Apple's Manufacturing Surge Pressures Short-Term Margins Amid Positive Growth Outlook
PILLAR DIAGNOSTIC // WEEK 09
“A massive U.S. manufacturing ramp‐up is tying up capital in long‐cycle projects, limiting near-term margin expansion even as growth forecasts from China and services remain upbeat—a risk not fully priced in by bullish machine estimates.”
Proposed action
Maintain neutral exposure; avoid chasing new longs.
THE MECHANICS
Tape & flow
—
THE MACHINE
Operational momentum
Record $416.2 billion fiscal 2025 revenue driven by a China rebound and sustained high-end iPhone demand, with services exceeding $100 billion annually at ~75% gross margin. Apple is ramping U.S. manufacturing via a $500 billion four-year investment, doubling its Advanced Manufacturing Fund to $10 billion, expanding Mac mini production in Houston, opening a $4 billion wafer fab in Texas, and securing over 100 million advanced chips for its Arizona facility. AI-related capex remained modest at $12.7 billion in FY 25.
THE MAP
Structure & constraints
Apple is embedding chip procurement and production deep within U.S. manufacturing: more than 100 million chips to be sourced from TSMC’s expanded Arizona fab (building on 19 billion U.S.-made chips in 2025) and a new 250,000 sq ft AI-server plant in Houston, supported by workforce investments and relief from overturned Section 301 tariffs, amid contingency-driven supply-chain strategies and a business-laptop market dominated by six major OEMs.
THE MOOD
Consensus & positioning
—