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Apple Signs $30 Billion Broadcom Deal To Produce 15 Billion US-Made Chips, Its Largest American Manufacturing Commitment
Samira Vishwas | July 9, 2026 9:24 PM CST

On July 8, 2026, Apple and Broadcom announced a multiyear chip supply arrangement valued at more than $30 billion, the greatest single pledge made by Apple under its American Manufacturing Program. The agreement would result in the creation of more than 15 billion US-made chips through at least 2031, with Broadcom investing $1.5 billion to expand and modernize its manufacturing site in Fort Collins, Colorado. Broadcom stock rose roughly 5% following the announcement.

“Apple and Broadcom have a long history together, and this new phase of our partnership further accelerates our commitment to American manufacturing and innovation,” said Apple CEO Tim Cook, who will step down on September 1, 2026, and be succeeded by hardware executive John Ternus. The agreement preserves supply chain continuity during the leadership change, as Ternus will not have to renegotiate Apple’s most essential wireless chip supply in his first year on the job.

“Apple today announced its multiyear partnership with Broadcom to design and produce custom silicon components and wireless technologies. The new agreement is expected to exceed $30 billion, leading to the creation of more than 15 billion U.S. chips and supporting hundreds of American jobs.”~MacRumors

FBAR Filters, Wi-Fi, And Bluetooth At Scale:

Apple’s primary hardware supplier for wireless components, with a history spanning multiple iPhone and Mac generations. Under the new agreement, the Fort Collins factory will manufacture advanced radio frequency components, including as FBAR filters, as well as Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity technologies for a variety of Apple products.

Film Bulk Acoustic Resonator (FBAR) – filters are an important component in current smartphones, allowing them to filter out undesired radio frequency emissions while maintaining clean wireless connections across several cellular bands. They are especially crucial as 5G networks spread into new frequency bands around the world.

Broadcom does not run its own massive fabrication facilities; instead, it outsources production to third-party providers like as TSMC. The Fort Collins site is an anomaly, since Broadcom retains direct manufacturing capability for some specialised components, making the $1.5 billion expansion investment especially significant for real US-based production.

“Apple has signed a $30 billion+ multiyear deal with Broadcom to design and produce more than 15 billion U.S.-made custom wireless connectivity chips. As part of the deal, Apple will put $1.5 billion in capital expenditure to help expand Broadcom’s manufacturing facility in Fort Collins, Colorado.”~TechCrunch

Part Of $600 Billion US Investment Pledge: Tariffs, Trump, And The Political Calculation

The Broadcom agreement is not a single deal; it is the largest single item in Apple’s $600 billion commitment to invest in the US economy over four years, which was made in direct reaction to rising pressure from the Trump administration. Last year, Trump threatened to put extra tariffs on Apple products unless the business transferred more manufacturing to the United States.

US-manufactured chips are not subject to China import tariffs meaning every billion committed to domestic chip production is both a commercial investment and a tariff shield. The deal also positions Apple favourably ahead of any future escalation in US-China trade tensions, which have repeatedly targeted consumer electronics supply chains.

The Broadcom deal is one of several US manufacturing commitments Apple has made this year. The company has separately been building AI servers at a Houston facility ahead of schedule, and partnered with Intel on US chip design and production in a deal announced earlier in 2026 in the presence of President Trump. Those aren’t the highly sought-after memory and storage chips that have become expensive during the AI boom and caused Apple to raise Mac and iPad prices but Broadcom’s wireless connectivity chips are in every Apple device sold worldwide.

“Apple Inc., following through on a pledge to boost spending on US-made components, said its expanded agreement with Broadcom Inc. is expected to top $30 billion. The deal will involve manufacturing more than 15 billion chips in the US, supporting hundreds of jobs.”~Bloomberg

Tim Cook’s Legacy Deal And What It Means For John Ternus?

The timing of the announcement with Cook’s September 1 departure now confirmed gives it the quality of a legacy-defining transaction. For an outgoing CEO who has spent his tenure building supply chain dominance and navigating geopolitical pressure from Washington and Beijing simultaneously, a $30 billion domestic manufacturing commitment is a signature exit.

For Broadcom CEO Hock Tan, the deal provides locked-in revenue visibility for five-plus years alongside a funded expansion of the Fort Collins facility. For the US semiconductor industry more broadly, the commitment from the world’s most valuable consumer electronics company to source more than 15 billion chips domestically reinforces the broader push toward onshoring that the CHIPS Act was designed to accelerate. Apple’s $600 billion pledge, with the Broadcom deal as its largest single component, is the clearest private-sector validation yet that US manufacturing of advanced components can be both commercially viable and politically strategic.


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