Apple just announced a $30 billion commitment to U.S. chipmaking with Broadcom, and the payoff for American workers amounts to — by the companies' own accounting — "hundreds" of jobs.
The multi-year deal, Apple's largest domestic manufacturing commitment to date, will produce more than 15 billion chips at Broadcom's Fort Collins, Colorado facility and includes a $1.5 billion expansion of that plant. Apple didn't provide a timeline for when the new capacity comes online, according to CNBC. The agreement runs through 2031 per an SEC filing and covers custom ASIC silicon — application-specific integrated circuits increasingly used for AI workloads — as well as wireless connectivity components.
Here's the math that matters: $30 billion committed, and the job creation number both companies are willing to put their name on is "hundreds." Not thousands. Not tens of thousands. Hundreds. Fox Business reported that figure without questioning it. CNBC didn't mention job numbers at all.
So where does the money actually go? The bulk of that $30 billion is a purchasing commitment — Apple agreeing to buy chips from Broadcom — not capital expenditure on factories or workers. The actual infrastructure investment is the $1.5 billion Fort Collins expansion. The rest is revenue flowing to Broadcom for products Apple was likely going to buy anyway, now rebranded as a patriotic reshoring victory.
Neither outlet asked about subsidies. The deal falls under Apple's $600 billion, four-year U.S. investment plan announced in 2025 and its American Manufacturing Program. Both CNBC and Fox Business note Tim Cook thanked President Trump personally, and Fox Business reported that a source said Trump made a direct appeal to Cook to "go big" on American jobs and reshoring. What concessions or taxpayer incentives accompanied that appeal went unasked and unanswered.
The CHIPS Act and related federal subsidies have funneled billions toward domestic semiconductor production. Broadcom and Apple are positioned to benefit. When a Trump administration official tells Fox Business this is "another major win for America" and a sign the administration's economic agenda is "delivering results," the question is: delivering for whom?
Neither outlet raised the H-1B question. Broadcom and other major chipmakers have long relied on imported visa labor for engineering and technical roles. In an industry where "we can't find American workers" is the standard justification, the public deserves to know how many of those Fort Collins positions will actually go to U.S. citizens.
CNBC framed the deal as Cook's "latest push to invest in American manufacturing" and noted it as "a major point of emphasis for the Trump administration." Fox Business led with the political win, running a Trump official's quote high and burying the "hundreds" of jobs deep. Both outlets took the $30 billion figure at face value without distinguishing between a purchase order and a factory investment.
Apple and Broadcom win a headline. Politicians win a press clip. The American worker gets hundreds of jobs — maybe — and the bill for whatever subsidies made it all worthwhile.








