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President Donald Trump and Foxconn chairman Terry Gou at a groundbreaking for the Foxconn plant on Thursday, June 28, 2018 in Mt. Pleasant, Wisconsin, US. Photo: TNS

Foxconn's September revenue jumps, buoys hopes for solid sales at Apple

The world’s largest contract electronics maker warned in June that the spat between China and the US was the biggest challenge it was facing

Apple

Taiwan’s Foxconn, a key Apple Inc supplier, reported a 30 per cent jump in September revenue on Thursday, boosting expectations for solid product sales for the American tech giant even as US-China trade war escalates.

Apple’s products, largely manufactured in China, have so far been spared from US import tariffs, but it could be put in the crosshairs of the escalating trade dispute as Washington has threatened to expand the tariffs to almost all goods from China including iPhones.

Foxconn, formally known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd, said in a stock exchange filing that revenue rose 30 per cent to T$584.93 billion (US$18.8 billion) in September, extending a streak of double-digit growth since May.

The strong monthly result, its second best ever, brings Foxconn’s both nine-month and third-quarter revenues to record highs, a company official told reporters.

“This time, the three biggest product queues in terms of month-on-month and annual increase comes in this order: consumer, computing, and communications,” the official said, without elaborating what the categories consist of.

Caught in the middle of the intensifying trade dispute, the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer warned in June that the spat between China and the United States was the biggest challenge it was facing.

China is a major production base for Foxconn, while the United States is a key market for the manufacturer.

Shares in Foxconn closed down 6.9 per cent on Thursday, versus a 6.3 per cent drop in the wider market that came under pressure after Wall Street faced its worst drubbing in eight months overnight.

Last month Apple introduced its largest-ever iPhone and a watch that detects heart problems in an attempt to get customers to upgrade to more expensive devices amid stagnant global demand for smartphones. It reports the September quarter results on November 1.

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