For the U.S. tech industry, President Trump's series of trade moves will hurt them, such as plans to impose high tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, and Apple, which will make iPhones and Macs available The price of the product soared.
According to Bloomberg reports, this week Trump has blasted the so-called "unfair international trade practices" in the industrial metals industry, and his remarks on the technology industry over the past few months indicate that he may soon be targeting this industry.
The report also mentions that the semiconductor industry is one of the six core industries under Trump's U.S. priority agenda, with others including steel, aluminum, automotive, aircraft and shipbuilding, while the U.S. government will limit China's investment or Joint venture in this piece of action.
Such behavior arouses widespread concern in the U.S. industry. China is the largest market for the chip industry. If they do so, some U.S. companies may be affected and the impact is enormous. Qualcomm, Micron, Intel and AMD, for example, are influential.
It should be noted that Qualcomm, Micron, Intel and AMD all have different levels of cooperation with domestic companies on the chip, and Trump's plan is bound to cause discontent and counterattack among giants, including Apple.