Trump excludes phones, computers from global reciprocal tariffs

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The administration of President Donald Trump has decided to exempt smartphones, laptops, and other important electronic devices from its broad reciprocal tariff policies. This decision is expected to ease pressure on both consumers and manufacturers of electronics worldwide.

A Bloomberg article said that the exemptions, which were secretly announced by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection late Friday, exempted a number of in-demand technology products from both the 10 percent worldwide baseline charge and Trump’s 125 percent China-targeted tariff.

Hard drives, computer processors, memory chips, laptop computers, smartphones, and other things that are rarely made in the U.S. and would take years of investment to localise production are on the exclusion list.

Apple and Samsung protected from tariffs’ pressure

The administration successfully protects big electronics companies like Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co. from sudden cost increases by excluding these products while simultaneously reducing the possibility of price increases for final consumers.

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Furthermore, equipment utilised in the production of semiconductors was exempt. For businesses like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), which has declared ambitious ambitions to expand in the United States, as well as for the larger chipmaking industry, this is a major move.

The report did point out that since the exclusions are based on an earlier presidential order intended to avoid cumulative tariff burdens across industries, the relief might only last temporarily.

Analysts predict that future tariffs on these goods, particularly those aimed at Chinese imports, may still be subject to fresh and maybe lower tariffs.

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Semiconductors excluded from tariff

Semiconductors are a prominent category on the exclusion list. Trump has previously declared intentions to slap targeted tariffs on semiconductor products, although such steps have yet to be executed.

His trade policy has limited sector-specific tariffs to 25% so far, although the final amount for semiconductors is unclear.

Following the tariff conflicts that resulted in a 125% charge on Chinese imports, industry analysts cautioned that the prices of several Chinese-made electronic items could suffer greatly.

With iPhone costs predicted to rise threefold, Dan Ives, Global Head of Technology Research at Wedbush Securities, specifically cautioned that tariffs might significantly affect tech consumers and international corporations like Apple.

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