NEW YORK - Despite years of pressure, Apple's business is still so dependent on China that the tech giant can't operate without it, said an article published on The New York Times (NYT) on Thursday.
READ MORE: Apple CEO Tim Cook pledges to increase investment in China
"Several years before Donald J. Trump entered politics, Apple and its partners built massive factories across China to assemble iPhones. Mr Trump first campaigned for president by promising his supporters that he would force Apple to make those products in America," said the article.
ALSO READ: Apple announces new clean energy fund in China
Nearly a decade later, little has changed. Instead of bringing its manufacturing home, Apple shifted some production from China to India, Vietnam and Thailand. Almost nothing is made in America, and an estimated 80 percent of iPhones are still made in China, it noted.
"Moves by the Trump administration to change Apple's behavior risk damaging the world's most valuable publicly traded company. And any serious effort to move Apple's production to the United States -- if that is even possible -- would take a titanic effort by both the company and the federal government," it said.
READ MORE: Alibaba teams up with Apple to roll out AI features for iPhones in China
In the four days after President Trump announced taxes on Chinese exports of 145 percent last month, Apple lost $770 billion in market capitalization. It regained some of those losses after Trump gave consumer electronics manufacturers in China a temporary reprieve, it added.