Stock Markets April 7, 2026

Apple's Asian Suppliers Rally After Report Says Foldable iPhone Still Slated for September

Supply-chain stocks climb as report rebuffs delay concerns and confirms launch timing alongside iPhone 18 line

By Derek Hwang AAPL
Apple's Asian Suppliers Rally After Report Says Foldable iPhone Still Slated for September
AAPL

Shares of several Asian companies that supply Apple rose after a report said Apple’s first foldable phone remains on schedule to debut in September 2026 alongside the iPhone 18 series. Major contract manufacturers, chipmakers and component vendors saw notable gains as investors priced in increased part demand if Apple proceeds with the new model.

Key Points

  • A Bloomberg report said Apples first foldable phone remains on schedule for September 2026, which lifted shares of multiple Asian suppliers.
  • Contract manufacturer Hon Hai (Foxconn) and foundry TSMC posted gains on Taiwans market; camera, audio and component suppliers in China and Hong Kong also rose.
  • Suppliers typically receive increased orders when Apple launches new iPhone models, and momentum from the iPhone 17 line has benefited many of Apples major partners.

Asian suppliers to Apple Inc. saw their stock prices advance on Wednesday after a report indicated the technology giants first foldable handset remains on track to be unveiled during its regular September product cycle in 2026.

On Taiwans markets, contract manufacturing leader Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd (TW:2317) - commonly known as Foxconn - climbed 4.5%. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TW:2330), the islands dominant chip foundry, rose 4.6%.

In mainland China and Hong Kong trade, several component suppliers posted similar gains. Lens Technology Co Ltd (SZ:300433), Goertek Inc (SZ:002241), and Luxshare Precision Industry Co Ltd (SZ:002475) each rose between 4% and 6%, while AAC Technologies Holdings Inc (HK:2018) increased 5.7% in Hong Kong. These firms supply camera modules, audio components and other parts used in Apples iPhones.

Japans Murata Manufacturing Co (TYO:6981) advanced 5.1%, while South Koreas LG Innotek Co Ltd (KS:011070) added 5.8%.


The moves follow a Bloomberg report on Tuesday that said Apples foldable phone is still expected to arrive by September 2026, countering recent reporting that suggested manufacturing problems could push back the timeline. Separately, a Nikkei Asia piece published the same day had said Apple was encountering difficulties during the engineering test phase for the foldable model, raising the possibility of production delays.

Investors and market participants often view new Apple models as a boon for the companys supply chain because new products typically generate higher orders for parts. The article notes that demand tied to Apples iPhone 17 line had already benefited many of the companys major suppliers.

Promotional material contained in the original report referenced an investment screening tool, ProPicks AI, which evaluates AAPL among thousands of companies using over 100 financial metrics. That material highlighted past winners identified by the tool, naming Super Micro Computer with a +185% return and AppLovin with a +157% return, and asked whether AAPL currently features in any of the tools strategies.

Market participants will be watching for further confirmation from Apple and for any updates on engineering or manufacturing progress that could affect production timing and component orders.

Risks

  • A Nikkei Asia report said Apple was facing challenges in the engineering test phase of the foldable phone, a development that could threaten production timing - this impacts suppliers and the consumer electronics sector.
  • Earlier concerns about manufacturing snags had been reported; if such issues persist they could delay rollout and reduce near-term parts demand, affecting suppliers and semiconductor orders.
  • Supplier revenue is linked to Apples product schedule; any change in launch timing or demand for the foldable model would directly affect contract manufacturers, component vendors and the broader electronics supply chain.

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