President-elect Donald Trump is ready to slap tariffs on China the day he sets foot in office. This time, he may be up for a rude awakening as China is reportedly ready to fight fire with fire using punitive countermeasures of its own. Companies could be caught in the crossfire of the trade war, which is why Apple and Samsung are already rethinking some of their earlier decisions.A report says that next year’s
iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max will abandon titanium frames, two years after Apple first embraced the material with the introduction of the
iPhone 15 Pro. According to tipster
Jukanlosreve, Trump’s reentry into the White House is one of the reasons why not only Apple but also potentially Samsung, will ditch titanium.
Leaker explains why Apple is ditching titanium. | Image Credit – Jukanlosreve, X
China is the world’s biggest producer of titanium and if the trade war between the East Asian country and the US intensifies, it will make the material more expensive. It doesn’t help that titanium is already more expensive than stainless steel and aluminum.
Another potential reason behind the alleged switch away from titanium is that despite being more expensive than stainless steel, which is what was used for Apple’s premium phones released before the
iPhone 15 Pro,
it didn’t offer any significant weight advantage. The
iPhone 15 Pro duo is only 9 percent lighter than their
iPhone 14 Pro counterparts, for instance.As
iPhone 17 Air and
Galaxy S25 Slim rumors have indicated, smartphone manufacturers are more into lightweight products right now. This seems to explain why Apple is switching to aluminum, which is currently associated with its non-Pro phones, instead of reverting to using stainless steel. To state the obvious, stainless steel is heavier than aluminum.
That said, stainless steel is more durable than aluminum, so it remains to be seen whether prioritizing weight over strength will be worth it.
Another potential concern that’s not a part of today’s leak is that titanium may be responsible for making Apple’s flagships uncomfortably warm. While complaints about overheating have largely subsided after the iPhone 16 Pro‘s release, presumably due to the phone’s new cooling architecture, they haven’t completely died down, indicating titanium may not be completely blameless.