AirPods maker GoerTek under pressure to leave China

March 1, 2023

GoerTek says it is investing $280 million in a new plant in Vietnam, citing pressure from U.S. buyers to leave China. This is attributed to concerns about rising costs and geopolitical risks as tensions between China and the United States continue to rise.

A top executive at GoerTek, which lost the contract to manufacture AirPods Pro but is still producing regular AirPods, said he has recently been hounded by U.S. companies with only one question. “When are you going to be able to leave?” Kazuyoshi Yoshinaga, Deputy Chairman of GoerTek, stated.

For the time being, Vietnam is the company’s only manufacturing location outside of China. According to Yoshinaga, the new 62-hectare complex in Bac Ninh will produce products for major U.S. brands and is expected to be operational within a year. This investment will be in addition to GoerTek’s $1.06 billion commitments in Bac Ninh and the north-central province of Nghe An, he said.

GoerTek has invested $280 million in a new factory in Vietnam and is considering expanding into India, according to Yoshinaga, who oversees operations at the company’s Hanoi headquarters. Clients in the United States are looking to diversify their supply away from China as the gap between the world’s two largest economies widens.

The sources for this piece include an article in AppleInsider.

Top Stories

Related Articles

June 9, 2026 Code discovered inside Meta’s AI app has revealed that the company has been developing facial recognition technology more...

June 8, 2026 Apple is reportedly partnering with Google and Nvidia to power the next generation of Siri, marking a more...

June 8, 2026 More than two-thirds of fraud cases reported by Lloyds customers originated on Meta-owned platforms, according to the more...

June 5, 2026 Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says the company's newest AI data centers consume so little water that their more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn