In the U.S. lately, it’s build, baby, build.
No, I’m not talking about the White House’s under-construction ballroom. (Though it’s worth noting that Amazon, Apple, Google, and Meta are
on the donor list.)
I’m talking about factories in the United States. As part of its four-year, $600 billion commitment to domestic manufacturing, Apple has been plowing toward the 2026 completion of a 250,000 sq. ft. plant in Houston, Texas, that would make AI servers for its domestic data centers.
Turns out it’s finished ahead of schedule and already shipping the servers, which will support Apple Intelligence services on consumer devices like iPhones,
according to a new Fox Business report.
Under pressure from a tariff-happy White House committed to reshoring manufacturing, Apple has
promised to move several processes back to the U.S. It’s making more chips locally (Arizona and Texas). It’s sourcing cover glass (Kentucky) and FaceID lasers (Texas), too.
But it’s a long road. Ninety-five percent of the components of an iPhone, for example—a product family that generates half of Apple’s total revenue—come from overseas, and the vast majority of them are assembled in China.
—AN