Dubai Telegraph - iPhone, Macbook makers halt Shanghai production over Covid

EUR -
AED 4.005595
AFN 77.258586
ALL 100.0194
AMD 429.07369
ANG 1.966946
AOA 998.46538
ARS 1162.471558
AUD 1.728477
AWG 1.963126
AZN 1.849983
BAM 1.958081
BBD 2.203527
BDT 132.60813
BGN 1.954346
BHD 0.411074
BIF 3176.446851
BMD 1.090626
BND 1.45607
BOB 7.541924
BRL 6.335992
BSD 1.091351
BTN 95.191148
BWP 14.960703
BYN 3.571595
BYR 21376.260354
BZD 2.192294
CAD 1.568499
CDF 3136.639108
CHF 0.962144
CLF 0.02669
CLP 1024.195365
CNY 7.893784
CNH 7.896887
COP 4479.886139
CRC 545.725738
CUC 1.090626
CUP 28.901576
CVE 110.752851
CZK 25.036437
DJF 193.826092
DKK 7.459246
DOP 68.385336
DZD 145.265835
EGP 55.290294
ERN 16.359383
ETB 140.90599
FJD 2.500366
FKP 0.842461
GBP 0.841003
GEL 3.026474
GGP 0.842461
GHS 16.915143
GIP 0.842461
GMD 79.067438
GNF 9439.364292
GTQ 8.415035
GYD 228.344385
HKD 8.472824
HNL 28.132839
HRK 7.53407
HTG 143.13412
HUF 399.186938
IDR 17930.865248
ILS 3.969571
IMP 0.842461
INR 95.060561
IQD 1429.264755
IRR 45928.968174
ISK 146.503382
JEP 0.842461
JMD 171.474477
JOD 0.77358
JPY 161.588712
KES 141.237423
KGS 95.375509
KHR 4378.86129
KMF 496.071269
KPW 981.608856
KRW 1582.045007
KWD 0.335968
KYD 0.909476
KZT 536.425073
LAK 23622.948904
LBP 97720.047416
LKR 322.394443
LRD 216.490397
LSL 20.01284
LTL 3.220334
LVL 0.659709
LYD 5.267734
MAD 10.531352
MDL 19.438001
MGA 5115.033867
MKD 61.485003
MMK 2288.869188
MNT 3785.606554
MOP 8.733835
MRU 43.514158
MUR 49.165204
MVR 16.797847
MWK 1890.599775
MXN 22.026167
MYR 4.832021
MZN 69.70202
NAD 20.012926
NGN 1662.113718
NIO 40.080418
NOK 11.586124
NPR 152.312627
NZD 1.904908
OMR 0.419917
PAB 1.091391
PEN 3.992765
PGK 4.360364
PHP 62.620422
PKR 305.429444
PLN 4.193113
PYG 8655.321132
QAR 3.970938
RON 4.976412
RSD 117.105873
RUB 95.049753
RWF 1532.328867
SAR 4.090377
SBD 9.185233
SCR 15.681145
SDG 655.4662
SEK 10.98622
SGD 1.452942
SHP 0.85706
SLE 24.920775
SLL 22869.878164
SOS 623.296062
SRD 39.447384
STD 22573.746471
SVC 9.549387
SYP 14180.633124
SZL 20.012967
THB 36.830458
TJS 11.896395
TMT 3.817189
TND 3.36454
TOP 2.554355
TRY 39.901516
TTD 7.407494
TWD 35.930115
TZS 2879.250853
UAH 45.344303
UGX 4001.771956
USD 1.090626
UYU 46.124367
UZS 14123.599996
VES 70.690142
VND 27767.32595
VUV 134.509415
WST 3.086527
XAF 656.709994
XAG 0.032776
XAU 0.000372
XCD 2.94747
XDR 0.8158
XOF 661.445689
XPF 119.331742
YER 269.165298
ZAR 19.98718
ZMK 9816.937556
ZMW 31.150861
ZWL 351.180975
  • RBGPF

    1.9200

    68.35

    +2.81%

  • CMSC

    0.1400

    23.06

    +0.61%

  • BCC

    0.2100

    98.21

    +0.21%

  • SCS

    -0.2200

    11.08

    -1.99%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    24.35

    -1.77%

  • CMSD

    0.1553

    23.21

    +0.67%

  • RIO

    -1.0700

    60.78

    -1.76%

  • RELX

    0.5300

    47.73

    +1.11%

  • RYCEF

    0.4800

    10.13

    +4.74%

  • GSK

    -0.6200

    38.88

    -1.59%

  • NGG

    0.0100

    62.26

    +0.02%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.93

    +0.23%

  • AZN

    1.3300

    75.57

    +1.76%

  • BTI

    0.3600

    41.36

    +0.87%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    9.16

    -0.76%

  • BP

    0.2200

    32.2

    +0.68%

iPhone, Macbook makers halt Shanghai production over Covid
iPhone, Macbook makers halt Shanghai production over Covid / Photo: STR - AFP/File

iPhone, Macbook makers halt Shanghai production over Covid

Several electronics companies, including iPhone and Macbook makers, have halted production in the Chinese cities of Shanghai and Kunshan, adding to supply chain woes under Beijing's strict zero-Covid measures.

Text size:

The business hub of Shanghai has become the heart of China's biggest Covid-19 outbreak since the virus surfaced more than two years ago.

The city of 25 million has remained almost entirely locked down since the start of the month, while other areas have rolled out less severe restrictions to stamp out Covid flare-ups.

"Local operation in Shanghai area has been temporarily suspended in response to Covid-19 prevention measures," said Macbook maker Quanta Computer in a filing to the Taiwan Stock Exchange on Wednesday.

The Taiwan-based firm's expected date of resumption will be advised by authorities later, the notice said.

This came a day after iPhone assembler Pegatron announced it had temporarily suspended work as well, and was "actively cooperating with local authorities" to resume operations soon.

The suspensions apply to two of its subsidiaries, in Shanghai and nearby Kunshan city, the Taiwanese company said.

Stay-at-home orders and stringent testing rules have strained supply chains in and around Shanghai, home to the world's busiest container port and a critical gateway for foreign trade.

China reported nearly 28,000 local virus cases on Wednesday, the vast majority in Shanghai.

Many factories have been forced to halt operations as virus cases have surged, while some staff have been living in their workplaces as businesses struggle to operate.

- Logistics problems -

Pegatron and Quanta Computer's suspensions are the latest blow to Apple, which has seen disruptions at other suppliers' assembly lines in recent months as Chinese cities struggle to curb virus outbreaks.

In March, another major supplier Foxconn halted operations in the Chinese tech hub of Shenzhen.

Foxconn has "resumed fundamental operations" in Shenzhen as of late March, the company said.

Consultancy group Trendforce said in a recent report that manufacturers may have just a few more weeks worth of inventories as logistics problems grow over the imposed restrictions.

Chinese authorities have struggled to maintain the flow of goods across the country as tough virus controls slow movement.

A Transport Ministry circular issued late Tuesday barred the "blocking of road transportation" vehicles and personnel, ordering more efficient Covid-19 screening along transport routes.

Anxious about the spring farming season and food supplies, officials in virus-hit areas such as the northeastern province of Jilin have also issued travel passes to let agricultural workers return to farmland on chartered buses.

"The Chinese economy has been facing a rising risk of recession since mid-March", Nomura analysts warned this week, citing severe disruptions to the delivery of exports, with coastal areas hit hard by controls to rein in the virus.

K.Al-Zaabi--DT