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Hundreds of Southern California Edison planners, technicians file for union election

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Hundreds of Southern California Edison planners, technicians file for union election

A group of planners, designers and field technicians at Southern California Edison on Thursday filed a petition for a union election with the National Labor Relations Board.

The move jump-starts a long-simmering unionization effort that comes amid scrutiny of the electric utility for potential mishandling of the devastating Eaton fire.

Hundreds of workers are asking to be represented by the Engineers and Scientists of California Local 20, which is part of the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers.

Of the more than 1,100 eligible workers of the proposed bargaining unit, a “strong majority” have signed union authorization cards, ESC Local 20 said. It declined to disclose the number of cards signed.

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Workers sent Edison management a letter Thursday morning notifying the company of their intent to unionize. Workers said they began organizing more than five years ago, but the effort was derailed when the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

“This has actually been years in the making. I’m excited we are one step closer to forming a union,” said Aaron Pearson, a planner who has worked at Edison for more than 20 years. “We just want a real voice at work. We feel a union would give us the power to protect what’s working, fix what’s not working and keep communities safe.”

Brian Leventhal, a Edison spokesperson, said the company knows that its “ability to deliver clean, safe and reliable power depends on providing a rewarding and respectful work environment and competitive compensation and benefits to all [its] employees.”

“We respect the right of our employees to vote in an election and decide for themselves whether to join a union,” Leventhal said. “We are encouraging all our employees to take the time to become educated and to vote on what they believe is in their own self-interest.”

A separate union, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 47, already represents construction linemen who install and maintain the overhead distribution and transmission lines.

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John Mader, president of ESC Local 20, urged the company to take a neutral approach to the union so that workers could eventually vote in an election “without interference or intimidation.”

“These workers provide an indispensable service to the people of California, and their right to come together collectively to improve their working conditions must be respected and protected,” Mader said in a statement.

While the cause of the Eaton fire — which killed 18 people and destroyed more than 9,000 structures in Altadena — remains under investigation, residents have filed several lawsuits blaming Edison for sparking the conflagration.

Edison International Chief Executive Pedro Pizarro said this month that the possibility an idle, unconnected Edison transmission line reenergized is “a leading hypothesis” for what sparked the fire.

The company announced recently that more than 150 miles of electrical lines damaged by the Palisades and Eaton fires will be replaced with underground lines in a years-long project.

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Workers said that they were not authorized to speak about the company’s handling of the fire and that their motivation to join the union had not been influenced by the disaster and resulting scrutiny.

“Our job is to make sure we have a safe and reliable system. We are just excited to have a voice at the table in how we go forward,” said David Morasse, a planner at Edison for about 25 years.

Once an election is held and if a majority of the bargaining unit votes in favor, the group of workers will officially join ESC Local 20 and begin negotiating their first contract with Edison.

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Plastic Spoons, Umbrellas, Violins: A Guide to What Americans Buy From China

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Plastic Spoons, Umbrellas, Violins: A Guide to What Americans Buy From China

Photo Illustration by Zak Bickel/The New York Times; Photographs via Getty; Unsplash

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Tariffs are up. Tariffs are down. Shipping is frozen. Shipping is back on.

In the past several weeks, Chinese imports to the U.S. have been on a seesaw, leaving Americans uncertain how tariffs will affect their lives.

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It’s impossible to say what tariffs will do to the price or availability of any particular item, although even the Trump administration’s current level of 30 percent tariffs — on top of previous levies — will certainly make many things more expensive.

But thanks to detailed trade data, we know what Americans buy from China, and how much of it, and thus what might be most sensitive to future swings in trade status.

Here are several ways of understanding what’s on those container ships, based on 2024 data from the U.S. International Trade Commission.

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First, the products where the greatest share of our imports are Chinese imports:

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Goods Americans import almost exclusively from China

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 Baby carriages $380
2 Artificial plants $991
3 Umbrellas $491
4 Filing cabinets $88
5 Vacuum flasks $1,634
6 Fireworks $465
7 Children’s picture books $505
8 Portable lighting $901
9 Combs $367
10 Travel kits $42

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This list is the simplest way to think about which Chinese goods the U.S. relies on most. But percentages aren’t everything. Americans buy so much from China that even goods with smaller imported shares from there could still be significantly affected by tariffs.

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Chinese goods that Americans spend the most on

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 Telephones $50,085
2 Computers $35,473
3 Electric batteries $17,022
4 Other toys $13,463
5 Motor vehicles; parts and accessories $9,059
6 Video and card games $7,083
7 Video displays $6,770
8 Electric heaters $6,607
9 Seats $6,582
10 Packaged medications $6,146

This list skews slightly toward more expensive goods that the average American purchases infrequently, particularly electronics. But the International Trade Commission also tracks how many of each good the U.S. imports.

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Chinese goods with huge U.S. import quantities

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ITEM Items imported
from China
in millions
1 Plastic housewares 67,895
2 Other plastic products 19,158
3 Plastic lids 13,688
4 Electrical capacitors 12,125
5 Semiconductor devices 11,368
6 Electrical resistors 9,276
7 Other toys 6,390
8 Other cloth articles 5,466
9 Shaped paper 3,895
10 Low-voltage protection equipment 3,626

In that list, you can see Americans’ well-documented reliance on China for plastic products.

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Many of America’s major imports from China are consumer goods: things you buy for yourself, like clothes, housewares or entertainment. Drill down into those categories and specific products stand out.

For example, American wardrobes are somewhat dependent on China: about a fifth of U.S. clothing imports. But a majority of neckties and gloves and pantyhose are imported from China.

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Clothing

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 Hosiery $149
2 Neckties $52
3 Gloves $724
4 Handkerchiefs $13
5 Women’s and girls’ bathrobes $217

Includes knit and non-knit clothing. Excludes leather, plastic and rubber clothing. Various fibers combined into single categories.

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The U.S. is more reliant on China for things made with polyester and nylon (like pantyhose) than for those made with cotton.

Athletes, especially racket-sport players, are also dependent on China:

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Sporting goods

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 Badminton or similar rackets $64
2 Equipment for table tennis $34
3 Lawn-tennis rackets $41
4 Gym and athletic equipment $1,652
5 Other sports and pool equipment $1,345

There are also consumer-goods categories whose “Made in China” status may not be as well known. For example, the U.S. gets a lot of its imported string instruments — such as violins and cellos — from China.

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Musical instruments

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 String musical instruments played with a bow $31
2 Brass-wind instruments $49
3 Percussion musical instruments $42
4 Wind musical instruments except brass $48
5 Grand and upright pianos $4.8

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The Japanese company Yamaha manufactures some of its instruments in China, including trumpets and drums.

The U.S. also relies on China for many of its vitamins …

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Vitamin derivatives

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 Vitamin B6 $32
2 Vitamin B1 $43
3 Vitamin B12 $59
4 Vitamin C $139
5 Vitamin B3 and B5 $35

… and eels. (China has a robust eel farming industry.)

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Fish

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 Preserved eel $38
2 Frozen cod-like fish $8.5
3 Frozen tilapia fillets $308
4 Dried, salted and brined cod-like fish fillets $37
5 Frozen flatfish fillets $58

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Includes processed, frozen, fresh and live fish.

Then there are the goods that the U.S. imports primarily to put inside other things, like car parts.

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Car parts

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 Vehicle windshields and window parts $358
2 Motor vehicle wheels and accessories $1,338
3 Vehicle parts: brakes, servo-brake and parts $1,697
4 Bumpers and parts for motor vehicles $79
5 Seat belts for motor vehicles $11

The U.S. relies heavily on Chinese imports to build electric vehicles in particular: Some 70 percent of its imported lithium-ion batteries are from China.

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Even batteries made in the U.S. often rely on raw materials from China, particularly graphite. (China tightened its export controls on graphite at the end of last year, so this year’s numbers could end up looking very different.)

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Critical minerals used in E.V. batteries

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 Graphite and artificial graphite $376
2 Manganese ores, oxides and articles $86
3 Cobalt ores, oxides, hydroxides and articles $9.8
4 Nickel ores, oxides, hydroxides, sulphates and raw nickel $30
5 Lithium oxide, hydroxide and carbonate $2.6

Mr. Trump’s newest tariffs are not the only levies imposed on Chinese goods, and there’s a complicated interplay of which tariffs apply to which products. Some goods that a lot of Americans buy received exemptions from the latest tariffs (though perhaps not future ones), including one item the U.S. imports almost exclusively from China: children’s books.

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Select exempted goods

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ITEM Imports
from China
in millions
1 Children’s picture, drawing or coloring books $505
2 Smartphones $40,675
3 Portable computers $32,169

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That’s a window into what Americans buy from China. But for some imports, the U.S. doesn’t rely on China. It’s a list that includes large vehicles, precious metals and tomatoes, all of which America imports largely from other countries.

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Goods that the U.S. imports the least from China

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ITEM Total imports
in millions
1 Delivery trucks $47,524
2 Other precious metal products $21,231
3 Planes, helicopters, and/or spacecraft $18,309
4 Diamonds $15,938
5 Raw aluminum $10,113
6 Refined copper $8,627
7 Platinum $6,973
8 Wine $6,697
9 Other fruits $5,923
10 Silver $5,088

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Imports value includes all countries, not just China. Includes categories where less than 0.5 percent of goods are from China.

It’s also worth noting what America exports to China. Though the U.S. sends fewer goods to China than it receives, these could still be affected in a trade war. (China has been instituting its own exemptions, which are broader than those of the U.S.)

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Goods that the U.S. exports the most to China

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ITEM Exports
to China
in millions
1 Soybeans $12,761
2 Civilian aircraft $11,522
3 Integrated circuits $8,716
4 Vaccines, blood, antisera, toxins and cultures $6,680
5 Petroleum gas $6,187
6 Crude petroleum $6,160
7 Cars $4,931
8 Machines used to manufacture semiconductor devices, electronic integrated circuits or flat panel displays $4,170
9 Medical instruments $3,460
10 Scrap copper $2,795

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Export value includes only exports to China, not other countries.

To let you take a closer look at what America does and doesn’t import from China, we’ve included a searchable list below of all goods for which the U.S. imported at least $20 million (from any country) in 2024, excluding America’s major exports.

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About the data

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We analyzed U.S. International Trade Commission data on goods imported for consumption in 2024. We used product descriptions from the Observatory of Economic Complexity to label the goods, and edited these descriptions lightly.

For the lists of major imports and exports, and the full searchable list, we grouped goods using the first four digits of their code in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule, which lists categories of products. For more specific lists of goods within these categories, we looked at the first six digits of the product code.

We excluded goods that are widely produced in the U.S., using export data to remove goods where the U.S. exports at least 50 percent of what it imports by value. (We did not do this for the critical minerals or imports by quantity data.)

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AI is changing shopping. Will consumers buy in?

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AI is changing shopping. Will consumers buy in?

Carolyn Bennett remembers flipping through a yellow telephone book in the 1980s to find carpet stores and workers who refinished wood to help renovate her home.

Today, the 67-year-old uses a chatbot to help her shop. Bennett has turned to ChatGPT, which she refers to as “Chat,” to find vendors for a kitchen renovation project, compare heat pumps and weigh in on whether she should buy a convection oven.

The San Francisco resident could have browsed websites on Google, but she prefers using ChatGPT to save time.

“Any product that has multiple features that you want to compare across different products, I think it’s super helpful,” she said.

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The rising popularity of artificial intelligence-powered chatbots that can generate text and images is already changing the way people brainstorm ideas, write and research. Tech companies and payment services are also betting that AI will transform how people shop. They’re even experimenting with AI agents that can place orders on a customer’s behalf with their permission.

Google, Amazon and other major tech platforms envision a future where online shopping becomes even more personalized and proactive. But companies will also have to convince consumers to buy into the idea, ensuring them that they’re protecting their privacy and providing accurate results.

AI chatbots have spewed out incorrect or nonsensical information before. And shoppers might be reluctant to give control to AI agents, especially when it comes to handing them their credit card, some retail experts said.

“There’s a lot of concern about the reliability of these kinds of tools,” said Rachel Wolff, a retail and ecommerce analyst at eMarketer. “So you might not want to trust these agents fully to make decisions on your behalf.”

For now, AI shopping experiences are growing. Last month, OpenAI said it’s experimenting with new shopping features, including a way to see images and prices of several products along with links for people to buy the items.

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Perplexity, which introduced a new feature last year that allows subscribers to buy items through its chatbot, also teamed up with Visa to help improve its shopping experience in the future.

“Visa knows a lot about its customers, and if customers opt in, there can be that anonymized data sharing, so that the recommendations you get in Perplexity are in line with your kind of purchase and transaction history so you can get better quality answers,” said Dmitry Shevelenko, Perplexity’s chief business officer.

(The Los Angeles Times partners with Perplexity to generate summaries of ideas expressed in opinion pieces.)

These efforts are still early, but AI companies are also trying to differentiate themselves from rivals such as Amazon and Google that also have chatbots and AI shopping features. Both Perplexity and OpenAI note the products shown within their chatbots are not ads. The chatbots cite websites that review and rate mattresses, coffee makers and other products.

Google also is stepping up its AI shopping features as it competes with OpenAI. Last week, the search giant said in the coming months people will be able to use AI mode, a tool where people can ask questions and get answers like they would to a chatbot, to find and compare products. The tool is powered by Google’s AI model Gemini.

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Vidhya Srinivasan, who leads the Ads and Commerce teams at Google, said Monday in a press briefing before Google’s annual I/O developers conference that the company displays search results in AI mode based on what’s most relevant to questions people are asking.

Some of the results also highlighted reviews from websites, but Google has more than 50 billion product listings and that information gets refreshed.

“We’re doing even more personalization in this mode, where we get to personalize based on brands and styles,” Srinivasan said.

The Mountain View-based company is exploring and experimenting with ads in their AI shopping experiences. Google unveiled other AI shopping tools, including a way to try out clothes virtually and buy products when the price falls.

Visa executives say they envision a future in which AI agents will book plane tickets, hotel rooms and other services and products on behalf of the customer with their approval.

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Rajat Taneja, president of technology for Visa, said that people will be able to set limits around what an AI agent could purchase like when someone hands over their credit card to a friend, family member or assistant, to help them shop.

The San Francisco-based payment company, partnering with such AI companies as OpenAI, Perplexity and Anthropic, unveiled a new initiative in late April to enable AI agents to shop and buy products for people but that work is still being tested.

Product recommendations, he said, will only get more personalized in the future.

“They’re going to be different ways in which this will manifest itself, much like the analogy of the internet has evolved in so many different ways,” Taneja said. “The most important thing is we are all unique, in our likes, in our dislikes, in what we gravitate towards and what we buy.”

Consumers are already using generative AI for shopping, research shows. Adobe Analytics, which surveyed 5,000 U.S. consumers, said that 39% reported using generative AI for online shopping and 53% planned to do so this year. Shoppers used generative AI for research, product recommendations, deals and other shopping tasks, according to the survey.

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Capgemini Research Institute, which surveyed 12,000 adult consumers across 12 countries, found that 24% of consumers used generative AI in shopping experiences. The use was higher among Gen Z and millennials compared to Gen X and boomers. But the survey also found that consumer satisfaction with generative AI also fell.

Elliot Padfield, a 21-year-old growth marketing consultant in San Francisco, uses AI for other tasks but he says the shopping experience has fallen short. As a result, he doesn’t always trust a chatbot’s recommendations.

When he tried out shopping on Perplexity for the first time, his order never arrived but he was able to get a refund.

And while chatbots can provide a comparison of four types of wireless headphones, for example, he wants more information about how the recommendations fit his needs and priorities.

“I still have to guide the AI through supporting me in the way that I need it to,” he said. “I actually find it easier at that point to then just go to the retailer.”

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From going to the mall to shopping on websites or through social media, retail experts see generative AI as just another option for consumers.

Retailers will have to learn how to navigate chatbots that might not recommend their products. But AI could also level the playing field for small businesses, experts say, if the results aren’t based on optimizing for a search engine or buying a ton of ads.

Caroline Reppert, director of AI and Technology Policy at the National Retail Federation, said she thinks generative AI is here to stay. Ultimately retailers will meet consumers where they are, she said.

“The trend is kind of still emerging and we’ll see if it ends up being an enduring one,” Reppert said.

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Apple is back in Trump's crosshairs over where iPhones are made

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Apple is back in Trump's crosshairs over where iPhones are made

Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook can’t seem to catch a break.

Last month, Apple appeared to secure a major win when the Trump administration agreed to remove tariffs on certain electronics imported from China following concerns that the prices of smartphones and computers could rise.

But Trump threw Apple another curveball this week when he expressed frustration about the tech giant producing the iPhone in other parts of Asia.

“I have long ago informed Tim Cook of Apple that I expect their iPhone’s that will be sold in the United States of America will be manufactured and built in the United States, not India, or anyplace else. If that is not the case, a Tariff of at least 25% must be paid by Apple to the U.S.,” Trump said in a post Friday on the social network Truth Social.

Apple didn’t respond to a request for comment about Trump’s remarks.

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The public spat underscores the fine line businesses are trying to walk as they try to navigate Trump’s tariffs. Tech companies in particular have to work with the new administration, while also trying to find ways to offset the costs of potential tariffs.

Trump has pushed for companies to build and manufacture products in the United States as part of an effort to strengthen national and economic security.

But shifting production to the United States would take years and result in price hikes for consumers who are already watching their spending, economists and analysts have said.

“We believe the concept of Apple producing iPhones in the U.S. is a fairy tale that is not feasible,” Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives said in a note Friday about Trump’s remarks.

However, Trump told reporters later Friday that he believes Apple can build an iPhone in the United States.

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The tariffs are expected to start in June and would also impact Samsung and other smartphone makers “otherwise it wouldn’t be fair,” he added.

“I had an understanding with Tim that he wouldn’t be doing this. He said he’s going to India to build plants. I said, ‘That’s OK to go to India, but you’re not going to sell into here without tariffs.’ And that’s the way it is,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

Apple makes most of its iPhones in China, but in recent years has expanded production in India, Vietnam and other countries.

In the June quarter, Apple expects to source the majority of iPhones sold in the United States from India, Cook said in Apple’s quarterly earnings call in May.

And Foxconn, a Taiwanese electronics contract manufacturer that assembles Apple’s products, is planning to build a $1.5-billion plant in India, the Financial Times reported, citing two anonymous government officials. A representative of Foxconn could not be reached for comment.

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Ives said it would take at least five years for Apple to shift production to the U.S. and the prices of iPhones could reach $3,500 if the smartphone was made in America. Depending on the model, the current cost of an iPhone can start from $599 but go over $1,000.

Tariffs would also make it more expensive to repair an iPhone because the smartphone includes parts that come from suppliers in other countries including China, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan, according to iFixit, an ecommerce website focused on repairs. For example, the display for the iPhone 16 Pro comes from South Korea; the battery comes from China.

In total, the iPhone 16 Pro is made up of roughly 2,700 parts sourced from 187 suppliers in 28 countries, according to an April report from TechInsights.

Apple isn’t alone in navigating the potential impact of tariffs. Other U.S. companies including Walmart have said they would raise prices as they face political pressure to eat the costs of tariffs.

Apple is in a tricky spot because if the Cupertino, Calif.-based company raises the prices of iPhones, consumers could just delay buying new electronics, which would also cut into the company’s profits at a time when it is facing heavy competition from rivals in the burgeoning market for AI.

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On top of that, Trump has also criticized companies such as El Segundo toy maker Mattel, which is considering raising prices, and Amazon, which considered showing the cost of tariffs next to some of its products, but didn’t approve the idea.

Cook has previously said that while there’s a popular conception that companies go to China for low labor costs, the reason Apple depends on China is for the skill of its workforce.

“In the U.S., you could have a meeting of tooling engineers and I’m not sure we could fill the room. In China, you could fill multiple football fields. It’s that vocational expertise that is very deep,” Cook said at the Fortune Global Forum in 2017.

For a time, it seemed that Apple was in Trump’s good graces. The company has garnered praise from Trump when the smartphone maker announced in February that it planned to invest $500 billion in the United States, hire 20,000 people and open a new manufacturing factory in Texas over the next four years.

Trump’s on-again, off-again tariffs have meant that businesses such as Apple are also facing economic uncertainty.

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Last week, the U.S. struck a deal with Chinese officials to roll back most tariffs for 90 days. The U.S. agreed to drop the 145% tax Trump imposed on Chinese goods to 30%.

Apple has been monitoring the potential impact of tariffs. In May, Apple estimated that tariffs could add $900 million to the company’s costs, but that assumed new tariffs weren’t added.

On Friday, Apple’s stock dropped roughly 2% to $195.98 per share after Trump’s announcement.

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