DJI for itself and critical infrastructure only, but that didn't stop some consumers/businesses adopting the policy too.

          • by matmos ( 8363419 )
            the withdrawal that can happen tomorrow if Xi gets mad at some Biden trade tactic. I would not bet on Apple in China (which represents 20% of their revenue). I'm guess that Apple's stocks is currently overvalued by at least 20% ...
      • You mean like why the USA banned huawei?

  • Apple used to complain about people in China selling things like clothes washers branded as Apple products. Their brand was so popular it was being abused. Now their brand is toast. Soon anyone caught with an Apple device will be considered a bad citizen in China. People who bought "iWashers" will be scraping the Apple logo off.
    • You think the average Chinese citizen gives two shits about their government? That's definitely not how that works, they're substantially less governable than we are in the US, they just have a very passive-agressive approach. As you would, if you lived in a dictatorship.

      Much like the hilariously ineffective great firewall, most citizens view their government as an obstacle, not an authority. For certain, businesses in government related industry will ask employees not to bring them to work, but we'll have

      • The GFW is extraordinarily effective. It totally prevents externally hosted Internet services from being viable inside China, and enforces Chinese sovereignty. They actually have to host them inside China and obey Chinese laws, or leave. They can't simply rely on servers located outside China.

  • In other news, those starting a trade-war are the most likely to lose it. Trade-wars do not make sense, except as a lie for domestic politics (were you always find tons of clueless nil-wits) to give the impression of "doing something" and to fuel dangerous nationalism. In other words, it is a strategy to win elections at the cost of significant, sometimes massive, economic damage.

    The same nil-wits will for sure claim that I am wrong on this. That is because they do not know history and do not understand tra

    • This is not simply a trade war in the sense of purely economic factors, like selling bulk aluminum for less than the cost of smelting or something.

      Anybody can see that relying on communications devices supplied by an adversary - should it come to that - is an extremely dangerous proposition. Not just in terms of losing further supply at some point (like the aluminum example) but in the existing installed base being used against you.

      Nevertheless it is also true that this economic distancing is going to

  • by m00sh ( 2538182 ) on Friday September 08, 2023 @06:06PM (#63833738)

    More like propaganda war first.

    Just say China and Americans will get emotionally agitated.

    China China China

    I can sense the clenching of fists and gritting of teeth and emotional dial going off the charts.

    • by matmos ( 8363419 )
      AI is potentially the next nuclear bomb. The US limiting hardware/knowledge/tech to China that is critical to that isn't a propaganda war, it's a survival tactic. The US isn't trying to cut off China from making their own stuff, we are simply trying to bring back some tech and manufacturing as we are WAY overextended in China because the next major war we have will 95% likely be with them. Why would all our eggs be in that basket?
  • Jobs CHOSE to manufacture in China with foxconn and Cook continues it. This has NOTHING to do with American government. This is purely Apple's foolish move and now they have to live with it.
    • That's why Apple recently is starting a new factory in India and China is already aware of it. Not if but when Apple ends up totally purged out of China and the question is why did the Apple choose China over India in the first place. There has to be more major issues for Apple doing business in India verus China before second cold war began.
    • Yea, it is at least a Bishop or a Rook.

C makes it easy for you to shoot yourself in the foot. C++ makes that harder, but when you do, it blows away your whole leg. -- Bjarne Stroustrup

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