President Trump’s aggressive new tariffs on Chinese imports could drive up the price of iPhones and other popular gadgets in the U.S. by hundreds of dollars. With 80% of U.S.-bound iPhones still made in China, Apple may be forced to either absorb the cost or pass it on to consumers — a move that could reshape global pricing, consumer habits, and the future of smartphone contracts.
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Breaking
- Himachal Bear Rescue: 2 Black Bear Cubs Rescued in Shimla After Distress Call
- Himachal Pradesh Panchayat Polls: Election Commission Sets Timeline, Voter Lists Soon
- Global Markets Fall as Iran Ceasefire Extension Fails to Ease Tensions
- Iran–US Nuclear Talks May See Trump’s Direct Entry; Islamabad Emerges as Key Diplomatic Hub
- Sukhwinder Singh Sukhu Assures Full CBSE Staff by June 30, 2026
- Apple’s 2025 Report: 30% Recycled Materials, 2030 Carbon Neutrality Goal
- Microsoft Slashes Xbox Game Pass Prices by 50% Ahead of June 2026
- Himachal Pradesh Announces Urban Local Body Polls for May 17, 2026
