iPhone production in India to reach 25 pc of global shipments by 2025: Jefferies
The tech giant is set to launch the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max in India following their global debut on Monday, with 'Make in India' models available right after the launch.
Buoyed by the ‘Make in India’ initiative and the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme, iPhone production in India has gone up from less than 1 per cent in 2017 to 10 per cent in 2023 and plans are to scale it up to 25 per cent of global shipments by 2025, according to global investment firm Jefferies.
The introduction of the mobile PLI scheme, alongside global supply chain diversification, is driving the surge in Apple’s local manufacturing in India, the latest report mentioned.
The tech giant was prepared to launch the latest iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max models in the country post the global debut on Monday. The company is set to make its ‘Make in India’ iPhone 16 Pro and 16 Pro Max models available in the country right after the launch.
Apple aims to manufacture more than 50 million iPhones in India per year, as it aims to shift some of the production out from China. The iPhone exports from India surged sharply to $12.1 billion in 2023-24 from $6.27 billion in 2022-23. Overall, the company’s India operations reached 23.5 billion dollars in value in the last fiscal (FY24).
According to Jefferies, the electronics export trend from India is rising rapidly but still has room to grow from a value-addition perspective.
Also, the electronics imports are still much more than double of electronics exports indicating much more potential for in-sourcing,” the report added.
To promote manufacturing in other sectors, the government is providing PLI across 14 sectors worth Rs 2 lakh crore and an additional Rs 70,000 crore to boost the semiconductor and display manufacturing ecosystem, according to the report.
According to industry experts, Apple is slated to build on its solid growth momentum in India with the upcoming Apple iPhone 16 series, driven primarily by increased ‘Make in India’ manufacturing and backed by aggressive marketing.
Driven by Apple’s aspirational appeal, consumers are increasingly prioritising the newest generation of iPhones, bucking the historical trend of purchasing old-generation iPhones.
“At CyberMedia Research, our insights point to the new iPhones potentially growing 30 per cent in comparison to the previous iPhone 15 generation in the launch quarter,” said According to Prabhu Ram, VP-Industry Research Group, CMR.
Inputs from IANS