President Trump declared on Wednesday that the United States will impose a 100% tariff on imported semiconductor chips—unless the companies have formally committed to building or expanding manufacturing within the U.S.
The tariff would aim to reshape the global semiconductor supply chain by incentivizing onshore production. Notable companies such as Apple, already committing over $100 billion in additional U.S. investments (bringing their total pledge to $500 billion), are being touted as major beneficiaries of this carve?out. Major chipmakers like TSMC—with its new Arizona fab—and Samsung, as well as SK Hynix, are also expected to qualify for exemptions given their current or planned production footprints in the U.S.
Markets responded with mixed signals. SK Hynix shares initially slid by 3.1%, though South Korea’s trade envoy quickly noted that both it and Samsung would be spared the tariffs due to their manufacturing commitments. Meanwhile, U.S. futures rallied, bolstered by confidence surrounding Apple and Nvidia’s exemption and U.S. manufacturing expansion.
This is just the latest move in Trump’s broader protectionist push, coming hot on the heels of an executive order that boosted India’s tariff rate to 50% While the tariffs on India were a result of its oil trade with Russia, this semiconductor announcement followed an earlier Department of Commerce investigation into semiconductor imports under national security grounds. The administration’s message is clear: foreign firms must invest in the U.S. or face punitive duties.
Experts warn of disrupted global supply chains, higher consumer prices, and logistical headwinds. Chips are deeply embedded in sectors from automotive to renewable energy, and halting smooth flows could ripple across industries.
Industry leaders have responded swiftly, adjusting their investment and production strategies. While some U.S. reshoring gains are real, analysts remain wary that many of the announced commitments could be repackaged plans rather than immediate factory expansions.
To further complicate things, the EU, South Korea, Japan, and other chip?producing nations will be closely observing how carve?outs are administered – particularly given recent deals that already capped tariffs for certain regions at around 15%
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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