Zinger Key Points
- Apple commits over $500 billion to U.S. investments, focusing on AI, silicon engineering, and expanding advanced manufacturing.
- Apple plans to hire 20,000 workers, build AI servers in Houston, and expand data centers to support Apple Intelligence.
- Get two weeks of free access to pro-level trading tools, including news alerts, scanners, and real-time market insights.
On Monday, Apple Inc AAPL committed over $500 billion in investment in the U.S. over the next four years to support initiatives including artificial intelligence silicon engineering.
CEO Tim Cook noted that Apple is doubling its advanced manufacturing fund to build advanced technology in Texas.
The $500 billion commitment includes Apple Intelligence infrastructure, data centers, and Apple TV+ productions.
Also Read: AMD Reshapes Strategy, Plans $4 Billion Data Center Asset Sale While Doubling Down on GPUs
In the next four years, Apple plans to hire around 20,000 people, most of whom will focus on R&D, silicon engineering, software development, AI, and machine learning.
Apple is doubling its U.S. advanced manufacturing fund from $5 billion to $10 billion. The fund’s expansion includes a multibillion-dollar commitment from Apple to produce advanced silicon in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co’s TSM Fab 21 facility in Arizona.
Apple is the largest customer at this facility, employing over 2,000 workers. Mass production of Apple chips began in January.
Apple’s investments in the sector help create thousands of jobs across the country at U.S. companies like Broadcom Inc AVGO, Texas Instruments Inc TXN, Skyworks Solutions Inc SWKS, and Qorvo Inc QRVO.
Apple and its partners will launch a new advanced manufacturing facility in Houston to produce servers that support Apple Intelligence.
Apple will also double its U.S. advanced manufacturing fund, create an academy in Michigan to train the next generation of U.S. manufacturers and grow its research and development investments in the U.S.
Apple will work with manufacturing partners to begin production of servers in Houston later this year. A 250,000-square-foot server manufacturing facility, likely to open in 2026, will create thousands of jobs.
Previously manufactured outside the U.S., the servers that will soon be assembled in Houston play a key role in powering Apple Intelligence and are the foundation of private cloud computing for AI cloud computing.
As Apple brings Apple Intelligence to customers across the U.S., it plans to expand its data center capacity in North Carolina, Iowa, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada.
Apple’s move coincides with President Donald Trump’s urgency to consolidate the U.S.’s domestic semiconductor manufacturing position, prompting chipmakers like Taiwan Semiconductor to ramp up production there.
Apple’s Big Tech peers, including Microsoft Corp MSFT, committed to $80 billion in AI infrastructure spending for 2025, and Meta Platforms Inc META earmarked $60-65 billion.
Price Action: AAPL stock is down 0.56% at $244.17 premarket at last check Monday.
Also Read:
Image via Shutterstock
© 2025 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.