The tariffs of President Donald Trump about the imported goods from Mexico, Canada and China are in force, but the large technological companies have remained mostly silent despite the possible impact rates they could have in their businesses.
I already wrote about this twice: once shortly after Trump announced them in February, and again a week after the initial 10 percent rate on China entered into force and the tariffs of Mexico and Canada had stopped. In both articles, The edge He contacted many companies in large adjacent technologies and industries, and the vast majority of them declined to comment or did not respond at all. Those who responded generally gave generic statements.
We have made another round of dissemination, and although there are some new comments, things are mostly the same. This is the new:
Otherwise, the situation is similar to the last time I wrote about it, with very minor changes:
But as I wrote before, the Trump administration is chaotic, so the nature of tariffs could change at any time. The Trump administration announced on Wednesday a one month exemption on automotive tariffs imposed on Canada and Mexico, according Political. The Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick, had indicated yesterday that the administration could announce some type of commitment in the fees of Mexico and Canada as soon as today.
We may not see the actual actual effects of these rates on technology companies until their next product releases. Could the iPhone 17 have a higher price? Will you have to pay more for the next generation of finish goggles-BAN glasses? We just don't know it yet.
Update, March 17: An expanded statement of ARM was added, which mentions Tarriffs.
Update, March 14: Declaration of the added arm.
Updates, March 6: Aggregate frame declaration. Acer, Asus, Canon USA and LG declined to comment.
Update, March 5: Sony Digital Imaging declined to comment.
Additional reports by Antonio Di Benedetto.
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