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05/15/2019

What Do the New U.S. - China Tariffs Mean for the Electronics Supply Chain?

Here’s what electronics buyers need to be thinking about as the U.S.-China trade wars continue to escalate.

Bridget McCrea | May 13, 2019

With the U.S.-China trade wars heating up again, electronics buyers should be taking a close look at their global supply chains and determining what impacts this latest round of tariffs could have on their organization.

The situation remains in flux as U.S. and Chinese governments grapple over the issue, but as of May 13, President Trump has ordered increased tariffs (from 10% to 25%) on about $300 billion in new Chinese imports (essentially, all imports that weren’t already subject to the higher tariffs), and the Chinese have retaliated by raising tariffs on $60 billion in U.S. goods.

“Most of the imports hit by the new 25% tariff rate are industrial or intermediate goods that are used as component parts in products manufactured in the U.S.,” CNN reports, noting that the new list also includes luggage, backpacks, baseball gloves, bamboo furniture, chandeliers, sailboats, motorboats, canoes, and parking meters.

Who Pays the Tariffs?

A tax on imports, tariffs are paid to the U.S. government by importing companies, most of which are either U.S. companies or the U.S.-registered units of foreign companies that import goods from China, Reuters explains.

According to Wired, the new tariffs could hit tech-related companies pretty hard. “Many U.S. semiconductor companies, for instance, are heavily exposed to China, both in terms of what they sell in China and how much they manufacture in China and then ship to the US,” Zachary Karebell writes.

“Qualcomm and Broadcom, for instance, generate more than 60 percent of their revenue from China, and are at risk from China’s retaliatory tariffs,” he points out. “And while companies such as Apple have not been affected by tariffs to date, Trump’s [25% tariffs] on additional Chinese imports would mean that all those iPhones assembled in Shenzhen would suddenly become even more expensive.”

Impact on Electronics

With this latest round of tariffs, the companies that import their industrial electronic parts from China may need to adjust their procurement strategies to accommodate the higher import costs. Those strategies could include seeking out alternative sources of supply in different countries (something many companies have been doing since the trade wars started surfacing last year); factoring the added costs into buying decisions; and/or working with suppliers to ensure an uninterrupted source of supply.

Many U.S. manufacturers are talking openly about their tariff struggles and how they’re offsetting them. Harley-Davidson, for example, has said that tariffs in the U.S., China, and Europe will cost the company up to $120 million this year. The company is ramping up production in Thailand to help lower costs, CNN reports.

In “The U.S.-China trade war is disrupting global supply chains in surprising ways,” Akiko Fujita explains how electronics manufacturer Audio Control is shifting its supply chain away from China. “We’ve started. We have plans in place, we’re working through that with two or three Chinese companies that supply product because we can’t wait to suddenly find out, by the way the tariffs are now 25% or something,” Audio Control’s Alex Camara told Yahoo! Finance.

According to Fujita, the manufacturer sources 70% of its components from U.S. suppliers. But when the first 10% tariff was placed on $200 billion in Chinese goods in 2018, the company’s costs jumped. “Everything from resistors to the diodes he imported were all taxed,” she writes, “resulting in a $200,000 bill, for the small business so far.”

05/13/2019

Record breaking component shortages continue on a variety of fronts, which have distributors and OEMs asking if they’ll ever end. At the same time, there’s some good pricing news for solid state devices (SSD) and DRAM.

Connectors and relays continue to be in worsening short supply. For connectors, some lead times are at nearly two years or more, the report said. “Because of international pressure for non-conflict raw materials, there is a domino effect happening – manufacturing costs are increasing now which will lead to higher retail prices,” it added. Security relay lead times, meanwhile, are stretching to the 100+ week level as well.

A lack of production capacity and wafer shortages are encouraging MOSFET manufacturers to focus on the production of high voltage, high value parts that yield higher margins. “At the same time, growing market segments such as renewable energy resources, automotive and consumer products have ever-increasing needs for low power, high efficiency MOSFETs,” the report explained. “The result has been an imbalance of supply.”

Also, lead times for 5G-related inductors, such as the MB, LB, CB and BR series, are on the rise. As suppliers scrambling to fulfill rising demand for current customers, new products and customers may have trouble finding needed stock.

Meanwhile, purchasers are finding more multilayer ceramic capacitor (MLCC) stock on distribution shelves. Shortages of large case size MLCCs are on the horizon late this year, the report predicted.

On the finished goods side, Samsung SSD pricing has decreased 10 to 15 percent this quarter, and other vendors, including Intel and Micron, have followed suit, Fusion said. DRAM is a mixed bag: “Except for LPDDR, DRAM manufacturers are restricting on-hand supply and decreasing prices while waiting for 5G production to grow. DRAM demand is unstable as customers are purchasing components when needed to avoid excess inventory.”

The infographic below outlines some of the biggest shifts. Take a look and let us know how this compares to your experience in the comments section below.

05/08/2019

Dallas-based Texas Instruments has chosen Richardson as the site for a $3.1 billion semiconductor facility that's expected to create more than 488 jobs.

The 870,000 square-foot plant will be built on W. Renner Road, between Custer Parkway and Alma Road. It will boost Texas Instruments' chip production for a broad range of uses, such as smartphones, connected cars and industrial machinery. The company is already the biggest maker of analog semiconductors.

Texas Instruments plans to produce its more cost-effective 300 millimeter wafers at the facility. Each wafer is cut into numerous analog chips. The 300 millmeter wafers can yield twice as many chips as the company's 200 millimeter product.

Select Technology is now IDEA Certified!
10/28/2014

Select Technology is now IDEA Certified!

08/09/2012

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05/22/2012

Foxconn, the manufacturer of Apple’s iPhones, iPads and Macs, plans to invest $210 million in a new Apple production line in China’s east Jiangsu province in October, according to a report from China Daily. The 40,000 square meter plant will employ as many as 35,800 workers and will be located in Hu...

01/26/2012

(Reuters) - Three major U.S. manufacturers reported better-than-expected profit and stuck to their forecasts of earnings growth this year, with solid emerging market demand and a modest U.S. recovery offsetting

Flood waters are receding but the ability to get your hands on most Western Digital, Seagate Technology HDDs, and other ...
01/24/2012

Flood waters are receding but the ability to get your hands on most Western Digital, Seagate Technology HDDs, and other Tsunami-stricken items are not getting ANY easier... "LIKE" Select Technology today and learn about how you cna rectify your supply chain issues

Before the floods, Thailand produced much of the world’s hard disk drives, the ubiquitous storage devices of the digital age. It is now clear it will be months before production returns to normal.

01/12/2012

We have 300 of the following drive new and packed 1 per original HP box.

BF3008B26C

HP 411089-B22, ROHS_HARD DRIVE_SCSI_300GB_15K RPM_WITH CARRIER_HP

Please let us know if you would like to bid. We can ship early next week.

11/30/2011

The computing industry calls them ultrabooks: super-thin, super-light, high-performance notebooks. Apple's wafer-thin MacBook Air partly ins...

11/17/2011

Thailand’s government said floodwaters around Bangkok may take as long as two months to fully recede, threatening plans by companies including Western Digital Corp. and Sony Corp. to restart production.

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