Foxconn’s profits see largest drop since recession as iPhone X production stalls

Foxconn’s profits see largest drop since recession as iPhone X production stalls

7 years ago
Anonymous $ZOEEBQ1zf0

https://www.theverge.com/2017/11/14/16650312/foxconn-profit-decline-fall-iphone-x-apple-assembler

Foxconn’s profits fell to $700 million last quarter, a 39 percent year-over-year decline from the $1.09 billion it pulled in during last year’s third quarter. It’s the Taiwanese assembler’s largest drop since the global recession, and it’s all due to the initial iPhone X production problems, as Foxconn relies on Apple for more than half of its business.

As first reported by Bloomberg, Foxconn, the sole assembler of iPhone X devices, was unable to assemble as many iPhone X phones as it needed to stay profitable due to a lack of parts. Not enough suppliers make OLED displays, and many struggled with the technical process of constructing the Face ID unit. Earlier last month, defective units from faulty Face ID parts sparked iPhone X production reports that Apple would only ship 20 million units, or half of what was planned.

Foxconn’s profits see largest drop since recession as iPhone X production stalls

Nov 14, 2017, 7:31pm UTC
https://www.theverge.com/2017/11/14/16650312/foxconn-profit-decline-fall-iphone-x-apple-assembler >Foxconn’s profits fell to $700 million last quarter, a 39 percent year-over-year decline from the $1.09 billion it pulled in during last year’s third quarter. It’s the Taiwanese assembler’s largest drop since the global recession, and it’s all due to the initial iPhone X production problems, as Foxconn relies on Apple for more than half of its business. >As first reported by Bloomberg, Foxconn, the sole assembler of iPhone X devices, was unable to assemble as many iPhone X phones as it needed to stay profitable due to a lack of parts. Not enough suppliers make OLED displays, and many struggled with the technical process of constructing the Face ID unit. Earlier last month, defective units from faulty Face ID parts sparked iPhone X production reports that Apple would only ship 20 million units, or half of what was planned.